The comments are counter to those made by federal Treasurer Jim Chalmers, who earlier this week described China’s COVID wave as a “key risk” to Australia’s economy this year while local business leaders have told this masthead they are bracing for logistics and freight issues to come to a head at the end of this month as the outbreak clashes with Lunar New Year to create widespread labour shortages.
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“We are heavily reliant on Chinese markets and Chinese work forces for a lot of the goods in our economy. It’s really right across the board,” Chalmers said on Monday.
China surprised global markets when President Xi Jinping abruptly reversed his long-held zero-COVID policy in early December. But the rapid unwinding of restrictions has ignited global concern about data transparency and the virus’ spread to other nations.
Australia is among more than a dozen countries, including the US, the UK, the European Union, France, and India to introduce COVID testing requirements for travellers from China.
Andrew McKellar, chief executive of the Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry (AICC), said the business community was broadly supportive of the federal government’s measures, which come into play on Thursday.
“Testing requirements should be continually reviewed to ensure it is not imposed any longer than is necessary.
It’s important to remember that Australia is not alone in imposing this new requirement,” he said.
Beyond China, the KPMG survey provides an insight into the big issues Australian businesses expect to grapple with for the next 3-5 years.
“These are notably different from a year ago, when their concerns involved staff working remotely, designing an ESG strategy, and ensuring diversity in organisational leadership,” the survey report said.
“Either way, as we enter 2023, traditional concerns like revenue growth, the training and up-skilling of staff, and operational security (albeit now with a technology focus) have re-emerged as priority areas for business leaders today.”
The KPMG survey was conducted between September 30 and October 21, before the extent and severity of Optus and Medibank’s cyber-attacks had fully unfolded.
“It is now better understood that cyber crimes not only impact the organisations whose systems have been hacked,” the report said.
“They also have the potential to hurt individuals whose data is stolen and communities who must deal with the aftermath of the loss of faith in data security and integrity that follows an attack.”
Only 3 per cent of senior executives nominated geopolitical risk as a top ‘social issue’ impacting the business environment.
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