Sunday, April 20, 2014

Chests thrown out, back-slapping, strutting and preening, 'Team Australia' arrives home


“Team Australia” arrived home recently, chests thrown out, amid much back-slapping, strutting and preening.

The Washington Consensus makes
 puppets of all it
touches, including whole nations.
The travelling party from the big end of town, the business boys (and they were mostly boys) who lock arms in a club that understands, and cares only about growth and profit, toured with Prime Minister Tony Abbott to Japan, Korea and China.

Surrounded by a phalanx of billionaires, Mr Abbott visited that trio of Asian countries to talk up Australia and point out it is “open for business”.

He went to sign-off on free trade agreements; deals he believes will benefit all Australians, but which history has shown will only enrich his already rich fellow travellers.

Free trade is integral part of globalization, which has done nothing but make the wealthy wealthier, worsening inequality and ripping the rug out from under small businesses.

The stance taken by Mr Abbott and his rich cohort reflects the Washington Consensus, a 10-point plan that the U.S. Government and international economic institutions have successfully used to rob resource-rich underdeveloped countries.

The oddities of Mr Abbott’s thinking are intriguing as usually it is the less developed countries that fall into economic traps set by wealthy and influential nations, but in this case Australia, under the PM’s insistence, has been a part of its own deception.

Third-world countries that fall under the spell of Washington Consensus-like programs are stripped of their resources, and natural trading advantages, bringing on bankruptcy from which they are allowed relief only by agreeing to punishing trade arrangements.

Forced into free-trade agreements that favour, invariably, the developed countries; and the small businesses in the target country are pillaged and forced to align with huge corporations and so are destroyed and vanish – they go broke.

Driven by what appears to be a hint of desperation to demonstrate his promise of Australia being “open for business”, our PM has played the country itself as his trump card and has laid us bare on the trading table.

The people who could make a meaningful social difference to Australia are being treated like criminals and secreted to the likes of Manus Island, while those whose only interest is in exploitation, profit and growth are ushered into our dining room with a flourish reserved for royalty.

Money, it seems, can easily cross international borders, no papers, no passport and no identity required, but should you be a struggling individual or family escaping a life of oppression and you bring no riches other than who they are, then Abbott’s Team Australia throws up the barricades.

Speaking during his Asian tour, Tony Abbott puffed out his chest and declared “Australia has had a very good day”, failing to acknowledge that it was really his rich friends who had a very good day.