Mining magnate Rinehart says Australia 'too expensive'

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Mining magnate Rinehart says Australia 'too expensive' Gina Rinehart. Photo courtesy of theage.com

Mining tycoon Gina Rinehart on Wednesday warned Australia was becoming too expensive for multinational companies who could source workers for two dollars a day in Africa, AFP reports. In a video address to the Sydney Mining Club, one of the world's richest women said the nation must become more competitive as high costs force businesses offshore. She blamed the government's mining and carbon taxes, red tape and high wages for the economy's "sluggish" performance. "Now, the evidence is unarguable -- that Australia is indeed becoming too expensive and too uncompetitive to do export-oriented business," she said. "What was too-readily argued as the self-interested complaints of a greedy few is now becoming accepted as the truth, and more ominously is showing up in incontrovertible data." Last week Rinehart, head of resources giant Hancock Prospecting, told Australians to "spend less time drinking or smoking and socialising, and more time working" and on Wednesday said the country should not become complacent. "Furthermore, Africans want to work, and its workers are willing to work for less than $2 per day. Such statistics make me worry for this country's future," the iron ore magnate added. Her outburst came a day after iron ore giant Fortescue announced it would defer planned developments, while BHP Billiton last month shelved its multi-billion dollar expansion of the Olympic Dam copper and uranium mine. The iron ore heiress has been attacked by Treasurer Wayne Swan for her "self-interested" campaigns against the government's taxes on mining profits and pollution, and in the video she hit back at what she called "class warfare". "Our federal and state governments must know that now, more than ever, we must lift our international competitiveness just to stay as well-off as we are," she said. "And with state and federal debts, we must get realistic not just promote class warfare. Indeed, if we competed at the Olympic Games as sluggishly as we compete economically there would be an outcry." Australian mining projects have faced headwinds from depressed conditions in Europe and the United States, softening growth in China and increased competition from other producers as well as falling commodity prices. The price of iron ore, a crucial ingredient in steelmaking, has fallen dramatically in the past two months as the Chinese economy slows, while the price of coal, another major Australian export, has also dropped sharply.

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Mining tycoon Gina Rinehart on Wednesday warned Australia was becoming too expensive for multinational companies who could source workers for two dollars a day in Africa, AFP reports. In a video address to the Sydney Mining Club, one of the world's richest women said the nation must become more competitive as high costs force businesses offshore. She blamed the government's mining and carbon taxes, red tape and high wages for the economy's "sluggish" performance. "Now, the evidence is unarguable -- that Australia is indeed becoming too expensive and too uncompetitive to do export-oriented business," she said. "What was too-readily argued as the self-interested complaints of a greedy few is now becoming accepted as the truth, and more ominously is showing up in incontrovertible data." Last week Rinehart, head of resources giant Hancock Prospecting, told Australians to "spend less time drinking or smoking and socialising, and more time working" and on Wednesday said the country should not become complacent. "Furthermore, Africans want to work, and its workers are willing to work for less than $2 per day. Such statistics make me worry for this country's future," the iron ore magnate added. Her outburst came a day after iron ore giant Fortescue announced it would defer planned developments, while BHP Billiton last month shelved its multi-billion dollar expansion of the Olympic Dam copper and uranium mine. The iron ore heiress has been attacked by Treasurer Wayne Swan for her "self-interested" campaigns against the government's taxes on mining profits and pollution, and in the video she hit back at what she called "class warfare". "Our federal and state governments must know that now, more than ever, we must lift our international competitiveness just to stay as well-off as we are," she said. "And with state and federal debts, we must get realistic not just promote class warfare. Indeed, if we competed at the Olympic Games as sluggishly as we compete economically there would be an outcry." Australian mining projects have faced headwinds from depressed conditions in Europe and the United States, softening growth in China and increased competition from other producers as well as falling commodity prices. The price of iron ore, a crucial ingredient in steelmaking, has fallen dramatically in the past two months as the Chinese economy slows, while the price of coal, another major Australian export, has also dropped sharply.
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