Government approves Santos Barossa pipeline and sea dumping

The Australia Institute Media Release   Environment Minister Tanya Plibersek’s Department has approved a…

If The Jackboots Actually Fit …

By Jane Salmon   If The Jackboots Actually Fit … Why Does Labor Keep…

Distinctions Without Difference: The Security Council on Gaza…

The UN Security Council presents one of the great contradictions of power…

How the supermarkets lost their way in Oz

By Callen Sorensen Karklis   Many Australians are heard saying that they’re feeling the…

Purgatorial Torments: Assange and the UK High Court

What is it about British justice that has a certain rankness to…

Why A Punch In The Face May Be…

Now I'm not one who believes in violence as a solution to…

Does God condone genocide?

By Bert Hetebry Stan Grant points out in his book The Queen is…

As Yemen enters tenth year of war, militarisation…

Oxfam Australia Media Release   As Yemen enters its tenth year of war, its…

«
»
Facebook

Problem Industries and The Way Forward

The industrial revolution, for all its flaws and all the misery it caused, was a major step forward in human civilisation. Goods were now available cheaper than ever before and greater movement of population took place as people moved to what would later become factory towns in search of work. The creation of industries around producing certain goods created competition to build a better mousetrap. However, the extension of industry, with its desire for profit, to encompass essential elements of society is part of the reason we are in the situation we are now. From healthcare, to prison to the very defence of the nation, the involvement of industry in society’s essentials is a true problem.

Problem Industry One: Health Insurance

Perhaps the most egregious example of private industry involved where it is not wanted is for-profit health insurance. When there is a direct link between company profits and people’s health – you know, their continued existence – we have a problem. America is the most serious example of this, where rapacious, for-profit companies make money by, to paraphrase Bill Maher, screwing people out of coverage. It is in their interest to deny as much coverage as possible, because paying out claims is a running cost, and those tend to eat into profits. The very purpose of business is to make money, and as much of it as possible for the precious shareholders choir.

I am not advocating for banning all insurance companies, but merely limiting their scope. Supplemental care – that is optional extras (usually voluntary procedures) – is a good place for the private sector. In this context, all fees, premiums and other outlays are voluntary. But there should be a baseline of essential care that is provided by what is currently being advocated by Bernie Sanders and the pretenders auditioning for the part: Medcare4All. This is essentially a massive national health insurance plan where costs are largely (if not completely) covered by tax revenue. The average amount of money paid into the scheme is actually less because the insurance pool is so much larger. Unlike the private insurance company, a government run system does not answer to shareholders and has no desire to turn a profit.

Problem Industry Two: Prisons 

Only marginally less egregious than a profit motive around healthcare is one around keeping people incarcerated. Those with such a motive are part of what is called the Prison Industrial Complex. These are businesses whose profits are tied in with the size of the prison population. This is not merely those who run the actual prisons. It is the security firms, those who manufacture the weapons, the uniforms, the clothes and meals for the inmates and all the associated items. All of these have to be paid for, and the more people in prison the wider the profit margin.

The very idea of linking profit to taking away people’s physical freedom is almost as outrageous as linking it to their health. This is a true perversion of the very idea of industry. Industry was intended to produce goods quickly and cheaply for commercial products. This refers to products like mattresses, video games, squash rackets and so on. Actual commercial goods. There is no place for the government in any of those items and their design, production and distribution. But when it comes to certain essential elements of society, if there is to be a place for private industry, it must be heavily regulated due to the profit-motives that are built in.

Problem Industry Three: The Military 

The final industry worthy of mention is the military. In his farewell address, former US President Eisenhower warned against allowing undue power and influence to what he called ‘the military industrial complex’. Clearly, the Prison Industrial Complex mentioned is derived from this. During the war, the creation of a permanent armaments industry was seen as necessary, with factories being converted to the production of tanks and planes. However, it never actually stopped following the end of the war. US foreign policy post WW2 has been highly interventionist, with many countries being invaded, some multiple times, for purposes of extracting resources and installing corporate friendly governments.

As just one example, see the coup in Iran in 1953 to install the Shah. The immediate context for the coup was the previous government’s moves to nationalise the oil industry and distribute the proceeds to the people. Western corporations could not tolerate that, so the coup was staged and a tyrant installed. Remember, this is from the society that claims to be in favour of democracy and human rights. Indeed is all I have to say to that.

