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Fair Share: Competing claims and Australia’s economic future by Stephen Bell and Michael Keating

by
June-July 2018, no. 402

Fair Share: Competing claims and Australia’s economic future by Stephen Bell and Michael Keating

Melbourne University Press, $59.99 hb, 408 pp, 9780522872279

Fair Share: Competing claims and Australia’s economic future by Stephen Bell and Michael Keating

by
June-July 2018, no. 402

This is not a book with immediate appeal for the general reader, who is likely to be deterred by the denseness of its analysis. That is unfortunate, because its message deserves to be widely disseminated. It provides a useful account of economic history since the end of World War II, both internationally and in Australia, and ultimately offers a bespoke reform agenda.

The authors’ account begins with the 1977 analysis by the OECD of the stagflation then globally rampant. The inter-government organisation argued that the principal cause of this malaise was ‘the competing claims on resources exerted by different socio-economic groups’. According to Stephen Bell and Michael Keating, the main agents propelling such competing claims are workers, business, capital holders, voters, and community and state élites. Forty years later, the authors see those agents still making their competing claims, but now enormous power is in the hands of the wealthy; the result is the vast inequality highlighted by Thomas Picketty’s influential Capital in the Twenty-First Century (2013) and preoccupying economists and politicians alike.

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