Balancing Act Quotes

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Balancing Act: Australia Between Recession and Renewal (Quarterly Essay #61) Balancing Act: Australia Between Recession and Renewal by George Megalogenis
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“journalists fea their loss of authority in the digital age will undermine their ability to hold government to account. Yet the government has much more to worry about because the internet has empowered vested interests, and Oppositions, in a way that effectively cancel an election result within weeks of the final ballot being counted. p236”
George Megalogenis, Balancing Act: Australia Between Recession and Renewal
“Government is weaker today because the public it serves is quicker to anger, and because the Opposition has realised the safest way back to power is opposition, not policy renewal. No mandate need be respected because the Opposition can trust the media to set impossible standards for government to meet. p237”
George Megalogenis, Balancing Act: Australia Between Recession and Renewal
“Before the news and polling cycles accelerated, leaders assumed that the electorate understood reform was a long game. Not anymore. The digital age has shrunk the public attention span and lured government into making each thing it says appear to be a big idea. p225”
George Megalogenis, Balancing Act: Australia Between Recession and Renewal
“Rudd proved to be too conservative for the nation he led, while Gillard's campaign for re-election was too cynical. But the problem goes deeper than any individual's failure. Labor in office suffered a return of the identity crisis that has plagued it in its wilderness years in Opposition... the party had given up its soul to the machine. p208”
George Megalogenis, Balancing Act: Australia Between Recession and Renewal
“The argument that mining already paid its fair share [of tax] was also wrong.... On the figures the [Minerals] council supplied, mining enjoyed the fourteenth-lowest effective company-tax rate out of nineteen sectors. It paid a lower rate than manufacturing and construction, the very sectors it was crowding out. p196”
George Megalogenis, Balancing Act: Australia Between Recession and Renewal