PM Transcripts

Transcripts from the Prime Ministers of Australia

Howard, John

Period of Service: 11/03/1996 - 03/12/2007
Release Date:
23/07/1999
Release Type:
Speech
Transcript ID:
11375
Released by:
  • Howard, John Winston
TRANSCRIPT OF THE PRIME MINISTER THE HON JOHN HOWARD MP OFFICIALLY OPEN NEWCASTLE AND HUNTER BUSINESS CHAMBER'S NEW OFFICE

Subjects: economic indicators and prospects for the Hunter

Region; $2.5 million investment in a call centre for Impulse

Airlines; BHP closures

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

Thank you very much Rob Chenery. To David Simmons, to Bishop Hirst,

to the Lord Mayor, my colleague Senator John Tierney and any other

parliamentary colleagues, ladies and gentlemen.

It is a special privilege and pleasure for me to be here this morning

to open these new offices. I think this is either the third or fourth

visit that I paid to the Newcastle area in the little over three years

that I have been Prime Minister. And the one very simple thing that

I want to say to you this morning is to convey a message of optimism

and hope and a very positive message about the future.

The fact that this building is being opened and the fact that it's

being opened to service and provide as a headquarters for a very large

regional business organisation is itself a demonstration of the commitment

that many men and women in business are making to the future of Newcastle

and the Hunter Region.

And in his introductory speech, Rob Chenery spoke of the new Newcastle

and the new Hunter Region. And I think they are very apt and very

relevant words and they are the words behind which a community should

coalesce.

This part of Australia has a very rich history. This part of Australia

is seen by the rest of Australia still in a particular stereotype.

That is understandable and there's nothing to be ashamed of about

that stereotype or about that past. But like so many other communities

in Australia the world is changing and what is important for communities

is to hold onto the good things from the past but by the same token

change and embrace where it is necessary. And I have certainly found

on my visits to Newcastle over the last few years that there is a

determination on the part of the local community to do exactly that.

The economic indicators for the Hunter Region are very strong. The

prospects for new investment and new industry are extremely positive.

And I have found in the contact that I have had with people in business

in this area that they are filled with optimism. They understand the

challenges that exist, they know that there are areas of difficulty

and hurt and loss and deprivation but above all they are looking forward

to a more diverse future. And I think the opportunities that are here

not only in continuing areas of manufacturing and mining but also

in the service industries and in new areas of manufacturing endeavour

I think those opportunities are significant.

Now, this morning is not, as Rob and David correctly said, it is not

an occasion or a forum for a litany of announcements of this or that.

I merely remind this audience of an announcement I made last night

of an in-principle commitment by the Federal Government to a $2.5

million investment in a call centre for Impulse Airlines. It will

be subject to certain conditions but I understand from discussion

with the company those conditions will be able to be met. And that

will lead to the generation of some 70 to 80 jobs directly and more

jobs indirectly.

Of itself not a huge announcement but one of a number which add to

the diversification of the employment base and the business opportunities

of this area. And a few days ago my colleague, John Moore the Defence

Minister, announced that Boeing was the successful contractor for

the early warning system. And much of the infrastructure for that

will be centered around Williamtown. And when you add together the

various investments that are going to be made in the aerospace industry

in and around Williamtown they will make a very significant contribution

to the diversification and change in the employment opportunities

and the business base of the region.

Now, all of this is occurring against the background of a national

economy that is performing extremely well. And it's important that

we understand that the national economy is in good shape. We are enjoying

the strongest growth of any industrialised nation in the world. We

have inflation and interest rates that are at a 30 year low. Nationally,

we have had strong employment growth with an unemployment rate nationally

which is lower than it's been for 10 years. We have very high levels

of business investment and lamb notwithstanding we have even increased

our exports to the United States - but I emphasise lamb notwithstanding.

So it is, generally speaking, a very positive picture. And it's a

picture that ought to fill Australians as a whole with a great deal

of sense of optimism. We were able to stare down the worst Asian economic

downturn in 30 or 40 years. And in all the visits that I have paid

to the city of New York, which is the financial capital of the world,

in the various positions I have occupied, the visit I paid last week

found me receiving more than on any other occasion a universal acceptance

that Australia was doing well. And a universal belief that the economic

policies that were being followed at the present time were delivering

results that were very positive.

Now, I mention all of those things not in any kind of triumphal sense

but I think it's important to be realistic. It's important to recognise

difficulty where it exists but it's also important not to be so overwhelmed

with the negative side of things that you lose sight of the positive.

And there's a very good national story to be told and there's an increasingly

good regional story to be told in Newcastle and the Hunter. And it's

important that people in this room tell it. It's important that I

tell it. But it's also important that we understand that there are

fellow Australians in this community who are suffering hurt and alienation.

And I understand that and I have just come from a discussion with

the Prime Minister's Taskforce on Newcastle that I established a couple

of years ago that is jointly chaired by Rob Chenery and Kevin Maher

of the Australian Workers' Union. And that Taskforce has kept in regular

touch with me. We discussed this morning a number of proposals relating

to improved access to employment support services after the redundancies

take place at BHP in September.

So hand-in-hand with recognising and extolling and drawing attention

to the employment opportunities and the business opportunities that

are growing I also recognise that there are amongst the people of

Newcastle those and their families who are seeing things more difficult

and are having harder times and are suffering loss that other sections

of the community aren't. And a community that brings together the

commitment of the Federal Government, the State Government, of the

union movement, of the business community, of the churches and of

philanthropic individuals. A community that can get all of those together

in what I might call a grand social coalition to tackle community

problems is a community that will look after difficult areas but equally

to reach out and to build new prosperity and to build new opportunities.

And I have sought in the time that I have been Prime Minister to work

closely with the New South Wales Government, to put aside any political

differences, to recognise that it's important for both of us to work

together in relation to issues that affect Newcastle. We might disagree

on other matters but when it comes to helping people through difficult

times it's incumbent on governments at a State and federal level to

work together as closely as possible.

But this is a very important day for the business community of Newcastle.

And Philip Holt, the National Director of your organisation, reminded

me that today was the culmination of something that had started in

1917 or 1918 and he showed me the minute book. And he said, if you

thought you'd completed a long journey with the GST you are only just

beginning. And I think it's a reminder of how things change or in

a sense but how they really stay the same. And it has been, I know,

a collaborative effort between many people that have brought the business

elements of this community together.

But it is a special part of Australia. It has a very diverse base.

It's history is steeped in manufacturing and mining. That is still

part of its future but the future is broader and more diverse. And

it's important that the rest of Australia understands that that future

is broader and more diverse. And it's important that the rest of Australia

understand the spirit of this part of the world. It's one that I have

been visiting on a regular basis long before I became Prime Minister

and one with which I am very familiar.

So I was therefore very pleased indeed to be invited to come here

again to open these new premises. To congratulate the people of Newcastle,

to congratulate the Business Chamber on its commitment to entrepreneurial

activity and private enterprise which is the foundation of the prosperity

of any community and without which prosperity is impossible. I congratulate

the businessmen and women whatever their businesses are on the contribution

that they are making to the community and pulling the appropriate

cord to declare these premises duly open. Thank you.

[ends]

11375