Tigra it is unfortunate that people (mainly green voters)now a days because we have been riding a mining boom for the past decade have turned into pro taxes and anti business supporters. They have somehow got it in there head that this carbon tax will save the planet from any change in climate change. They think that by Australia leading the world in pushing through a carbon tax it will make India, China, Brazil, Indonesia and USA the big and growing emitters of the world change there way and turn there back on there own manufacturing sector like we are doing.
Most of Australia's old-school manufacturing sector was killed off long ago. The price of opening up the Australian economy by abolishing tarriffs and trade barriers. There was plenty of short-term pain in the switch (1990 recession) but the country is now better for it. Imagine if we tried to hold on to a protectionist policy - apart from the country been driven into the ground as was by 1982 for a further 30 years
, we'd be living in country with high prices for basic items, high unemployment because we didn't move to towards the good, services and jobs of the future (2011) and we'd be copping it left, right and centre from other countries imposing similar trade barriers on the goods we would want to sell to them making us uncompetitive. Look at the USA - Ford and GM failed to move with times and virtually sent themselves to the wall because they stuck to old ideas about Americans wanting big cars. You don't move with the times you get left behind and go out of business.
I'm not that naive to believe this current push around the world to put a price on carbon is just pollies and big business suddenly finding a green heart. IIRC being "developing" nations like China and India don't have to complete system in place reducing their emissions until 2030 (develop nations like us need to have one by 2020; underdeveloped nations by 2040-50). Getting your hands on updated or new superior techology equates to power and $$$ which is why they are starting to act now. There's also the advantage for service industries if you're a low-carbon emission country selling carbon permits to those high-carbon emitting countries who'll need to buy them to meet their emission targets.
I'm no greeny just because I support a carbon price unless you believe Malcolm Turnbull is a greeny and anti-business lol. My first preference is a ETS as market-mechanisms have a history of working best and being most efficient. We'll be moving to one after 3 years of a fixed-priced carbon tax. As for being anti-business - was Henry Ford anti-business because mass-producing an accessible inexpensive car would've been most people working with the horse-drawn carriages, blacksmiths, etc out of business? That's life and that IS business. New technologies and industries are developed and they replace old outdated ones.
The whole point of pricing carbon is to increase the investment and development in new "cleaner" energy technologies and make them price competitive. I'm no pollie saying there'll be no price to be paid. However the longer we leave it or worst still we don't act at all then the price will be higher and not just environmentally. We'll be left behind. We've spent and wasted the best part of 10 years already squabbling with idiotic neo-cons over the validity of the science who have been shown to be wrong.