Cultured Bogan I have another question for you regarding corporate welfare.
Let's say a company conducts an analysis of a project and finds that the project has a risk adjusted loss of $10 million. All things being equal, based on those numbers the project is rejected. However, what if this venture was going to employ 20 000 people directly and indirectly provide jobs for another 80 000 in associated industries.
Should the Government provide a $10 million subsidy, an act of corporate welfare?
No. I've already made my position clear on this. It's discriminatory policy.
I'd rather the 10 million go into the CSIRO which can fund research the government can make revenue from.
Do you think it's fair that Holden has drawn over $2b, Ford $1.1b and Toyota $1.2b over the period from 2001-2012, only for them to spit the dummy and piss off anyway while thousands of small businesses have routinely gone to the wall over that same period? How many jobs have been lost via small businesses going belly up?
But this subsidy is a revenue making proposition for the Government. If we assume that these new jobs aren't crowding out other jobs, then if each new position attracted the average wage of $70,000, tax revenue from wages would be around $1.5 billion in the first year alone. Depending on the life of the project the present value amount could be over 10 times the first year tax receipts.
That is a $15 billion return on a $10 million investment. This figure only counts the income tax receipts and does not include the corporate tax receipts. How is this a bad investment from the Australian tax payer?
I am also interested to know why an investment in industry is discriminatory whilst an investment in the CSIRO is not? Is a dollar made from generating income tax not the same a dollar made from a Government agency?
In regards to the subsidies to the car industry, the question is not whether it is 'fair', but rather whether the economy was benefited by a multiple of the original investment. It has been recorded in the press that each job created in the car industry led to 5 jobs in associated industries. As I have not seen the numbers I can only speculate on this.
It does seem however that the car subsidies may have been politically motivated with the ALP arguing strongly for them and the LNP arguing strongly against them.
Small businesses are also the recipient of Government subsidies, I am not sure of the total pool of funds as they come under multiple headings in the budget, but I know that there is financial help for small businesses wanting to expand. The hard part about subsidising small business is being able to generate the high ROI that has been described above.
I most definitely see the sense in what you're saying, especially with the arbitrary values you've mentioned in your example, it is just my belief that government should not be involved in private enterprise.