For more than four decades, Sir Rod Carnegie strode the Australian business landscape as an industrialist, pioneering management consultant, ubiquitous company director and advocate of genuine free markets and labour reform.
Indeed, Carnegie was even once dubbed as a “dangerous socialist”, partly because of his friendship with fellow Oxford University alumnus Bob Hawke.Carnegie was born in Melbourne in 1932, the eldest of four children and only son of Douglas and Margaret. By that time, Carnegie’s career-winning traits were becoming evident. As president, Carnegie introduced a strict training regimen and American techniques. During a critical race against arch foes Cambridge, a fellow Oxford rower succumbed to exhaustion and Carnegie took over his oars in a valiant but vain attempt to retake the lead.
The company also acquired a 30 per cent interest in Chile’s Escondida copper mine, which continues to be a major global supplier of the industrial metal. “The driving force has to be management’s commitment to make the workplace one in which people want to really give as much of themselves as they would to football team,” he said later.
Post CRA, Carnegie formed the property group Hudson Conway in Melbourne with racing figure Lloyd Williams and the late Ron Walker. In 1959, Carnegie married Carmen Clarke, whose family were Western District grazing pioneers with links to the equally blue-blood Baillieu dynasty. Carmen died in 2008.
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