Once upon a time, when Australia had a steel industry

Similar documents
Holden to cease making cars in Australia by 2017: experts react

Dollars and Sense. John Nolan Vice President Steel Dynamics, Inc. Fort Wayne, IN USA

DOMESTIC MANUFACTURING MATTERS. SEE WHAT WE SHOULD DO TO SUPPORT IT.

Mineral Policy Lessons from Canada and Australia

Is wool s price-demand slump due to grower politics or high prices?

Introduction. Vehicle Suppliers Depend on a Global Network

Introduction. Vehicle Suppliers Depend on a Global Network

AFFILIATE ROCKET YOUR QUICK-START GUIDE TO AFFILIATE MARKETING

Trade Policy III - WTO and Case Studies

Passion. Beauty. Culture.

Coal was king of the Industrial Revolution, but not always the path to a modern economy

Future Directions in Intellectual Property. Dr Peter Tucker. General Manager, Business Development. and Strategy Group.

Motivating Yourself to Succeed Every Day

Missouri Economic Indicator Brief: Manufacturing Industries

Does Globalization Force One Best Model? Results from the MIT Globalization Study. Suzanne Berger Discussant: Philippe Riès

SEMICONDUCTOR INDUSTRY ASSOCIATION FACTBOOK

MEASURES TO SUPPORT SMEs IN THE EUROPEAN UNION

Global Trends in Patenting

OECD Science, Technology and Industry Outlook 2008: Highlights

The Slap: whose side are you on?

Relationship initiation between universities and manufacturing: a new perspective

NEW INDUSTRIAL POLICY

We can t compete on cheap and nasty; let s be a country that makes high-quality, lasting things

2010 HSC Economics Marking Guidelines

BRAZIL S COMPETITIVENESS CHALLENGES VIEWED FROM ITS COMPANIES

Japan Lagging in Scientific Research

CAPITALISM, TECHNOLOGY AND A GREEN GLOBAL GOLDEN AGE: The Role of History in Helping to Shape the Future

ISSUES FOR THE FUTURE OF MINING IN AUSTRALIA. R W Kirkby: President Carbon Steel Materials. BHP Billiton. ABARE Commodities Outlook Conference

The Tohoku Japan Earthquake of Susan Wolfe. San Jose State University

NERA Innovation Cluster Workshop Miranda Taylor, November 2016

Technology and Industry Outlook Country Studies and Outlook Division (DSTI/CSO)

Workplace 2030: Emerging business challenges and opportunities

Learning Lessons Abroad on Funding Research and Innovation. 29 April 2016

Unit 6: Development of an Industrial United States ( ) Part 2: The Rise of Big Business in America

Cultivating Entrepreneurial Spirit in Asia

1. Introduction The Current State of the Korean Electronics Industry and Options for Cooperation with Taiwan

Dead Simple Trick Brings Any Old Battery Back To Life Again!

War robots and the 2014 World Cup - defenders off the field

AP UNITED STATES HISTORY 2001 SCORING GUIDELINES. Question 4

Federal Professional-Services Suppliers Run Into Trouble After Out-Growing Small Business Status

THE OIL & GAS SERVICES SECTOR: GOOD PROSPECTS FOR THE MEDIUM TO LONG TERM. Dr. Kris R. Nielsen Chairman and President

THE EVOLUTION OF THE INTERNATIONAL SPATIAL ARCHITECTURE OF CLUSTERING AND VALUE NETWORKS

An end to Australia s auto dream: why we loved Holden

market development out of our comfort zone RICHARD MATHESON

April 7, Sulzer Ltd Annual General Meeting 2016 Speech Greg Poux-Guillaume, Chief Executive Officer. Dear Shareholders,

On Money and Magic By Edward Castronova, Indiana University

AUSFTA: Linking War, Free Trade and the Environment

Case study in academic and industry collaboration: the development of an adolescent targeted sun protection intervention in NSW

Case Study Disclaimer. Participants Case Studies

This is simply, customers looking for businesses that service their local area. Businesses like yours.

The Industrial Revolution

Who s Afraid of the Big Bad Dragon? How Chinese Trade Boosts Innovation

WHAT TO DO IF YOUR NICHE DOESN T STACK UP?

International Trade Continues to Excel as the Global Economy Stalls: A Review of U.S and New York Customs District Trade through August 2011

Weighted deductions for in-house R&D: Does it benefit small and medium firms more?

Unit 1: The Economic Fundamentals Weeks How does scarcity impact the decisions individuals and societies must make?

