The Forum > Article Comments > No more excuses for trade > Comments
No more excuses for trade : Comments
By Henry Thornton, published 7/3/2006Can we afford not to reform Australia's tax system?
- Pages:
-
- 1
-
- All
- Pages:
-
- 1
-
- All
The National Forum | Donate | Your Account | On Line Opinion | Forum | Blogs | Polling | About |
Syndicate RSS/XML |
|
About Us :: Search :: Discuss :: Feedback :: Legals :: Privacy |
To become the "poor White trash of Asia" as Lee Kwan Yew famously but so far incorrectly predicted, may be no bad thing. According to an article by Lydia Polgreen in The New York Times yesterday, http://www.iht.com/articles/2006/03/06/news/optimism.php :
"One glance at the statistical profile of the continent's 900 million people will tell you that Africans can expect to live the shortest lives, earn the lowest incomes and suffer some of the worst misrule on the planet. They are more likely than anyone on earth to bury their children before the age of 5, to become infected with HIV, to die from malaria and tuberculosis, to require food aid.
"Yet a recent survey by Gallup International Association of 50,000 people across the world found that Africans are the most optimistic people. Asked whether 2006 would be better than 2005, 57 percent said yes. Asked if they would be more prosperous this year than last, 55 percent said yes.
"These data bear out what I see all the time as I travel across sub-Saharan Africa as a correspondent: that every single day lived here, each birth, wedding, graduation, sunrise and sunset, is, in ways large and small, a daily triumph of hope over experience.
"Hope, it seems, is Africa's most abundant harvest."
The Gallup finding is consistent with the latest World Values Survey finding, http://www.worldvaluessurvey.org/ that, incredibly, Nigerians constitute the happiest nation of the hundred and something surveyed. (Over 65% of people surveyed described themselves as "very happy"; the figure for Australia was just over 40%.)
While it would mean junking most people's current aspirations, it is possible that we would be more content and more optimistic living in a "White trash" economy than we are in the present one.
Perhaps that is the secret Howard-Keating vision for Australia.