Skip to content
Government Federal

Australia’s Productivity Revival Needs One Essential Ingredient: Optimism

The Centre for Optimism 2 mins read

If you want a national growth mindset, then conscript the optimists.

The Productivity Commission’s call this week for Australia to adopt a growth mindset arrives at a pivotal moment, just two weeks ahead of the August Economic Reform Roundtable, to be chaired by the Treasurer, focused on productivity and economic resilience.

A growth mindset is not just a personal tool; it is a powerful asset. It is a national capacity, a cultural belief that we can learn, adapt, and improve.

However, the truth is that pessimists cannot possess a growth mindset. Growth requires belief. Reform demands resolve. And both are founded on optimism.

On day one of his prime ministership, Anthony Albanese declared:

“I want a country where hope and optimism are the major emotions projected from our national government to the Australian people.”

In announcing the Roundtable, he urged us to “make every single day count” through optimism and collaboration.

Yet national sentiment is fragile. The AICD Director Sentiment Index, Lowy Institute polling, and consumer confidence data point to rising unease. The World Economic Forum now lists “declining optimism” as the top emerging global risk.

The government cannot reverse that mood overnight. But it can lead with optimismIt can help shape an optimistic national narrative as recommended by The Centre for Optimismone that counters the prevailing zeitgeist of crisis, polycrisis, and permanent emergencies.

Rather than a regulatory environment focused on minimising risk and suppressing initiative, we need a climate that celebrates progress, encourages creativity, and nurtures invention.

At The Centre for Optimism, we know that optimism is not wishful thinking—it is a national asset. It inspires business investment, public trust, and civic action. It is the very energy that fuels a growth mindset.

Research, including studies by Shawn Achor, Martin Seligman, and Barbara Fredrickson, shows that building optimism can increase productivity by 7 to 20 per cent.

The University of Sydney Business School’s "Optimism Effect”, drawing on 25 years of OECD data, confirms that national optimism drives productivity and innovation.

So the first question on the Roundtable agenda should be:

“What will make the workers of Australia more optimistic for Australia’s future—and more optimistic themselves?”

Because optimism is not a feeling, it is a force. It is the mindset that enables reform, resilience, and national renewal.

Read More: Australia Needs a New Optimistic National Narrative

Let us lead with optimism. Let us conscript the optimists for the Roundtable and beyond. Let us grow.


Key Facts:
  • The Productivity Commission has called for a national growth mindset to support productivity and economic resilience.

  • A genuine growth mindset depends on optimism, the belief that improvement is possible and worth striving for.

  • Optimism is not fixed. It can be cultivated, strengthened, and encouraged through infectiously optimistic leadership, a strong culture, and purposeful action.


About us:

The Centre for Optimism is a Melbourne-based think tank dedicated to fostering infectious optimism in leadership for Australia and beyond.


Contact details:

Victor Perton
COO, The Centre for Optimism
+61 417 217 241

More from this category

  • Government Federal
  • 12/12/2025
  • 09:41
Catholic Health Australia

Commonwealth must boost funding for public hospitals

The Commonwealth should increase its funding of public hospitals to a 50-50 share with the states and territories, Catholic Health Australia said today as health ministers meet in Brisbane. Analysis of AIHW data by Catholic Health Australia finds public hospitals are under severe pressure, leading to sliding performance in recent years. Only 67% of patients were seen on time in 2025, down from 71% in 2021. Only 53% of ED visits were completed within four hours in 2025, down from 67% in 2021. In some states, patients wait more than a year after the clinically recommended deadline for their surgery.…

  • Government Federal, Medical Health Aged Care
  • 11/12/2025
  • 14:21
Hepatitis Australia and ASHM

Australia’s leading hepatitis experts reaffirm support for birth-dose hepatitis B vaccination

Australia’s foremost hepatitis researchers and clinicians have released a joint expert statement confirming that Australia’s recommendation remains unchanged: all medically stable newborns who meet the weight threshold should receive their first dose of the hepatitis B vaccine within 24 hours of birth. The statement follows international attention after a U.S. advisory panel recommended reversing its long-standing advice that infants receive the hepatitis B vaccine at birth. Hepatitis Australia CEO Lucy Clynes said parents and healthcare professionals should remain confident in Australia’s long-standing, evidence-based approach. “Australia’s advice has not changed. The hepatitis B birth-dose vaccination is safe, effective and one of…

  • Government Federal, Taxation
  • 11/12/2025
  • 14:16
Australian Taxation Office

Former ATO contractor found guilty of fraud

A former contractor to the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) was sentenced to 18 months imprisonment, with immediate release on a recognisance release order conditioned that she be of good behaviour for three years, for defrauding the ATO of more than $105,000 through Operation Protego. The fraudulently obtained funds have since been repaid. Eva Dierens was based in Maroochydore and worked for the ATO between 2019 and 2021, assisting taxpayers with income tax, business tax, and debt-related matters. Her fraudulent activity occurred after her engagement with the ATO had ended and did not involve ATO systems, nor were any systems compromised.…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.