A Tale of Two Countries: Lessons Australia Should Learn From Argentina

Commentary A survey by JP Morgan reveals that Australia’s business leaders are “cautiously optimistic about the economy,” while almost half expect a recession in 2023. It also points out that energy prices “continue to weigh on Australian businesses.” Similarly, the Reserve Bank of Australia indicated in November 2022, that the “prospects of a significant slowing in the global economy have intensified … fuelled by persistently high inflation and rising policy rates, the energy crisis in Europe, and the various headwinds affecting China’s recovery.” These ambivalent predictions are reminiscent of Charles Dickens’s “A Tale of Two Cities” (set in London and Paris). The book’s opening sentence could not better describe Australia’s economic outlook: It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief, it was the epoch of incredulity, it was the season of Light, it was the season of Darkness, it was the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair, we had everything before us, we had nothing before us, we were all going direct to Heaven, we were all going direct the other way—in short, the period was so far like the present period. Dickens’s tale is also a timely reminder that, in economic matters, Australia could learn a great deal from comparable historical developments in other countries, for example, Argentina. Argentina and Australia have comparable areas of arable and pastureland. In 1900, both countries had populations of approximately four million people. Since then, the Australian population has grown by approximately 21 million and Argentina’s by 41 million people. Argentina was one of the world’s richest countries in the early 1900s. The name is derived from the Latin word for silver, Argentum, and it had a magnificent natural harbour at the mouth of the River Plate, derived from Río de la Plata, Spanish for River of Silver. The River Plate is the estuary mouth of three major rivers and the outlet for much of the mineral, agricultural, and pastoral produce from a rich hinterland. Aerial view of the port of Buenos Aires, on the Rio de la Plata river (River Plate), taken on Aug. 5, 2022. (Luis Robayo/AFP via Getty Images) Opening Up Trade in Europe Across the Pacific, Europe’s population was bursting at the seams after the coal-fired Industrial Revolution. For the four centuries prior to 1750, plague and famine had regularly visited Great Britain, and the average population growth over that period was about three percent per century. From 1750 to 1850, the population grew 300 percent, not because of an increased birth rate, but mainly due to increased longevity. But the price of tariff-protected locally produced grain had driven the price of bread above the average household budget, and poor people had to resort to potatoes as their staple food. By 1840, the population had grown too rapidly, and food production and distribution failed to keep up with the growth in population. In the 1840s, Great Britain had a Parliament of around 650 members, and the laws had been adopted to protect trade and prices of food products were well controlled. Yet, in the words of Edgar Sanderson, in 1840, “famine was rife, and everywhere the gaze met gaunt, haggard men, shrivelled women and emaciated children.” Then, in 1845, when the Irish potato crop was destroyed by blight, the situation became desperate. Responding to these challenging economic circumstances, a vigorous group of men had been promoting the idea of free trade, the idea of removing government controls on prices with considerably reduced taxes on trade. They formed the Anti-Corn Law League. This League persuaded the government to abandon the effective price controls on the staple food—“corn” was used then to describe wheat, oats, barley, and rye—and to embrace free trade. This involved dropping the “protective” taxes on most of the 1,200 listed items and reforming the Navigation Acts to provide for competition between foreign vessels and British merchant ships. From Abundance to Sparsity Around the turn of the century, in the early 1900s, Argentinean meat and grain then fed Europe. Argentina also was second only to the United States in the number of immigrants from Europe, and the thriving economy led to its status of being the seventh richest country in the world by 1908. The British company, Swifts, built an abattoir on the River Plate to service the booming trade with Europe. With the invention of ship refrigeration in 1876 and the opening of the Panama Canal in 1914, Australia could compete, and Swifts built an identical abattoir on the Brisbane River at Cannon Hill in 1913. Since the first few prosperous decades of the 20th century, Argentina has now become an economic basket case, recently having to import meat and grain because of socialist taxation programs. A demonstrator waves a flag with images of Argentina’s late president Juan Domingo Peron

A Tale of Two Countries: Lessons Australia Should Learn From Argentina

Commentary

A survey by JP Morgan reveals that Australia’s business leaders are “cautiously optimistic about the economy,” while almost half expect a recession in 2023. It also points out that energy prices “continue to weigh on Australian businesses.”

Similarly, the Reserve Bank of Australia indicated in November 2022, that the “prospects of a significant slowing in the global economy have intensified … fuelled by persistently high inflation and rising policy rates, the energy crisis in Europe, and the various headwinds affecting China’s recovery.”

These ambivalent predictions are reminiscent of Charles Dickens’s “A Tale of Two Cities” (set in London and Paris). The book’s opening sentence could not better describe Australia’s economic outlook:

It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief, it was the epoch of incredulity, it was the season of Light, it was the season of Darkness, it was the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair, we had everything before us, we had nothing before us, we were all going direct to Heaven, we were all going direct the other way—in short, the period was so far like the present period.

