As General Manager, later Director, of the Australian Industry Development Corporation between 1972 and 1976, McKinnon played a major role establishing and developing the corporation.[2] He moved to the Industries Assistance Commission in 1976, serving there as deputy chairman and then chairman.[3][4][5]
McKinnon was appointed Secretary of the Department of Immigration and Ethnic Affairs in 1983.[6] As head of the Immigration department, he oversaw transition of immigration considerations to an environment where the department was more concerned with the economic viability of immigrants.[7]
In 1987, McKinnon lost his job as head of the department, perhaps due to his role in the approval of Australian residency for Taj El-Din Hilaly, a prominent Sydney Sunni Muslim leader.[8]Paul Keating had personally approved Sheik Hilali's residency while Acting Prime Minister during a period that Prime Minister Bob Hawke was away.[8]
McKinnon went from his Secretary role into a position as the Australian High Commissioner to New Zealand.[9]
Awards
McKinnon was made a Commander of the Order of the British Empire in December 1982.[10]
^"Sugar price rise to flow on quickly". The Canberra Times. 2 May 1979. p. 3. on the recommendations of the McKinnon inquiry into the sugar industry. The inquiry, headed by the chairman of the Industries Assistance Commission, Mr Bill McKinnon, recommended an increase of $80 a tonne
^Jupp, James (2007), From White Australia to Woomera: The Story of Australian Immigration (2nd ed.), Cambridge University Press, p. 44, ISBN978-0-52169-789-7, This left the department relatively free to develop its own policies, mainly under the secretaryship of Bill McKinnon. McKinnon's experience had been with the Industries Assistance Commission and the Department of Trade and Industry...This period began the process whereby the Immigration Department became more centrally concerned with the economic viability of immigrants
^ ab"Editorial: Immigration advice ignored at our peril". The Australian. 30 October 2006. Indeed Mr Keating engineered the elevation of Sheik Hilali to the leadership of the Muslim community to ensure Labor would have a leader it could deal with. And when he was Acting Prime Minister while Bob Hawke was away in 1990, Mr Keating personally approved Sheik Hilali's residency. Chris Hurford was moved from his portfolio of immigration, and Bill McKinnon, who headed the department at the time, lost his job.