Please review my blogs of 6th December 2012 ("Finally the truth is out") and 18th February 2013 ("Lions led by donkeys"). What you read in those blogs is now becoming daily news.
As Henry Ergas reports (Australian 4th May 2013), "Bad policy just does not happen". How right he is.
For my non-Australian readers, the Australian economy is being squeezed from several directions at once. Some of these pressures are inflicted by its own government, and some are the consequences of a globalised world and just have to be managed.
What is clear, and many Australians are starting to become very concerned about their specific situations, is that the future is not going to be like the immediate past. Why?
First: The money-tap is being tightened by falling real commodity prices and increasing supply sources. This will also apply to LNG and other commodities as the United States and Canadian suppliers change patterns and pricing in world markets. Reversion to the long term price mean results in lower prices for Australian producers.
Second:The global sea of newly created money in the United States, United Kingdom, Europe, and Japan pushes down the relative quantity of Australian dollars, and increases its relative price, especially since the Federal debt remains AAA rated, along with Norway, Switzerland, Canada, and Sweden. The ECB may reduce European interest rates to zero or below. Australia has relied heavily on foreign capital inflows, which presently upwardly support the relative value of the Australian dollar. But, because Australia is not a "developed" country in the sense that Switzerland is, and Australia will continue to require capital inflows to "develop", then the policy measures to reduce the relative strength of the Australian dollar need to be be different. Taxing those foreign inflows, as proposed by eminent economist Henry Thornton (nom de plume), may not be the solution. And reductions in Australian official interest rates are probably akin to pushing on a string.
The chances are therefore, that the relative value of the Australian dollar will remain where it is. That changes the producer economics permanently and reduces domestic profit margins hugely at a time of rising unit cost structures. Hence the lower corporate tax receipts, even though Australian corporate taxes are high by world standards.
Third:Australian public debt as a percentage of GDP is reported to be relatively low by "developed country" standards. What is not reported is that if you add in the sovereign debt of the Australian States and Territories (who can themselves borrow on world capital markets), you get a vastly higher level of sovereign debt (about twice Federal debt). This is already becoming a political issue in Australia with fiscal consolidation occurring Federally and in the States. Governments are needing to borrow for well into the foreseeable future.
Four: Price inflation for tradeable goods and services is presently benign in Australia. Price inflation for statutorily mandated services, pensions, labour, electricity, and utilities is significant, and is causing increasing business and household distress. So are personal tax rises. Australians pay a top marginal rate of almost 50% if you include levies and other quasi income taxes. The marginal rate in Singapore is 20% and in New Zealand 33%, and both countries are competitors for Australian talent.
Five:It is inevitable that measured unemployment will rise. The real killers, as I have blogged before, are underemployment, a belief that jobs aren't available, and a decline in entrepreneurial activity. It is this loss of confidence that is deflating property prices. If people are not confident, or they know people who are not confident, they will not borrow money, no matter how low the interest rate. Go back to 1991. At some point, this will affect the banks and the bubble in bank share prices will be pricked as a result.
This all points to a deflationary domestic environment. Real spending in government, business, and households will decline. So will the velocity of circulation of money. This makes Australia and Australians vulnerable and uncertain. That is certainly the feeling you get talking to real people. Real people understand intuitively and from walking around that things are not as well as they were. Political and institutional Australia is only now waking up to that reality. Their problem is that they have lost control and do not have the necessary policy tools to regain it without significant forthcoming pain.
More and personalised guidance can be found at www.corpbuilders.com.au
No comments:
Post a Comment