Sdajii
Sdaji
- Joined
- 13 October 2009
- Posts
- 2,146
- Reactions
- 2,312
You say that as if the extra income from tourism wouldn't be more than offset by the virus ripping through your population like wildfire, which it would.
Everyone will eventually be exposed. Delaying the inevitable is extremely expensive and will weaken us for decades
The genie has absolutely been kept in the bottle in many places. To let it out would be the height of stupidity
I'm likewise young enough and, so far as I'm aware, healthy enough that I'll be paying off the debts.
The price they'll pay isn't just the deaths right now, but that the best and brightest, or indeed anyone with much sense, will no longer be seeing it as a desirable place to live. The days of US leadership are gone for that reason - the brightest minds are not lured by money alone, such people tend to value their own safety, and many will be looking elsewhere.
Or we could take a look at China. Based on official statistics they've done an order of magnitude better job of dealing with the virus than the US, UK, France or Iran (among many others) have but they've paid a huge economic price for doing so.
That China did what they did is partly my reasoning. Whatever they know about the virus, it scared the absolute crap out of them that's rather clear. Actions speak louder than words and the actions scream that they saw it as a huge concern.
Closer to home a very similar dynamic applies. Where would you rather be right now?
1. In an apartment tower in Melbourne?
2. Anywhere else in Victoria?
3. Anywhere else in Australia?
I think we all know the answer there and the other states, especially the smaller population ones, would be crazy from a purely economic perspective to blow the opportunity that's been handed to them.
Big business needs to likewise face that reality. Working at head office is no longer the prize goal for the best employees. Rather, it's the place where you put the drones meanwhile the stars work from home in a place that's nowhere near the city. Smart businesses will adapt to that quickly. Those not so smart will lose the best employees to those who do adapt. Welcome to free market capitalism.
In saying all that, the dam does not collapse due to the flood. No, it collapses due to inadequate design, construction or maintenance with the flood being merely the trigger.
Same with the pandemic. It's not the first time there's been a pandemic and it won't be the last, indeed the next one may well require far more stringent measures than this one. Hence exposed businesses insure against the pandemic risk, hence the economy needs to be designed to cope with GDP that goes down at times as well as up and so on.
If those things are not in place, if businesses didn't have insurance or governments and central banks haven't allowed for times when GDP goes down, well then that's a failing on their part and the solution is to replace them with better managers who do have the ability to manage risk. Trying to cover up the problem only perpetuates it.
Realistically, what can't occur if Australia or any other country closes its borders?
Holidays and tours by professional sports teams and performing artists basically covers it.
Business meetings etc are doable online.
Manufacturing, mining, agriculture, freight etc carries on business as usual. Only real exception being if someone gambled on long distance FIFO and lost, in which case capitalism takes care of those unable to manage risk by advantaging competitors who can.
Anyone moving permanently could simply be quarantined upon arrival.
That leaves those on a short stay and who need to physically be present. Tourists, live performances of music or other things, professional sports.
Personally well I like going on holidays and I've been to plenty of concerts over the years but I find it unacceptable to knowingly sacrifice the lives of others in order to resume doing so.
Eh i agree with you @over9k
Yeah, australia's only competitive edge is in mining. That's it, it's all it has.
But it's a lot, so aus will be fine. Just not somewhere the best & brightest will migrate to.
Well yes, but 50% of the world's iron ore supply vs an order of magnitude less of its food. Sorry, should have been more specific.
"Rocks and crops", as we say.
You do not build a space agency without importing skillsAustralia has great potential to leverage of these existing industries. For example, Australia's space industry can provide critical support to our mining and agriculture sectors.
View attachment 105672
https://www.industry.gov.au/strategies-for-the-future/australian-space-agency
You do not build a space agency without importing skills
Also remember the link between defence and space:
NASA is where it is/was thanks to high tech defence contractors..and reverse..a beneficial loop
Airbus/Ariane rockets are the fruit of military cartel experience and skills.
We have zip.
I had to move skills from air defence to mining when moving in OZ .
Can list the high tech relevant areas in oz: Boeing and Eurocopter in qld, submarine in SA.
Over...
And a lot of expats who will be on the way out soon
NOT A CHANCE
An area not discussed much but of critical importance for the young and brightest is promotion.if you scratch being the surface, you will notice that WFH is a great killer of ambitious but not ambition.
You do not build a space agency without importing skills
Also remember the link between defence and space:
NASA is where it is/was thanks to high tech defence contractors..and reverse..a beneficial loop
Airbus/Ariane rockets are the fruit of military cartel experience and skills.
We have zip.
I had to move skills from air defence to mining when moving in OZ .
Can list the high tech relevant areas in oz: Boeing and Eurocopter in qld, submarine in SA.
Over...
And a lot of expats who will be on the way out soon
NOT A CHANCE
I don't use social media for science.As most people already know, Hong Kong, Singapore and Tokyo all wore masks from day one, here are the links for Vitamin D already posted on ASF
https://www.aussiestockforums.com/t...tbreak-discussion.35174/page-198#post-1080556
If someone’s age 20 then you’re probably right. Health risks are minimal and they’ll chase promotion and so on.
Once they’re 30-something with kids though, well if they choose the US then either they haven’t made it, they didn’t get those promotions and they have no real choice in what they do now, or they’re not one of the brightest. Safety tends to be a priority at that point and the US isn’t really in the race these days.
Young people chase money and success. Oldies tend to favour certainty and safety. Having children is usually the tipping point for most.
fair and agree, my son birth was what made me decline a job in the silicon valley but that was a mistake my son will not do.If someone’s age 20 then you’re probably right. Health risks are minimal and they’ll chase promotion and so on.
Once they’re 30-something with kids though, well if they choose the US then either they haven’t made it, they didn’t get those promotions and they have no real choice in what they do now, or they’re not one of the brightest. Safety tends to be a priority at that point and the US isn’t really in the race these days.
Young people chase money and success. Oldies tend to favour certainty and safety. Having children is usually the tipping point for most.
The virus becomes deadlier the older you get. You know who spends on tourism like drunken sailors?
Retirees.
The genie has absolutely been kept in the bottle in many places. To let it out would be the height of stupidity.
The missing piece of your argument is how, exactly, is the country losing?
Apart from universities and immigration, which given the duration of stay could be worked around by quarantine, what economic activity of any real benefit to the nation overall is unable to occur at present?
I do agree that ultimately a lockdown is not sustainable. But then constant growth in population or real housing prices is also not sustainable but there's plenty willing to try and kick the can on those two. Same with plenty of other things - they're not sustainable but there aren't too many in a hurry to stop them without first exhausting all possible options for their continuance.
Given that vaccine trials are commencing now, that is trials on humans, it seems a bit premature to say it won't happen. It may not happen, there may come a point where there's no choice other than to deal with that, but the options haven't been exhausted yet.
Of course if a vaccine doesn't eventuate, then that's one almighty spanner in the works of rather a lot of economic argument is it not? The argument that markets fix problems and all that - if the market doesn't come up with a vaccine despite having a truly massive incentive to do so then that's an almighty rug pull from under the entire argument for free market capitalism as being something that's sure to come up with solutions to problems. Such an outcome would likely have far broader implications than just the virus.
That said, well we may not come up with a vaccine that's entirely possible. We're not at that point yet, we've barely even tried, so to say we're going to fail at this point is akin to saying we can't put the fire out when we haven't even dumped any water in it yet. At least give it a go.
If we have come to the point where human health needs to be sacrificed in order to meet the needs of the economy then we're well past stuffed in oh so many ways.
Such a scenario amounts to the master taking orders from the servant.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?