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Huge resources sector investments have not delivered significant benefits to Australians – union

6th December 2013

By: Esmarie Iannucci

Creamer Media Senior Deputy Editor: Australasia

  

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The major investment in Australia’s resources sector has failed to deliver any significant benefits to Australians, a new report by worker union CFMEU has found.

‘The Australian Resources Boom: Sharing the Benefits’ report found that record mining company profits far outstripped growth in resource taxes and royalties, while the array of deductions available to mining companies left them with a corporate tax rate lower than any other industry’s.

The report states that the mining industry’s cash flow after operating costs nearly doubled between 2006/7 and 2011/12, while the share of industry income going to workers has fallen from 30% in 1990 to the current 20%.

Investment in the resources sector has seen the rate of employment in the industry grow, but CFMEU national president Tony Maher notes that much of this growth has been in the fly-in, fly-out operations.

“In mining towns themselves, a chronic deficit in social infrastructure, including housing, health and community facilities, has barely been addressed, making life in those towns increasingly difficult and expensive.”

CFMEU mining and energy division general secretary Andrew Vickers says Australians should not be arguing about how to fund education, public services and support for the elderly in the midst of an unprecedented resources boom.

“We need to do better. We’ve just experienced an investment boom the likes of which we’ve never seen before and we’re in the middle of a production boom with many years to go,” says Vickers.

“We can’t keep squandering the opportunity to deliver real benefits to Australians from the finite mineral resources that belong to all of us. We need a federal government willing to stand up to self-interested mining companies and manage this resources boom in a fair and sustainable way.”

Vickers points out that the minerals resource rent tax (MRRT) could have been better constructed, but notes that it is a first step towards addressing this challenge.

“We shouldn’t dump the MRRT – we should build on it for the long term.”

Newly elected Prime Minister Tony Abbott has moved to abolish the MRRT, intro- ducing legislation into Parliament with a view to abolishing the tax by the start of July next year.

Meanwhile, the CFMEU report also accuses the mining industry of not driving enough growth in other sectors of the eco- nomy, arguing that the resources sector should be used to extend opportunities to manufacturing and services firms engaged in offshore engineering.

The CFMEU report comes just days after the Minerals Council of Australia released figures showing that Australian miners had spent about A$34.7-billion on community infrastructure, indigenous contractors, local suppliers and other community activities in 2011/12.

Edited by Martin Zhuwakinyu
Creamer Media Magazine Managing Editor

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