How does a country go from being highly investible to completely uninvestible? In many cases this seemingly happens overnight.
Prior to the Chávez administration, Venezuela was a highly investible country, with an economy that was the envy of their South American counterparts. Now, thanks to an unstable socialist government and unexpected legislative changes, no prudent investor would put their money anywhere near Venezuela. In finance, this concept is known as legislative risk.
AUSTRALIA: LEGISLATIVE RISK-OFF
In Australia, we have always prided ourselves on an economy that punches well above our geopolitical weight. Despite being a small and distant country, we have adopted a favourable attitude towards foreign investment and maintained an active foreign exchange market with minimal capital controls. This has earned Australia AAA credit ratings and favourable dispositions from international bodies and foreign investors – as well as local investors.
Simply put, legislative risk means we all must consider whether Australia is stable enough to be worth investing in – and not just financially.
However, I cannot help the feeling that things are starting to change. During Covid, it did not take long for Australia to revert to its isolationist ways. By slamming our borders shut and keeping them shut well beyond many other countries, we began destroying our service and education industries – Australia’s biggest exports outside of the mining industry. While tourists and students are slowly returning to our shores, other legislative risks are beginning to present themselves.
LEGISLATIVE RISK BEYOND COVID
It is not just me that feels this way. Recently Binance, the biggest cryptocurrency exchange in the world, halted Australian-dollar deposits and withdrawals. It is evident their currency partner was simply unwilling to take on the growing risk of overburdening regulation in Australia’s financial sector. While Binance has assured Australian clients that Australian-dollar deposits and withdrawals will resume when they find a new partner, several months on they are all still searching. Is no one in the crypto space willing to touch Australia?
The danger of unexpected legislative change is a concept West Australian farmers are all too familiar with. While the WA Labor Government has backed down from requiring farmers and regional landholders to consult with indigenous communities regarding any changes they wish to make to their land or farming practices, more subversive versions of this legislation are on their way. Had the Voice to Parliament become a reality, this may have been something we all have to learn – and it may well still be via state and territory legislation.
Australian firearms owners and shooters have experienced legislative risk for decades, even if they were not aware of the term.
WHAT DOES IT ALL MEAN
Simply put, legislative risk means we all must consider whether Australia is stable enough to be worth investing in – and not just financially.
Is it worth pursuing higher education if the job you are studying for might be regulated out of existence?
… other legislative risks are beginning to present themselves.
Is it worth buying property in Australia, whether you’re a buying your first home or you’re a foreign investor, if you are not sure how long it’s going to be before you’re paying indigenous rent?
Is it worth starting an alternative media platform if you are not sure how long it will take until you are shut down and fined by the Ministry of Truth?
These are just some of the questions we all must ask ourselves before we start a business, pursue a degree or start a family in Australia. They are certainly questions I find myself asking more and more frequently.
Australia is slowly turning towards communism in recent years. Watch this closely despite we are a little late to discover this. Follow the city council election court case, he, has the government(s) back up and may easily get away with merely a slap on the wrist. I hope justice comes upon, or else, the communists truly on top of us. Then, we become an uninvestible country except for a handful of comards to be wealthy rewarded.
Australian liberalism and Australian democracy have a long history of being authoritarian dating back to the early 19th century with the influence of Jeremy Bentham’s philosophy of utilitarianism. Bentham was no fan of John Locke’s classical liberalism and natural rights, and Bentham is well known for saying that natural rights was “nonsense on stilts” and a “fallacy”. The Westminster system of parliamentary democracy we “inherited” from the British is no better with the Westminster system being firm advocates for rule from the top-down, majoritarianism, and seeing individual rights and liberties as a conditional, legislated majority-approved “privilege” that can be easily revoked by a simple majority and a Act of Parliament.
It should also be noted that Bentham and the utilitarians were massive advocates for legal rights i.e. seeing rights and liberties as a product of the government and the laws they pass, and one gets rights from the government and through the government. If you look at the way Australians have a very negative attitude individual rights and liberties and why they blindly support everything from gun control, censorship, big interventionist government, this is due to the influence of Bentham’s utilitarianism.
At the end of the day, Australian liberalism and Australian democracy is a massive breeding ground for authoritarianism.
Great Comment! In Victoria legislation is forcing people with second properties to sell resulting in a rental crisis. Not legislative risk but legislative destruction! (Random increases in land taxes and stamp duty and pro tenant regulations)
Federally environmental laws are shutting down extractive industries as we rush headlong into the Stone Age. This is the only country in the world who believes we can develop an AI industry by calling Microsoft and google tax cheats and increasing their taxes! More examples of legislative destruction. Our governments anti capitalist passions make chairman mao look like a wimp.