The Paradox of National Water Savings: A Critique of ‘Water for the Future’

Lin Crase[1]

Suzanne O’Keefe[2]

Table of Contents

Abstract
Introduction
The Policy Context for Federal Intervention
Efficiency and Water
The importance of scale
Food Bowl Modernisation and an Integrated National Approach?
Concluding Remarks
References

Abstract

The Commonwealth’s assumption of greater control over water policy has been justified on the grounds that a ‘national approach’ to the problems in the Murray-Darling Basin is required to resolve the ills of the Basin. This paper investigates the validity of this contention in the context of the Federal government’s ‘Water for the Future’ manifesto. The paper argues that the current naïve understanding of ‘water use efficiency’ concepts is likely to stymie any purported basin-wide gains from a ‘national approach’ to water policy.




[1] School of Business, Albury-Wodonga campus, La Trobe University, l.crase@latrobe.edu.au. JEL classifications: Q25, Q56.

[2] Faculty of Law and Management, La Trobe University, s.o’keefe@latrobe.edu.au