PM Transcripts

Transcripts from the Prime Ministers of Australia

Howard, John

Period of Service: 11/03/1996 - 03/12/2007
Release Date:
27/11/1998
Release Type:
Speech
Transcript ID:
10954
Released by:
  • Howard, John Winston
27 November 1998 TRANSCRIPT OF THE PRIME MINISTER THE HON JOHN HOWARD MP ADDRESS AT THE BRW/ALCATEL BUSINESS ACHIEVEMENT AWARDS RITZ CARLTON, SYDNEY

E&OE....................................................................................................

To you Robert and to Ron Spithill, to all the other very distinguished

business guests, ladies and gentlemen. It is a great delight to

share this occasion with you tonight.

And Robert spoke of some of the things that we do well in this

country. And I thought tonight that we were, at long last, starting

to get things into proper balance because last night I had the great

pleasure of attending the annual dinner of the Sports Hall of Fame

at the Crown Casino in Melbourne. And this is a great event and

every year they make an award or, in fact, inaugurated a new award

last night, the Sir Donald Bradman award for the outstanding sports

performance and it was jointly won last night by Heather Turland

and Mark Taylor. And they also inducted into the Hall of Fame, as

a new sporting legend, that great tennis player, Margaret Court.

And I thought what a tremendous characteristic it was of Australians

to properly honour the men and women who brought such sporting pride

and pleasure to us and to our nation.

I think tonight we are quite appropriately in a different city

but in an equally impressive way we are honouring business achievement.

And for a long time we haven't really done that as well as

we should have done. And I do think BRW and Alcatel deserve our

praise and our compliment for the fact that they are leading the

way in honouring the great achievers in Australian business because

we do need to treat them like sporting heroes. And I say that as

a passionate follower of Australian sporting achievement and a passionate

supporter of particular sports in Australia but then Prime Ministers

are meant to support all sports, and I do.

But, ladies and gentlemen, it is very important that we honour

excellence in Australian business. And we have a gathering here

tonight at an extraordinarily interesting time for the Australian

economy. I've just come back from a meeting of leaders of the

APEC nations in Kuala Lumpur and the strongest impression that I

took away from that meeting was the new respect and the new esteem

in which Australia is held at the present time by dint of her economic

strength and some of the achievements and some of the qualities

of Australia and Australians that have shone through in the recent

Asian Pacific economic difficulties.

One of the things that I think the economic downturn in Asia has

done is to demonstrate, in a quite emphatic way, the strengths of

this country. What could be a more attractive conjunction of circumstances

to have a low inflation, low interest rate, might I, I hope, not

too immodestly say, a well-run economy, to have a stable banking

system, a transparent banking system, to have a very stable political

system and to have a congenial lifestyle and to have, amongst our

population, hundreds of thousands of Australian citizens who have

very close cultural family and personal links with the nations of

the Asian Pacific region.

Now, when you add all of those things up, that is a remarkably

potent mix and it's a remarkably attractive mix to people who

are looking for some kind of oasis of stability and predictability.

And some of those things that perhaps a few years ago some may have

regarded as irksome, unnecessary, perhaps not adventurous enough,

are suddenly the credentials that make this an appealing country

- the transparency of our banking system, for example. And we have

a world-class financial system now. And when the benefits of the

changes in the taxation reform flow through, particularly in relation

to the removal of financial institutions duties and bank account

debits tax and the removal of stamp duty on share transactions,

it will become an even more attractive place as a financial centre

in this part of the world.

So what I think one of the...that the Asian crisis has done

is to highlight again the tremendous strengths. And I was saying

to Ron earlier over dinner that one of the many endearing things

about Australians – and he, as somebody in the forefront of

information technology, finds it particularly endearing – and

that is that we've always been great devourers and rapid devourers

of new technology. And it is one of the characteristics of Australians.

And that is also something that is standing us in tremendously good

stead in present circumstances.

I think the Australian economy has done better than just about

anybody in this room expected. I have to confess there were occasions

earlier this year when I thought it would slow down a little more

than it has but, overall, it has performed very well. And all of

the indicators coming to us are very positive and are very strong.

And it is a fact that we are probably enjoying about as great a

period of economic stability and strength and attractiveness that

I can remember in the 24 years that I've been in Parliament.

I entered Parliament in 1974 when there was a period when the world

was beginning to change very rapidly. And the manufacturers will

nod their heads in particular. And it was at a time when all the

constance and all the verities of that long period of economic stability

after the end of World War II was seeming to come to an end. Now,

we haven't gone back. We've gone to a new period of opportunity.

And the world is very different and it's forever different

from what it was 25 years ago but we do have now some strengths

and we have a tremendous opportunity. And I am really tremendously

excited that I've got the privilege of being Prime Minister

of this country on the cusp of all these great events that we're

going to celebrate - our centenary as a federation, the coming of

the Olympic Games to Australia and the opportunities that this very

strong country, economically and politically in our part of the

world, now has.

The fact that we are seen in the region as having the endowments

of a western country without some of the encumbrances, perhaps of

our North American friends and some of our European friends, in

dealing with the countries of the region. We've sort of got

all the advantages without any of the disadvantages of our history

and of our culture and here we are in this part of the world and

we can be a very special intersection of culture and of economic

opportunity and of political history.

One of the messages that comes out of the last year is that the

process of reform is never-ended. Those who argue that having done

something about the industrial relations system, having essentially

removed many of the tariff barriers that Australia used to have,

having brought about further financial sector reforms and ultimately

when the taxation is reformed that that will be the end of it. That,

of course, is wrong. There's never an end to economic reform

because new challenges come along which invite you to make further

changes.

So, ladies and gentlemen, all of this adds up to a time and a community

that needs business achievers. It does need risk-takers. It does

need people who excel. It does need a nation that sees its men and

women of business excellence as being equally important to our country

as our great sports men and women. And tonight is a tribute to those

people and tonight is a reminder to all of us, to those in government,

not only of the inadequacy of the capital gains tax system but also

it's a reminder to us of just how important it is to have business

heroes and business achievers and just how important it is to the

future of our country that we have people who are world-class performers

in business.

So I am delighted to be here tonight. I do compliment the sponsors

of tonight's gathering. I congratulate, in advance, those who

will be announced as winners and I thank all of you for the support

that you're giving to an occasion that is very important to

the future of our country as we go into the 21st Century.

Thank you.

[ends]

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