Statement and Appeal - by the Attac-Preparatory Group for the Beyond Growth Congress

Office of International Business Development a Global, Strategic Approach to Creating and Keeping Jobs in Pennsylvania

DELEGATE WORKSHEET: ASKING PEOPLE TO JOIN OUR UNION

Canada and the Second World War

IIP sknowledge Exchange Project on the Industrial Restructuring Experience of Germany s Ruhr Valley

The 6 Revenue Killing Mistakes In Online Marketing

AIM: Was big business helpful or hurtful to America?

Dollars and Sense The Sequel. John Nolan Vice President Steel Dynamics, Inc. Fort Wayne, IN USA

Understanding Generation Z TREND REPORT

What type of Entrepreneurs (Entrepreneurship) do we need for Economic Development?

Objectives ECONOMIC GROWTH CHAPTER

CBSME-NSR. Priority. Priority 1 Thinking Growth: Supporting growth in North Sea Region economies

Raymond James snags four industry bigs in RIA push

Korea s Industries in the World Market (Shares and Ranking)

Future Challenges and Opportunities: Further Expansion of Trade in ICT Products

WIPO REGIONAL SEMINAR ON SUPPORT SERVICES FOR INVENTORS, VALUATION AND COMMERCIALIZATION OF INVENTIONS AND RESEARCH RESULTS

Gender pay gap reporting tight for time

Research Partnership Platform. Legal and Regulatory Challenges of the Sharing Economy

UX Adoption Maturity model. Paul Blunden: first published March 2015

The Minerals Council of Australia 2012 Sustainable Development Conference November 2012, Bangkok

2. Try to be helpful, but don t offer to perform many free services that are being paid for by the owners of currently listed property

WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION

Legal Notice: The Author and Publisher assume no responsibility or liability whatsoever on the behalf of any Purchaser or Reader of these materials.

A career in one of the biggest industries in the world

The ICT industry as driver for competition, investment, growth and jobs if we make the right choices

Speech by Pascal Lamy, Chair of the High Level Group on maximising the impact of EU research and innovation programmes

Japan s business system has changed significantly since 2000, shifting toward

5 Burning Questions. Every Business Owner Needs to Answer. Written by Mariah Bliss

Technology and Competitiveness in Vietnam

9696 GEOGRAPHY. Mark schemes should be read in conjunction with the question paper and the Principal Examiner Report for Teachers.

BASED ECONOMIES. Nicholas S. Vonortas

Real Estate Buyer Scripts Role Play CD I

Industry Overview (1/2)

SPECIAL REPORT. How To Sell A House If You Own It Free & Clear

MELBOURNE MINING CLUB 8 February 2018 Speech by Alberto Calderon Sustaining our economic successes

Lithuanian experience with WTO membership

What I would like to do this evening is to give you some facts about our investment and share with you some insights into our experiences.

Limits to Growth and the Possibilities of Breakthrough

ORCADE. Organisation pour le Renforcement des Capacités de Développement Tel: BP 675 Ouagadougou 09 Burkina Faso

The Transformational Dynamics of the US-Japan Economic Relationship

THE MACROECONOMICS OF THE GLOBAL TECHNOLOGY ECONOMY. Howard A. Rubin

Speech by Lars Renström, President and CEO AGM Ladies and gentlemen, shareholders and co-workers,

Law Firms in Los Angeles After the Financial Crisis

The Diana McDonald Writer's Challenge

Transcription:

University of Wollongong Research Online Faculty of Law, Humanities and the Arts - Papers Faculty of Law, Humanities and the Arts 2011 Once upon a time, when Australia had a steel industry Diana J. Kelly University of Wollongong, di@uow.edu.au Publication Details Kelly, D. J. (2011). Once upon a time, when Australia had a steel industry. The Conversation, (24 August) Research Online is the open access institutional repository for the University of Wollongong. For further information contact the UOW Library: research-pubs@uow.edu.au

Once upon a time, when Australia had a steel industry Abstract Once upon a time, 30 years ago, when we still thought the steel industry was an endless and bottomless well for economic growth and employment, many of us also believed in industry policy, corporate responsibility to communities, and the right to stay in the same place and space as long as we wanted. We were happily unaware that restructuring would become inevitably intertwined with job losses or that the inheritors of the Kingswood (which many of us drove back then) would soon be driving cars neither built in Australia nor made from Australian steel. But that was 30 years ago. Shortly after, the Australian steel industry began to spin into crisis, an early homegrown casualty of the globalisation of production. Indeed, the crisis should probably have happened sooner but in those days there was a fair investment in Australian steel production and the low Aussie dollar meant good steel export prices the US even accused Australia of dumping cheap steel and profit levels were generally accepted at lower rates than today. Keywords had, upon, steel, industry, time, when, australia, once Disciplines Arts and Humanities Law Publication Details Kelly, D. J. (2011). Once upon a time, when Australia had a steel industry. The Conversation, (24 August) This journal article is available at Research Online: http://ro.uow.edu.au/lhapapers/1587

24 August 2011, 1.33pm AEST Once upon a time, when Australia had a steel industry Author 1. Diana Kelly Associate Professor, School of History and Politics at University of Wollongong Disclosure Statement Diana Kelly does not work for, consult to, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has no relevant affiliations. uow.edu.au Provides funding as a Member of The Conversation.