Conclusion: The Way Forward

You can see the problem and its solution coming, can you not? The issue is corruption: money in politics. Corporations would never have been granted the degree of influence they have were it not for our corrupt politicians. The deregulation and increasingly fascist relationship between corporations and government would never have been allowed to happen if it were not for corruption.

The purpose of this piece has been to outline three main industries were profits are determined by negatively impacting people’s lives: health, prison and armed combat. As long as these facets of society remain subject to the rationales of private industry (profit at all costs) there can, and will, be no progress.

To end, two quotes from people who get it

Jailing people, really, when you think about it, turned out to be a for-profit industry. I don’t know how we didn’t see it all these years

Bill Maher

But my favourite has to be Star Trek DS9’s Quark, who said

No-one ever went broke selling weapons

7 comments

Login here Register here
  1. RosemaryJ36

    The privatisation of caring enterprises benefits shareholders first and foremost.

  2. Ken

    This is a very good assessment of what needs to be fixed

  3. New England Cocky

    An interesting article that barely touches on the many other impacts of corporations upon citizens. Take agriculture for example.

    Since at least the 1980s the US banks foreclosed on family farms to aggregate them into large holdings for corporations to use as legal tax minimisation investments. The flow on effect from this has been to increase demand of irrigation water for broad acre water and the development of glasshouse intensive cultivation of many crops often with high water demands.

    This has led to over-licensing irrigation water by unthinking metropolitan bureaucrats and the ‘new’ phenomenon of competition between town drinking water supplies and glasshouse crop production.

    Again, the unthinking metropolitan bureaucrats have adversely impacted urban regional communities by granting licences to access town water supplies for export crops grown by foreign owned agricultural investment corporations dedicated to producing points for overseas resident shareholders.

    Meanwhile, the mining industry prepares to dig coal and extract CSG in NW NSW and demand from government access to the already over licensed rivers for water to use for dust control in the mining operations.

    It would be reasonable to assume that some financial political patronage may be involved as this is now one way corporations induce governments to spend taxpayer funds on building infrastructure for agricultural enterprises.

    Otherwise an ordinary person could reasonably presume that the National$ politicians would support the Australian voters in urban regional communities rather than the foreign owned multinational corporations. It is a sad reality that the National$ Party has forgotten their voter constituency.

  4. Hotspringer

    There is no corruption in politics, Albo himself says so, so it must be true!

  5. andy56

    in australia, we need to move away from real estate and mining. We need to identify new technologies and invest heavily, as in 30-40billion to become world dominant. Areas i can identify are 1/ hydrogen/ammonia/fuel cells.
    2/ medical research.. Most other fields are saturated and we would be coming from a long way behind. I am sure there are others that we can identify without too much difficulty, but then you need to eliminate ideology thats failed first. Then you need to imprison the politicians who gave us Fraudband. We need to make sure politicians dont stuff it up by playing partisan politics. Actually, putting Tony Abbott in prison with his mate Bolt would progress politics by a large margin.

    No country has progressed by eliminating taxes and shrinking. The biggest example was the roman empire, virtually gone overnight.
    America has proven that a strong government involvement, ie the space race has a hugh beneficial knock on effect.
    They still practice the idea but have now substituted the military for NASA. The rest is all BS.

  6. andy56

    Albo reminds me of Beazly. Marshmellow on policies. Albo needs to grab Morrisons juggular and not let go. All this goodie two shoes does is make him look the fool. No need to shift policy direction, just keep hammering on the same points till the tide turns. And it will when the shit hits the fan, this year or next.
    Its obvious what Morrisons ploy is. Same as on water policies. HIDE FROM INQUISITION. No policies means no scrutiny and they can just hide away. The term bludger should be pointed in that direction at every turn, every interview, every question time. Give them a taste of Tony Abbott.
    liberals are bludgers, liberals are bludgers, liberals are bludgers.
    There is ample evidence that can be used as proof. How many days has parliament sat over the last year?

  7. Kerri

    If big business won’t pay a living wage, then people need to get their medical care, education etc from government.
    And government need to raise the funds for that by taxing big business.
    Will never happen.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

The maximum upload file size: 2 MB. You can upload: image, audio, video, document, spreadsheet, interactive, text, archive, code, other. Links to YouTube, Facebook, Twitter and other services inserted in the comment text will be automatically embedded. Drop file here

Return to home page