Ron Manners
Ronald B. Manners | |
---|---|
Born | 1936 Kalgoorlie, Western Australia |
Education | Kalgoorlie School of Mines |
Occupation | Businessman |
Ronald B. Manners (born 1936) is an Australian businessman. He is Executive Chairman of Mannwest Group and founder and Executive Director of the Mannkal Economic Education Foundation, an Australian free-market think tank.[1][2] Manners was one of the founders of the Workers Party, subsequently known as the Progress Party,[3] and is a co-founder of ANDEV (Australians for Northern Development and Economic Vision),[4] a lobby group chaired by co-founder Gina Rinehart.
Biography
Early life
Ron Manners was born in 1936 in Kalgoorlie, Australia, to a family that had a long association with the mining town.[1] His grandfather, W.G. Manners, the son of a Ballarat prospector, headed West in the late 19th century and established a mining and engineering business, W.G. Manners & Co, in 1895. Ron Manners studied electrical engineering at the Kalgoorlie School of Mines.[1][5]
Career in mining
In 1955, Manners assumed management of the family business.[6] He expanded and diversified the company which became the Mannwest Group.[6] He serves as its Executive Director.
Between 1972 and 1995, he floated several Australian listed mining companies.[6] In 1985, he founded Sirius Resources NL, later known as Croesus Mining NL, a gold mining company.[6] He served as its Chairman from 1985 to 2005.[6][7][8][9][10] While chairman, the company produced 1.275 million ounces of gold and paid 11 dividends.[2] He has served as Chairman Emeritus since 2005.[6] He has also served as Non Executive Chairman of De Grey Mining Ltd.[6]
He is Emeritus chairman, patron of the Australian Prospectors & Miners' Hall of Fame,[1] inducted in 2011 as a "living legend".[5][11] He also served as Executive Councillor of the Association of Mining and Exploration Companies (AMEC).[6] He is a Fellow of both the Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy and the Australian Institute of Company Directors.[1][better source needed] He was elected at the 2005 Excellence in Mining & Exploration Conference in Sydney.[1][2] In 2012, he defended Gina Rinehart against Wayne Swan in her bid to invest in Fairfax Media.[12]
Other activity
A proponent of the free market, he founded the Mannkal Economic Education Foundation in 1997.[1][2][5][11] He is a member of the Mont Pelerin Society and is on the Co-ordinating Committee for the Commonwealth Study Conference.[6] In 2010 he was appointed to the Board of Overseers for the Atlas Economic Research Foundation in Washington, D.C.[2][13]
Bibliography
- As author
- Heroic Misadventures (Australia:Four Decades-Full Circle) (2009) ISBN 978-0-646-52212-8. OCLC 455934757
- Never a Dull Moment (with Charles Manners and Nancy Manners) (2002) ISBN 0-85905-174-9. OCLC 52697697
- Mannerisms (1979-1983) (self published poems, 1983) ISBN 978-0-959-12030-1. OCLC 222633611
- As editor
- Kanowna's barrowman: James Balzano, 1859-1948: the early history of Kalgoorlie's goldrushes (with George Compton) (1993) ISBN 0-85905-176-5. OCLC 38335683
- So I Headed West – W.G. Manners (1992) ISBN 0-85905-123-4. OCLC 31700388
References
- ^ a b c d e f g Mannkal biography
- ^ a b c d e GLG Research biography
- ^ "Ron Manners on the Workers Party". '’Economics.org.au'’. Retrieved 19 June 2013.
- ^ "Top end tax utopia all right for Rinehart". Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 2 June 2013.
- ^ a b c Rania Spooner, Rebranding the mining industry, SMH, 15 November 2011
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Ronald B. Manners, Bloomberg BusinessWeek
- ^ Sandra Eleyn Close, The great gold renaissance: the untold story of the modern Australian gold boom, 1982–2002, Surbiton Associates, 2002, p. 227
- ^ Brad Norington, Good early gold results for Croesus, The Sydney Morning Herald, 6 August 1987
- ^ Brad Norington, Croesus claims reserve boost, The Sydney Morning Herald, 1 October 1987
- ^ Barry Fitzgerald, South Res faces another attack by shareholders, The Age, 26 October 1989
- ^ a b ABC
- ^ Andrew Burrell, Courtly Manners rises to Rinehart's defence, The Australian, 23 June 2012
- ^ Atlas Economic Research Foundation board