Re: SA Economy
Posted: Fri Sep 20, 2024 5:56 pm
Then why did you post a link to a japanese made car?rev wrote:This is about the South Australian economy, and innovation, investment, new high tech industries and manufacturing, and jobs.
Adelaide's Premier Development and Construction Site
https://sensational-adelaide.com/forum/
Then why did you post a link to a japanese made car?rev wrote:This is about the South Australian economy, and innovation, investment, new high tech industries and manufacturing, and jobs.
Doesn't really give any hard numbers.abc wrote: ↑Fri Sep 20, 2024 11:40 amcurious article about EVs in China
https://www.news.com.au/technology/moto ... 29e327d6cf
Against my better judgement i'll respond directly to you.
Let me spare you any further childish "but why, but why" questions, The discussion you jumped in on to troll, was about innovation and advances in solar & home battery technology locally, which could have economic benefits.
We'll probably hit the 2 million mark sooner then expected, as federally Labor wont really cut back their mass migration program, and I haven't heard anything serious from the Coalition that they'll curb those numbers.SRW wrote: ↑Sat Sep 21, 2024 9:00 am
On the face of it, best run of growth for SA in decades, but due less to fundamentals and more to post-pandemic snapback.
Our growth was largely overseas migration, so if this is cut hard I wonder whether SA will still hit 2 million by 2030 as targetted.
On top of that, now that SA's relative affordability has evaporated our recent recovery in interstate migration may also reverse.
Not that population matters in and of itself, but our slice of the national pie will get smaller and smaller as others grow ahead. Fewer seats in parliament, reduced political power, less funding priority.
The government (both state and federal) needs to go all-in on building homes. The market has failed, we need supply, supply, supply.
Genuine question, why electrify when electricity is so expensive and businesses are folding because of it? What's the incentive?rubberman wrote: ↑Tue Sep 24, 2024 6:59 pmSome good news.
https://glamadelaide.com.au/sa-port-tur ... nvestment/
The article explains why they did it.HiTouch wrote: ↑Wed Sep 25, 2024 7:38 pmGenuine question, why electrify when electricity is so expensive and businesses are folding because of it? What's the incentive?rubberman wrote: ↑Tue Sep 24, 2024 6:59 pmSome good news.
https://glamadelaide.com.au/sa-port-tur ... nvestment/
once again, no evidence to back up what you say...just word saladrubberman wrote: ↑Thu Sep 26, 2024 8:43 amThe article explains why they did it.HiTouch wrote: ↑Wed Sep 25, 2024 7:38 pmGenuine question, why electrify when electricity is so expensive and businesses are folding because of it? What's the incentive?rubberman wrote: ↑Tue Sep 24, 2024 6:59 pmSome good news.
https://glamadelaide.com.au/sa-port-tur ... nvestment/
Businesses are created and fold all the time in a market economy.
Businesses fold for many reasons, but you want to watch out for the unscrupulous types who cherry pick reasons to suit their own agendas.
For example, if someone has an agenda to blame the Reserve Bank of Australia, they find a bunch of businesses that have folded because of high interest rates. Then blame the RBA.
If they have an anti small business agenda, they find a few small businesses that made silly decisions and folded. They cherry pick those to prove that small business owners are dunces.
If someone has an agenda, there's almost certainly a few bankruptcies they can use to back it up.
The only time to take those seriously is when they are presented in the context of all the reasons for businesses folding: the world economy, interest rates, business costs, specific issues for the firms involved. Anything less is cherry picking.
At the moment, power prices don't help, but interest rates are crippling too, and I feel sorry for businesses...and home owners trapped there.
As for power prices, we have a private enterprise system where the generators, transmission, and retailers are all private. A bit like Coles and Woolies. The present prices are the result.
Lol. Interest rates haven't gone up? Businesses don't go bankrupt for all sorts of reasons? Focusing on one reason out of many isn't cherrypicking?abc wrote: ↑Thu Sep 26, 2024 10:15 amonce again, no evidence to back up what you say...just word saladrubberman wrote: ↑Thu Sep 26, 2024 8:43 amThe article explains why they did it.
Businesses are created and fold all the time in a market economy.
Businesses fold for many reasons, but you want to watch out for the unscrupulous types who cherry pick reasons to suit their own agendas.
For example, if someone has an agenda to blame the Reserve Bank of Australia, they find a bunch of businesses that have folded because of high interest rates. Then blame the RBA.
If they have an anti small business agenda, they find a few small businesses that made silly decisions and folded. They cherry pick those to prove that small business owners are dunces.
If someone has an agenda, there's almost certainly a few bankruptcies they can use to back it up.
The only time to take those seriously is when they are presented in the context of all the reasons for businesses folding: the world economy, interest rates, business costs, specific issues for the firms involved. Anything less is cherry picking.
At the moment, power prices don't help, but interest rates are crippling too, and I feel sorry for businesses...and home owners trapped there.
As for power prices, we have a private enterprise system where the generators, transmission, and retailers are all private. A bit like Coles and Woolies. The present prices are the result.
Interest rates in the 1990s were in double figuresrubberman wrote: ↑Thu Sep 26, 2024 10:40 amLol. Interest rates haven't gone up? Businesses don't go bankrupt for all sorts of reasons? Focusing on one reason out of many isn't cherrypicking?abc wrote: ↑Thu Sep 26, 2024 10:15 amonce again, no evidence to back up what you say...just word saladrubberman wrote: ↑Thu Sep 26, 2024 8:43 am
The article explains why they did it.
Businesses are created and fold all the time in a market economy.
Businesses fold for many reasons, but you want to watch out for the unscrupulous types who cherry pick reasons to suit their own agendas.
For example, if someone has an agenda to blame the Reserve Bank of Australia, they find a bunch of businesses that have folded because of high interest rates. Then blame the RBA.
If they have an anti small business agenda, they find a few small businesses that made silly decisions and folded. They cherry pick those to prove that small business owners are dunces.
If someone has an agenda, there's almost certainly a few bankruptcies they can use to back it up.
The only time to take those seriously is when they are presented in the context of all the reasons for businesses folding: the world economy, interest rates, business costs, specific issues for the firms involved. Anything less is cherry picking.
At the moment, power prices don't help, but interest rates are crippling too, and I feel sorry for businesses...and home owners trapped there.
As for power prices, we have a private enterprise system where the generators, transmission, and retailers are all private. A bit like Coles and Woolies. The present prices are the result.
The world must be terribly frustrating for you.
Lolol.
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I wonder if there were bankruptcies then too?abc wrote: ↑Thu Sep 26, 2024 12:59 pmInterest rates in the 1990s were in double figures
Power was affordable in the 1990s. Opportunities abound. Nowadays there is no hope for small businesses thanks to spiralling property/rent and energy prices.rubberman wrote: ↑Thu Sep 26, 2024 2:15 pmI wonder if there were bankruptcies then too?
Could they be connected?
On a per capita basis, SA is doing far better than NSW, Vic and Qld. It has a much lower bankruptcy rate than those. We have 4% of total bankruptcies but 6.7% of the population of Australia.
50% fewer bankruptcies than Australia as a whole. Just the facts.
https://asic.gov.au/about-asic/news-cen ... s-failing/