Dickens’s tale is also a timely reminder that, in economic matters, Australia could learn a great deal from comparable historical developments in other countries, for example, Argentina.

Argentina and Australia have comparable areas of arable and pastureland. In 1900, both countries had populations of approximately four million people. Since then, the Australian population has grown by approximately 21 million and Argentina’s by 41 million people.

Argentina was one of the world’s richest countries in the early 1900s. The name is derived from the Latin word for silver, Argentum, and it had a magnificent natural harbour at the mouth of the River Plate, derived from Río de la Plata, Spanish for River of Silver. The River Plate is the estuary mouth of three major rivers and the outlet for much of the mineral, agricultural, and pastoral produce from a rich hinterland.

Epoch Times Photo
Aerial view of the port of Buenos Aires, on the Rio de la Plata river (River Plate), taken on Aug. 5, 2022. (Luis Robayo/AFP via Getty Images)

Opening Up Trade in Europe

Across the Pacific, Europe’s population was bursting at the seams after the coal-fired Industrial Revolution. For the four centuries prior to 1750, plague and famine had regularly visited Great Britain, and the average population growth over that period was about three percent per century.

From 1750 to 1850, the population grew 300 percent, not because of an increased birth rate, but mainly due to increased longevity. But the price of tariff-protected locally produced grain had driven the price of bread above the average household budget, and poor people had to resort to potatoes as their staple food. By 1840, the population had grown too rapidly, and food production and distribution failed to keep up with the growth in population.

In the 1840s, Great Britain had a Parliament of around 650 members, and the laws had been adopted to protect trade and prices of food products were well controlled. Yet, in the words of Edgar Sanderson, in 1840, “famine was rife, and everywhere the gaze met gaunt, haggard men, shrivelled women and emaciated children.”

Then, in 1845, when the Irish potato crop was destroyed by blight, the situation became desperate.

Responding to these challenging economic circumstances, a vigorous group of men had been promoting the idea of free trade, the idea of removing government controls on prices with considerably reduced taxes on trade. They formed the Anti-Corn Law League.

This League persuaded the government to abandon the effective price controls on the staple food—“corn” was used then to describe wheat, oats, barley, and rye—and to embrace free trade. This involved dropping the “protective” taxes on most of the 1,200 listed items and reforming the Navigation Acts to provide for competition between foreign vessels and British merchant ships.

From Abundance to Sparsity

Around the turn of the century, in the early 1900s, Argentinean meat and grain then fed Europe. Argentina also was second only to the United States in the number of immigrants from Europe, and the thriving economy led to its status of being the seventh richest country in the world by 1908.

The British company, Swifts, built an abattoir on the River Plate to service the booming trade with Europe. With the invention of ship refrigeration in 1876 and the opening of the Panama Canal in 1914, Australia could compete, and Swifts built an identical abattoir on the Brisbane River at Cannon Hill in 1913.

Since the first few prosperous decades of the 20th century, Argentina has now become an economic basket case, recently having to import meat and grain because of socialist taxation programs.

Epoch Times Photo
A demonstrator waves a flag with images of Argentina’s late president Juan Domingo Peron and his wife Eva Duarte in Buenos Aires, Argentina, on Oct. 17, 2020. (Alejandro Pagni/AFP via Getty Images)

Historical data expert Aaron O’Neill has argued that the “election of Juan Perón in 1946 proved to be a defining point in Argentina’s history” and that his “isolationist policies and radical spending contributed to severe inflation.”

Many academic essays have been written about the economic collapse of Argentina, but surely the end result of the Peron-style, dictatorial policies of big government in bed with big unions and big corporations that ride roughshod over the fundamental needs of the populace speaks for itself.

Will Australia Continue Down the Argentinean Road

Similar policies are now being implemented in Australia in vain attempts to satisfy unrealistic emissions targets set by a disparate collection of nations following dodgy scientific advice.

The charges against carbon dioxide must be tested in the courts to clear the air for a prosperous future in a verdant world before proceeding further down the Argentinean road to nowhere.

Yet Australian schools teach a revisionist history, whitewashing the raw past to sanitise and popularise political objectives inimical to economic progress and human well-being.

The Swifts’ Cannon Hill abattoir building on the Brisbane River is a metaphor for the Australian economy today.

When a young engineer was assigned to investigate and ensure the structural stability of this imposing structure, he found that the façade hid a rotting building infested by rust, rats, and cockroaches.

Surely, it is time to clean up Australia, commencing with fundamental reform of an archaic, corrosive, and demotivating tax system. Uncontrolled spending policies and the implementation of cosy collaborative projects of big government in collusion with big unions and big business do not serve Australia well.

Views expressed in this article are the opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.