BlueScope has fallen victim to a changing export market, high Australian dollar and gradual structural shift to free trade policies. AAP Once upon a time, 30 years ago, when we still thought the steel industry was an endless and bottomless well for economic growth and employment, many of us also believed in industry policy, corporate responsibility to communities, and the right to stay in the same place and space as long as we wanted. We were happily unaware that restructuring would become inevitably intertwined with job losses or that the inheritors of the Kingswood (which many of us drove back then) would soon be driving cars neither built in Australia nor made from Australian steel. But that was 30 years ago. Shortly after, the Australian steel industry began to spin into crisis, an early home-grown casualty of the globalisation of production. Indeed, the crisis should probably have happened sooner but in those days there was a fair investment in Australian steel production and the low Aussie dollar meant good steel export prices the US even accused Australia of dumping cheap steel and profit levels were generally accepted at lower rates than today. Shock to the system Even so, when it came, that first steel crisis was pretty shocking postwar Australians were not yet used to major job losses, nor the allied multiplier effects that devastated towns and communities.

I remember writing in the introduction to the Katherine Thompson play, Diving for Pearls, (set in an industrial town experiencing major job losses) that Christmas 1982 was a time of fear and spending, as people avoided each other, fearful of hearing bad news or telling it, and spending up big because of redundancy pay or fear of job loss. Yet, sooner than we hoped, most of us bounced back. That was because they had a wonderful instrument in those days called industry policy. In those distant decades, governments were not wedded to day trading for policies they took longer term views, knew the market could be as mindless and destructive as Triffids, and also took it as their responsibility to intervene so the polity, society and economy were not mere flotsam among the blips and bumps of market fluctuations. Industry plan And that was the case in 1983 when the Steel Industry Plan (SIP) was proposed, debated and implemented over a few months. The SIP was not just a comprehensive and integrated set of assistance, responsibilities, goals and gains for the steel stakeholders, it was even a tripartite policy (that is sooo 20th century!) and had the commitment of the steel company, the trade unions and communities, and the government. It worked at least for a time. Now again in 2011, we have a steel industry crisis. After reports of an annual loss of nearly $1 billion (nearly ten times the average profits of 20 years ago), 1000 redundancies and a major reduction of contractors have been announced at BlueScope Steel. The causes are fourfold. Paradox The most important factor has been the high Australian dollar paradoxically driven by the resources boom which has raised the price of steel exports. The paradox is that the second factor leading to the current steel crisis has been increased input costs notably iron ore and coal. The drivers of the very mining boom which has raised the Australian dollar have also raised the costs of production coal prices for example have tripled in the last decade. The effect of these factors has meant the crisis has been more pronounced on BlueScope, which has less favourable access to inputs than has its former sister company, OneSteel. Third, there is pressure on steel companies throughout the developed world the Brazilian company Usiminas is in trouble, and even ArcelorMittal, the biggest steel company of them all is struggling. Market shift

Export markets are shifting. Japan is planning to buy steel for post-earthquake reconstruction from China or Korea, and many former customers of Australian steel are now exporters. And on top of all of that, in Australia, the fall of steel is tied to the inexorable decline of local manufacturing. When manufacturing booms, steel bounces, but employment in manufacturing has fallen to well less than 10% of employment in the last decade, and its contribution to the national economy has fallen similarly. So it is perhaps not surprising that we have another steel crisis. The job losses may be fewer and the impact on buyer, supplier and contractor firms may be less, but we have a steel crisis that will once again weaken and depress the steel communities of the Illawarra. Brave words are being spoken of resilience and hope, but the options in steel are few. Anti-competitive Certainly we won t have a Steel Industry Plan this time around the WTO has put paid to that. Giving preference to local product for construction is now anticompetitive, and so are tariffs and subsidies. Governments can support the steel communities at least a little but they cannot support the steel industry, they cannot offer carrots to encourage capital investment or enforce requirements on major new projects to buying Australian made products. They can ask nicely, but in the brave new world of free trade, governments are tied to the higgling of the market. Chillingly, perhaps the story books of the future might begin Once upon a time, when Australia had a steel industry