Allan Fels: A Portrait of Power

Front Cover
Wiley, 2003 - Biography & Autobiography - 310 pages
Allan Fels

A Portrait of Power

There's one certainty about Allan Fels-- People either love him or loathe him.

For much of big business, he was an ogre who made their lives a misery. For consumers, however, he was a modern-day Robin Hood, fighting their battles with business and politicians.

As Chairman of the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission, Fels should have spent a quiet career behind a desk in Canberra. But, armed with his regulatory powers and a canny exploitation of the media, Allan Fels made an indelible mark on Australia. The Australian Financial Review voted him the third most powerful person in Australia, behind Prime Minister, John Howard, and  Treasurer, Peter Costello.

Yet behind the headline-hunting Fels lies a story of power in contemporary Australia: how the nation developed a competitive culture: how big business lobbied to corral him: and how politicians became envious of his media prowess.

While Allan Fels projected an image of part tough regulator, part a somewhat eccentric academic, in reality he is quietly religious with a self-deprecating sense of humour.

Leading journalist Fred Brenchley deftly weaves the compelling inside story of the forces that cut short Allan Fels' career as Australia's competition czar.

From inside the book

Contents

Societys Alist
1
The slow revolution
23
Fishy
41
Copyright

13 other sections not shown

Common terms and phrases

Bibliographic information