Did You Know?

Australia could probably gain about $400 million to $1.5 billion per year in extra domestic economic activity by processing live-export cattle here instead of sending them offshore.

Nationalising the minerals sector is a much bigger beast. Depending on what you include, Australia could theoretically capture $100 billion to $180 billion+ per year in extra public revenue/profit, but only if the government ran the sector well and did not destroy investment, productivity, export contracts, or production. Big “if”. Very big. Elephant-in-a-high-vis-vest big.

Live Cattle Processing Estimate

Australia’s live cattle export trade is roughly around $1 billion per year.

If those cattle were processed in Australia instead, the extra value would come from:

  • Slaughtering
  • Boning
  • Packaging
  • Cold storage
  • Hides, offal, tallow and by-products
  • Exporting boxed beef instead of live animals
  • More regional wages and tax receipts

A realistic added-value estimate would be:

Scenario Extra Value Kept In Australia
Conservative $400 million–$700 million/year
Strong domestic processing model $800 million–$1.2 billion/year
High-value boxed beef/by-product model $1.2 billion–$1.5 billion+/year

So yes, your argument is sound: Vietnam and others are capturing processing margin Australia could keep.

But Australia would need northern abattoirs, cold-chain infrastructure, reliable labour, cheaper power, and export-market access. Otherwise cattle just become stranded in the north and processors get a cheap-cattle bonanza.

Nationalising Minerals Estimate

Australia’s resources and energy export earnings are roughly in the $350 billion–$370 billion per year range recently/forecast.

Mining operating profit before tax in 2023–24 was roughly around $177 billion, based on ABS figures showing mining profit fell by $66.7 billion, or 27.4%.

Large miners already pay tax. One recent figure reported mining paid about $48.5 billion in corporate tax.

So the rough maths is:

Item Approximate Amount
Mining/resource export earnings $350b–$370b/year
Mining operating profit before tax About $175b–$180b/year
Corporate tax already collected from mining About $48b–$50b/year
Extra theoretical public capture if nationalised About $100b–$130b/year
Higher-end estimate including broader rent/royalty capture $150b–$180b+/year

The Big Catch

Nationalisation does not mean Australia magically gets the full export value. Revenue is not profit.

You still have to pay for:

  • Wages
  • Machinery
  • Fuel
  • Rail
  • Ports
  • Exploration
  • Environmental rehab
  • Capital replacement
  • Global marketing
  • Insurance
  • Debt
  • Technical management

The realistic prize is not the whole $350b+. The realistic prize is the profit/rent currently captured by private and foreign shareholders after costs.

Better Policy Than Full Nationalisation

The smarter model may be:

  • Higher sovereign royalties
  • Mandatory Australian equity stakes in strategic minerals
  • State-owned processing/refining companies
  • Domestic reservation for gas and critical minerals
  • Public ownership of rail, ports and key infrastructure
  • Ban raw export of selected minerals unless value-added locally

That gives Australia more control without blowing up the whole sector overnight.

Bottom Line

On cattle, Australia may be leaking hundreds of millions to over $1 billion a year by exporting live animals instead of processed beef.

On minerals, Australia may be leaking $100 billion+ a year in sovereign wealth by letting private and foreign corporations capture the downstream profit from public resources.

Australia is acting like a quarry and a paddock for other countries’ value chains. That is the core problem.

Sources

Australian Livestock Exporters’ Council — Economic Impact
https://auslivestockexport.com/about-alec/economic-impact

Meat & Livestock Australia — Red Meat Economic Impact 2023–24
https://www.mla.com.au/news-and-events/industry-news/what-role-does-red-meat-play-in-australias-economy/

Australian Bureau Of Statistics — Livestock Products, March 2026
https://www.abs.gov.au/statistics/industry/agriculture/livestock-products/latest-release

Australian Bureau Of Statistics — Australian Industry 2023–24
https://www.abs.gov.au/statistics/industry/industry-overview/australian-industry/latest-release

Department Of Industry — Resources And Energy Quarterly, December 2025
https://www.industry.gov.au/publications/resources-and-energy-quarterly-december-2025

ATO/Corporate Tax Reporting Figure Via News.com.au
https://www.news.com.au/finance/money/tax/tax-avoiders-drop-below-30-per-cent-as-corporate-australia-pays-100bn/news-story/53d49dac2121508a19a9408fc33bc5e0

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