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Power Privatisation in NSW: The Pros and Cons

Power Privatisation in NSW: The Pros and Cons

It's election time, and a central plank to Premier Mike Baird's campaign is the proposed selling off - or partial leasing, to be precise - of the electricity grid's “poles and wires”.
 
It's not for us here at the FiftyUp Club to tell you which way to think on the issue, but we would like to help you make an informed decision. So here's our list of pros & cons:
 

Arguments For -

Statistics:
 
The Australian Bureau of Statistics has released data showing Australians who live in states with privatized electricity supplies have faced smaller price rises over the past two decades compared with their counterparts in other states.
 
A study was conducted by respected analysts The Grattan Institute, showing retail prices have risen more in Sydney and Brisbane than in Melbourne and Adelaide, where the Victorian and later the South Australian governments had privatized the electricity industry from the 1990s.
 
From 1996 to mid 2014, in nominal terms, retail electricity prices have increased by 208% in Adelaide and 158% in Melbourne - compared with 212% in Sydney and 217% in Brisbane.
 
According to the Institute's energy director, Tony Wood, “Privately-owned businesses run at lower cost to the benefit of consumers”.
 
The Pay-off:
 
Baird wants to go ahead with the sell off so he can get his hands on a $20 billion war chest to build new infrastructure including a second Sydney Harbour rail crossing and $1 billion of Western Sydney rail upgrades.
 

Arguments Against -

Jobs:
 
Privatization has become a dirty word in many sectors of the community, particularly among Labor and the Unions, who are running a campaign saying it will cost jobs and drive up the price of our power.
 
On the jobs point, they are probably correct. It is likely a private operator would cut costs in the network businesses, and both the number and quality of jobs in these businesses have benefited over the years from government ownership.
 
But Baird's infrastructure plan would also create jobs, so there would be both winners and losers on that count.
 
Experience:
 
The public is rightly suspicious of government selling off public assets which then become private monopolies charging monopoly rents. You only have to look at Sydney Airport, the Commonwealth Bank and Qantas to see how those businesses have been changed by privatisation.
 
In those states where poles and wires have been privatized, consumers report feeling worse off, despite the numbers quoted above.
 
In Victoria, 67% said people in the state were worse off, while in South Australia, 74% said people there were worse off, in a union-commissioned poll.
 
There is also the loss of annual revenue from these businesses to consider, given they paid their government owners $1.7B in 2012-13, falling to a projected $407M in 2017-18.
 

So, what do you think?

 
And as always, whatever the election result, make sure you're on a good plan so you're protected against whatever may happen to power prices.
 
Originally posted on .

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Power Privatisation in NSW: The Pros and Cons

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Al
Al from NSW commented:

Based on this Survey, 66% are for privatisation, and Labor is in for another crushing defeat, after which Luke Foley will disappear back to wherever he scuttled out from. "A New Approach for NSW" was a lousy slogan for his 1950's Union policies. "A New Roach for NSW" would at least have been truth in advertising! 

Geoffrey
Geoffrey from NSW commented:

Sell off = short term gain for long term pain. When are politicians ever going to think beyond 4 year terms? Thank God for our genuine politicians of the past or there would never be a Harbour Bridge or Snowy Mountains Scheme. Geoff NSW 

phill
phill from NSW commented:

They sold the banks, and now they are 100% profit driven. They sold Telstra then we need the NBN to do what Telstra did. They sold lotteries now they, They sold the TAB now the tab wants the gov to take less, will we/they ever learn. The quick grab for cash to make them look good in their term In office. So using that theory we should spend what ever I can sell the house spend that to then live on the tax payer even though there's less of them because they sold the jobs THATS WHAT THE GOV DOES 

Karen
Karen from NSW commented:

All government assets considered for a sell-off should be put to a referendum. They are not the politicians assets, they are the people's assets. Leasing would be a better option. If governments and unions did not waste taxpayers and members monies then we would not be in this position. Too many sweetheart deals done between governments, large corporate moguls and unions has always been the undoing of finances and the "state of the nation" - greed and power that's all they care about, not the welfare of the people. 

Denis
Denis from NSW commented:

Andrew, I don't think there's any point in continuing this discussion. I don't resile from what I said. Neither of us is going to convince the other. The issue is simple without all of the fluff you've posted. The "poles and wires" will cost us all in the long run. It won't reduce electricity rates. It will deprive whoever is in power of the current income from those "poles and wires". It's the old story of killing the goose that laid the golden egg. It's a bad decision to sell the farm when you no longer can depend on the income from it - end of story. 

Denis
Denis from NSW commented:

Andrew, I don't think there's any point in continuing this discussion. I don't resile from what I said. Neither of us is going to convince the other. The issue is simple without all of the fluff you've posted. The "poles and wires" will cost us all in the long run. It won't reduce electricity rates. It will deprive whoever is in power of the current income from those "poles and wires". It's the old story of killing the goose that laid the golden egg. It's a bad decision to sell the farm when you no longer can depend on the income from it - end of story. 

Denis
Denis from NSW commented:

Andrew, I don't think there's any point in continuing this discussion. I don't resile from what I said. Neither of us is going to convince the other. The issue is simple without all of the fluff you've posted. The "poles and wires" will cost us all in the long run. It won't reduce electricity rates. It will deprive whoever is in power of the current income from those "poles and wires". It's the old story of killing the goose that laid the golden egg. It's a bad decision to sell the farm when you no longer can depend on the income from it - end of story. 

Denis
Denis from NSW commented:

Andrew, I don't think there's any point in continuing this discussion. I don't resile from what I said. Neither of us is going to convince the other. The issue is simple without all of the fluff you've posted. The "poles and wires" will cost us all in the long run. It won't reduce electricity rates. It will deprive whoever is in power of the current income from those "poles and wires". It's the old story of killing the goose that laid the golden egg. It's a bad decision to sell the farm when you no longer can depend on the income from it - end of story. 

Thelma
Thelma from NSW commented:

Thank you Tony - to me it is a form of blackmail 

Nand
Nand from NSW commented:

What consumers look at first when the bill arrives home is the amount of money that has to leave the household. Yes, the power bills have increased rapidly over the past years in NSW but IT IS STILL CHEAPER in NSW when compared to VICTORIA and SOUTH AUST. Just wait until the Victorians see massive rises in their bills due to SMART meter rollouts and guess who will be paying for that - the VICTORIAN CONSUMERS and do not forget the upgrades that are needed in Victoria because the private owners have invested very little. Just look at the outcome of the 'Bushfires' caused by the power lines due to lack of maintenance. 

Warren
Warren from NSW replied to Nand:

Absolute rubbish Nand. Yes elec/gas plus every other goods and services had a massive 10% increase with labor's Carbon Tax, which when removed by the Liberals, they retained the $500 benefit for us pensioners/oldies. Get real! 

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