Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

AUSTRALIA WILL END UP IMPOVERISH­ED LIKE SRI LANKA

Gina Rinehart, 67, is Australia's richest woman worth $31billion in May 2021 Warns the country could fall from prosperity into poverty like Sri Lanka

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"Alluring political words of ''free this'' and ''free that'', more taxpayers' money for this or that, helped to turn once-prosperous Ceylon, prosperous with its tea plantation­s and other agricultur­e, into a country which couldn't support itself with food"

“its people faced hunger, loss of free speech, consequent damaging riots, property damage, unhappines­s, police and military, and a country name change as it struggled with the results of its socialist path.”

Australia's richest woman Gina Rinehart, worth $31billion, has warned Australia is on the same track as Sri Lanka and Argentina in falling from prosperity to poverty due to a big-spending, regulation­heavy government. The mining magnate, who is the country's richest person with a net worth of $31billion, urged Australian­s to be 'on guard against the 'ruining effects of socialism' in order to preserve the nation's wealth, the Daily Mail reported.

'For generation after generation, we have wanted to hand down a better country for our children,' she wrote in her essay obtained in advance to Daily Mail Australia.

'Sadly for this generation, I believe this is now at risk, which the younger ones amongst us, in particular, should not want.'

Mrs. Rinehart urged the Federal Government - which last year oversaw a record $167billion budget deficit, largely due to heavy spending to offset the crippling effect of Covid lockdowns - to show more fiscal restraint in the years to come.

'Alluring political words of ''free this'' and ''free that'', more taxpayers' money for this or that, helped to turn once-prosperous Ceylon, prosperous with its tea plantation­s and other agricultur­e, into a country which couldn't support itself with food,' she wrote using the British colonial name for Sri Lanka which became independen­t in 1948.

'Instead, its people faced hunger, loss of free speech, consequent damaging riots, property damage, unhappines­s, police and military, and a country name change as it struggled with the results of its socialist path.'

Mrs Rinehart, whose wealth soared by $2.2 billion in the six months to May this year due to surging iron ore prices, also cited Argentina - which was the world's tenth wealthiest nation per capita in 1913 but now suffers political instabilit­y, inflation, and a 42 per cent poverty rate - as a cautionary tale of big government.

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