UnSubRocky wrote on May 10
th, 2014 at 7:44pm:
Laugh till you cry wrote on May 10
th, 2014 at 12:03pm:
Darlings, Australia is facing an economy dominated by the resources industries which probably have the lowest number of employees per million dollars revenue
Surely, that isn't a bad thing to have the lowest number of employees per million dollars revenue. My uncle retired from the mining industry after being on a near 6 figure salary, and he reckons that mining is what separates Australia from being a third world country. You would think that the billions of dollars that the mines produce for the Australian economy is something that is very cost efficient if we only have the fewest employees per millions of dollars revenue produced.
When resources becomes the major part of your economy you have become a third world country because there is insufficient jobs to go around and manufacturing is uncompetitive because wages are high and exchange rate is high.
In such a circumstance, the only way to keep a lid on the A$ is by capital investment in other countries so you export capital instead of goods and services. The lucky country is becoming the dumb country.
Australia was 7 th in OECD's life satisfaction index.
7. Australia
> Life satisfaction score: 7.4 (tied for 7th)
> Self-reported good health: 85% (4th highest)
> Employees working long hours: 14.2% (7th highest)
> Disposable income: $31,197 (4th highest)
> Life expectancy: 82.0 years (7th highest)
More than 14% of Australians said they worked very long hours, more than all but a few other nations. Residents were rewarded for their hard work, however. Per capita disposable income was $31,197 — fourth highest after the U.S., Luxembourg, and Norway. Additionally, the average personal earnings in Australia was $46,585, among the highest of all nations reviewed. Residents were also heavily engaged in politics last year. Australia’s 93% voter turnout, likely the result of compulsory voting, was the highest in the OECD. Possibly also contributing to residents’ happiness was the size of their homes. Australians live in especially large homes, averaging 2.3 rooms per person, among the most of any country reviewed.
On the basis of purchasing power parity Australian incomes fall considerably and are comparable with UK and behind USA.http://247wallst.com/special-report/2014/05/05/the-happiest-countries-in-the-wor...