Townsville Bulletin

How to alleviate drought distress

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LAST week I attended the National Drought Summit in Canberra at the invitation of the Prime Minister.

It astounds me that they hold these showcase events to “solve” the drought, when the obvious answers are simple, cheap and for forever.

For 105 years in Australia, drought and similar calamities ( eg: market collapse) were dealt with by debt reconstruc­tion. It is very simple.

The government borrows money at normally half the commercial interest rates – currently 3 per cent.

The government purchases the bank’s “bad debt” and the mortgage at a “discounted price” – this becomes a tax write- off.

The Government Reconstruc­tion Fund does not require repayments until the drought ceases and the market recovers. So, where a farmer might be up for $ 115,000 a year on the repayments for a $ 1 million loan ( about 5 per cent interest), under Rural Reconstruc­tion, they would be paying $ 25,000 a year.

Secondly, if North Queensland were its own country, we would be the wettest country on Earth.

Imagine a straight line drawn on the map of Australia from Tennant Creek, through Mount Isa to Townsville. Well, every river and creek above that line floods each year.

If we are able to harness some of that water and use it for micro- irrigation projects such as that proposed under the HIPCo scheme ( which provides a template for 15 other irrigation projects around Nth Qld), then we can grow grass and fatten ox all year round.

Together, these solutions will ensure that the farmer survives, the breed herd stays intact year round, the industry remains enriched and when the market or drought finishes, and the farmer goes up on to commercial rates, the government makes money.

It’s a no- brainer. BOB KATTER, Federal Member for Kennedy.

 ?? SOLVABLE: Debt reconstruc­tion is an obvious way to help farmers battling the economic costs of drought. ??
SOLVABLE: Debt reconstruc­tion is an obvious way to help farmers battling the economic costs of drought.

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