Re: PLENTY TO CROW ABOUT
Posted: Tue Feb 12, 2008 1:54 pm
almost forgot the text from the next page
Adelaide's Premier Development and Construction Site
https://mail.sensational-adelaide.com/forum/
https://mail.sensational-adelaide.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=3190
Insurer Brings New Jobs
GREG KELTON
February 15, 2008 09:30pm
A NEW call centre for Adelaide will see 250 new jobs created over the next 15 months.
In what Treasurer Kevin Foley describes as "an investment coup", insurance giant Allianz will establish its new national call centre in Adelaide.
The company, which already has about 250 employees here, will take on another 250.
"The timing could not be better," Mr Foley said. "It will help soften the blow of the Mitsubishi closure and could potentially offer jobs to a number of those displaced workers."
Mr Foley and senior officials from the Trade and Economic Development Department were involved in negotiations with Allianz.
He said the Government had provided no incentives to bring about the decision.
Many of Allianz's current staff handle claims on behalf of the Motor Accident Commission.
Allianz managing director Terry Towell said the new call centre and expanded claims processing facilities would double the size of its SA workforce to around 500 by the middle of next year.
He said the company expected the number of jobs it could create in SA to grow quickly from around 200 by the end of 2008, to 250 by mid-2009 and then by between 30 and 40 jobs a year for the foreseeable future.
The initial establishment and rental costs for the Allianz move is estimated to be between $15 million and $20 million.
It has an initial lease on 2500 sq m of office space at 55 Currie St in the city for up to 10 years and believes the company will inject around $10 million a year into the SA economy through wage payments growing to $20 million a year over the next decade.
Mr Towell said the decision to choose Adelaide for the new centre was based on the state's competitiveness in terms of business costs and the availability of a high-quality workforce.
Mr Foley said Adelaide had a salary and operating cost advantage over other Australian capitals.
"It shows yet again that Adelaide is the most competitive city in which to do business in Australia," he said.
"It provides a high-quality lifestyle in the country's most affordable capital city housing market."
Yep agree with skyliner. I read several newspapers each day (need to for my job) including the fin review, the age, the australian and i've noticed the quantity of positive articles focused on Adelaide & SA is steady growing. most impressive!skyliner wrote:just to add some impact to this article. I read the Fin. Review frequently and have found this to be the best article on SA I have seen. Trends also noticed - we are turning up more frequently in this paper. BRW also is showing things are moving in SA. (A useful read as their bias is not to SA but to business activity - more likely to have little vested interest colouring state reports.
Overall, it's a good statistical summary.
well it be interesting to see where we are at in around 6 months timemonotonehell wrote:If it's anything like the 1990's recession we'll see a few buildings completed and then everything will slow for a few years.
But I doubt that it will play out like that this time. There's a lot of interesting forces manifesting in the World at the moment unlike anything we've seen in decades. The US is in a downward spiral, China and India are looking for resources, Europe is generally ticking along, oil is past peak production so that's going up, climate change is affecting the viability of regions' ability to support their current applications and the way business conducts itself...
To paraphrase the old Chinese proverb "We live in interesting times"
I hoping to be in Disneyland around thenThe Carabinieri wrote:well it be interesting to see where we are at in around 6 months timemonotonehell wrote:If it's anything like the 1990's recession we'll see a few buildings completed and then everything will slow for a few years.
But I doubt that it will play out like that this time. There's a lot of interesting forces manifesting in the World at the moment unlike anything we've seen in decades. The US is in a downward spiral, China and India are looking for resources, Europe is generally ticking along, oil is past peak production so that's going up, climate change is affecting the viability of regions' ability to support their current applications and the way business conducts itself...
To paraphrase the old Chinese proverb "We live in interesting times"
AtD wrote:As someone who likes to think they're 'in the know' on such topics, most analysts aren't pointing at an Australian recession, the fundamentals are far too strong. We're a lot more disconnected from the US than we used to be, economically. We have a lot further to maneuver in terms of fiscal and monetary policy. The only Australian indicator predicting trouble is the markets. The ASX has predicted 15 economic downturns out of the last 8, though, so it's somewhat disconnected from the real economy.
This is some what true ... In tearms of a recession, i heard some economist on TV stating that in 2009, the possibility of having one, is very much alive.Rising interest rates are a sign of a growing economy, by the way, not a recession.
I don't know about everyone, but a lot of current investment and spending has been coming out of debt. Howard / Costello encouraged part of this with things like the home buyers bonus and so on, they effectively shifted a small recession we probably should have had (as did the rest of Asia) into household debt. The next few years, as interest rates rise we will probably see that delayed recession bite as debts become burdensome.The Carabinieri wrote:The other thing i want to know, is where everyone is getting the money from??? It seems that when real estate was cheap (around 10 yrs ago), no one was buying, and now that its been sky rocketing (with many people possibly paying even too much) it seems that people have plenty of money to spend.