Dynamics Downunder: Australian Economic Strategy and Performance from the Palaeolithic to the Twenty-first Century
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Snooks, Graeme Donald
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Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR), Research School of Social Sciences, The Australian National University
Abstract
This essay attempts to quantify and explain the economic performance of the Great South
Land – later called Australia – from the first migrations some 60,000 years ago to the
present, and beyond. A general dynamic theory – the ‘dynamic-strategy’ theory – has
been employed to provide a new interpretation of ‘dynamics Downunder’. It is shown,
among other things, that the bold attempt from the 1910s to the 1960s to turn aside from
the traditional development policy of exogenously driven natural-resource exploitation in
order to embark on an endogenously determined dynamic process, has broken down
during the course of the present generation. This was mainly due to a failure of ‘strategic
leadership’ on the part of recent Australian governments that have, quite rightly,
dismantled the framework of protection, but have failed to replace it with the
infrastructure of strategically relevant technological ideas. Once again Australia’s
economic prosperity depends heavily on the fluctuating fortunes of the global economy.
While in the nineteenth century this took the form of reliance on the prosperity of Britain,
today it centres on the continuing growth of Japan and China. This critical problem has
been exacerbated by misconceived monetary policies that are damaging the central
endogenous dynamic mechanism. What then of the future? It all depends on whether
strategic leadership can ever be rediscovered.
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