John Newman
The Bunker Group
I agree that Australian shipbuilding is never going to be competitive as you have stated, but that's only the tip of the iceberg.That is the Catch 22 problem, isn't it? One wants their shipbuilding to be competitive worldwide with costs, but also stretch out shipbuilding programs to keep the shipbuilders busy, i.e., employed. The more you stretch out a shipbuilding program, the more the ships cost leading to your shipbuilding being less competitive.
Frankly, Australia isn't China. Australia doesn't have their population or skilled workforce to stay busy with competitive prices. The United Kingdom and France face the same Catch 22 problem as well. Even the United States faces this problem too. While the larger United States may be able to keep their shipbuilders busy, they do so being uncompetitive with prices. The last time the United States sold new US built warships for export was back during the late 1970s to Australia. And that included four frigates out of a total US built class of 55 warships.
If the Government went to an overseas yard to say spend $1Billion on a ship to be constructed, that's a Billion dollars that is going to flow out of the country for no economic benefit.
On the other hand if that same ship is built here its probably going to cost $1.5Billion, yes on the face of it the Government is spending an extra $500m for the same ship.
But the company building it here is going to pay tax on its profits, the employees are all going to pay income tax (and possibly not be on unemployment benefits too), the employees wages flow further down into the economy the government gets another tax hit back, and on it goes.
Not suggesting for one minute that it would eventually work out cost neutral, (I'm sure some Government department has a calculation somewhere), but I'm sure that the $500m premium initially paid is no where near that after the money spent here cycles its way through the ecomomy.
Yes first and foremost, from the Navy's perspective, I want to see it get the ships it needs to do its job properly, and if the Government can ensure that sufficient continuous work flows through the yards, then as a taxpayer I don't mind paying a "reasonable" premium to achieve that.