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 2014: we changed minds

By any measure, it’s been a big year for The Australia Institute. As the government sought to make sweeping changes, we worked with politicians across party lines to safeguard important policies and to shape public and parliamentary debates. Here are some of our highlights from 2014.

We worked to protect the RET

We helped secure the support of the Palmer United Party, Senator Ricky Muir, and in turn a majority of the senate, to protect the Renewable Energy Target, the Australian Renewable Energy Agency, the Clean Energy Finance Corporation, and the Climate Change Authority. By protecting the RET and these leading climate agencies, the senate safeguarded more than $11 billion worth of government investment in renewable and clean energy, and up to an additional $35 billion worth of investment in clean energy, leveraged from the private sector. In June, Clive Palmer and former Liberal leader, John Hewson, launched our report Fighting Dirty on Clean Energy.

We revealed billions in subsides to mining

We challenged the idea that mining is good for humanity and generated enormous political attention about the downsides of coal and coal seam gas through 2014, continuously enraging the industry. Our report Mining the age of entitlement revealed for the first time the extraordinary extent of state government subsidies to the mining industry – $17.6 billion per year!

We made superannuation exciting

Our ground-breaking work on superannuation tax concessions is leading an unstoppable public discussion for tax inequality reform. Just this week, the OECD echoed our findings that Australia’s superannuation tax concessions, which are set to reach $50.7 billion by 2016-17, are overly-generous and unsustainable. Even the Murray Review, led by former Commonwealth Bank boss and the inaugural Chair of the Future Fund, David Murray, has called for action in this area.

We reframed the divestment debate and backlash

In October, when the government lashed out at the Australian National University’s decision to divest from seven mining companies, we enlisted your help to publish an open letter of support to the ANU in the Canberra Times and the Australian Financial Review. The letter defended the ANU’s right to divest on social and environmental grounds, and was signed by dozens of investors, senior business representatives and other high-profile Australians including Malcolm Fraser and John Hewson. A further 10,000 people signed our online petition!

After the open letters, IPA, CISjournalists and column writers had to work “of course institutions have the right to sell shares whenever they want” into their attacks on ANU. Even former Treasurer Peter Costello was forced to concede “it’s no big deal to sell a stock.”

We revealed millions in subsidies for Tasmania’s logging industry

Our work on forestry has played a key role in overcoming the common misconception that the Tasmanian logging industry is a big employer, and in highlighting that the state government is overcharging electricity consumers while paying subsidies to Forestry Tasmania. We helped position forestry subsidies as a key issue in the Tasmanian state election. Without that work, there is no way the Tasmanian Liberal Opposition would have promised an end to forestry subsidies – a promise they must now deliver on in Government.

We eroded the ‘budget emrgency’

We busted myths about the government’s ‘budget emergency’, and helped lead the effort to block $12 billion worth of Federal Budget funding cuts. We audited the auditors following the National Commission of Audit, revealing that their report was deeply flawed.

To all of our supporters, we thank you for coming on the journey with us. All in all, it’s been a great year, and we look forward to getting stuck right in again in 2015!

Wishing you a safe and happy holiday season, and all the best for the New Year.

The TAI team

TAI in the media

We’ve had a lot of fun getting our faces on TV and our ideas in print throughout the year, sharing research and contributing a unique perspective on the politics of the day.

From Richard’s fortnightly columns in The Canberra Times and the Australian Financial Review, to Ben’s regular spots on Sky News and The Drum, and everything in between – the Australia Institute clocked up an average of more than 200 media mentions a week in 2014!

The sixth annual Go Home on Time Day made a massive splash in media and highlighted our research, which finds Australians contribute a cumulative $110 billion worth of unpaid overtime every year!

We appeared on The Project not once, not twice but 14 times, and we made the front page of The Saturday Paper. We challenged the mining industry and its advocates at every opportunity. Even Alan Jones paid us some credit, agreeing that the privately-owned Galilee mine should not be propped up with public funding (we didn’t see that one coming!)

You can’t reframe a debate unless you’re in the debate – and the Australia Institute is always in the debate.

Coming in early 2015: safeguarding QLD against corruption

Join former NSW ICAC Commissioner, David Ipp, and a host of legal transparency experts this February for Accountability and the Law: Safeguarding QLD against Corruption. This special election-eve conference will examine why Queensland needs protection from corruption in politics and industry like never before.

 

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