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The bestselling author of The Australian Moment asks the most important question confronting the country right now – how do we maintain our winning streak?
Most nations don't get a first chance to prosper. Australia is on its second. For the best part of the nineteenth century, Australia was the world's richest country, a pioneer for democracy and a magnet for migrants. Yet our last big boom was followed by a fifty-year bust as we lost our luck, our riches and our nerve, and shut our doors on the world. Now we're back on top, in the position where history tells us we made our biggest mistakes. Can we learn from our past and cement our place as one of the world's great nations?
Showing that our future is in our foundation, Australia's Second Chance goes back to 1788, the first contact between locals and migrants, to bring us a unique and fascinating view of the key events of our past right through to the present day. With newly available economic data and fresh interviews with former leaders (including the last major interview with Malcolm Fraser), George Megalogenis crunches the numbers and weaves our history into a compelling thesis, brilliantly chronicling our dialogue with the world and bringing fresh insight into the urgent question of who we are, and what we can become.
'Megalogenis has emerged as something of a polymath. He slaps history and politics and culture like mortar in and around his knowledge of economics and numbers to build compelling, even thrilling, theses about the country of his birth and where it stands in the world.' Tony Wright, Saturday Age
324 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 2015
My goodness, Megalogenis is impressive. This is possibly the most accessible and persuasive book I've read on Australia's multicultural project. He walks the reader through the history of Australian immigration - starting with white settlement in 1788 and taking us through history to the present day. His basic thesis is that Australian economic prosperity has gone hand-in-hand with openness to migration. And he has the facts to back it up.
Two things stand out for me in the book. One is that it is in many ways a personal story - Megalogenis drops into the text occasionally stories of his own family's migration history to Australia, which I found gave the story so much more texture. And secondly, what I think is the most profound idea in the book, is his description in the last chapter that Australia is a Eurasian nation - that Chinese-born are now the largest migrant group in Sydney and that the Indian-born will dominate Melbourne in coming decades. That this idea does not have greater currency in Australian political debate is something Megalogenis puts down to the overwhelmingly anglo-dominated nature of the Australian parliament and media. This will, I'm sure, change with time.