Australia might have initially dodged a bullet when its early and successful handling of the pandemic saw lockdown restrictions, and economic impediments, removed earlier than expected. Policymakers breathed a sigh of relief that while things were bad, they were nowhere near as bad as expected. Instead of GDP falling by an early estimate of 10% in the June quarter, the forecasts are now back around half that rate.
That’s all history after yesterday. Victoria’s economic shutdown will deliver a body blow to Australia’s economy, with the impact site in Melbourne but the effects felt right across the country. This is bad. And it will get worse. For those of us who lived through the 1990s recession, it’s a sickening prospect.
And all thanks to the Victorian government.
Large sections of Victorian retail will shut down, though much of it will continue to function, after a fashion — restaurants and cafes doing takeaway and delivery, click-and-collect continuing to operate, online commerce proceeding as normal.
Even so, the employment consequences will be dire. So much of the retail sector is small business; many, having survived this far, won’t make it to September.
The severe curtailment of construction — with large projects forced to offload 75% of their workers, down to “pilot light” status — will bring the lockdown deep into the heart of one of the nation’s biggest industries, which until now has only suffered indirect, though substantial, damage from falling demand. The consequences will flow through building supply chains across the country. Again, many firms that have struggled into the second half of the year will go under, never to return.
The logic of the construction lockdown isn’t clear. The sector hasn’t been a vector for infection in the way animal slaughtering (which will have less restrictions) and hospitality has been. Building workers don’t just go to construction sites, of course — they travel there, they buy goods and services along the way and while at work — and Daniel Andrews is correct that the line has to be drawn somewhere, and there will always be arguments at the margins. But the sector is paying the price for failings elsewhere in the economy.
So will the rest of Australia. Even if successful in rapidly bringing down the level of infection in Victoria, the economic damage will persist, probably for years to come, in the form of higher unemployment, lower pay and lost opportunities — especially for young people.
The Andrews government is responsible for this. The #IstandwithDan crowd can type all the hashtags they like and it won’t change that fact. A reckoning is due on that front, but that can wait.
It is the federal government that should be borrowing the funds needed to support the economy. Unlike Victoria, it is in no danger of seeing its credit rating downgraded — in fact the Commonwealth’s credit rating is better than that of the United States, despite the unreformed and sclerotic economy we’re constantly told we have by business and the commentariat.
The government is currently tapping the market for debt at record low rates; it should continue to do so and take on the full burden of funding the measures needed to support the economy. Adjustments can be made in the future, in areas like GST distribution, so that Victoria can repay some of that. But the efficiency with which the federal government can raise debt, and the national nature of the crisis emanating from Melbourne, requires a national fiscal and debt response.
The Reserve Bank, despite speculation about an interest rate cut to 0.1%, has no further capacity to assist: any further reduction would see effective negative interest rates, which governor Philip Lowe has made clear the bank is not prepared to countenance.
Today’s meeting, nonetheless — and Friday’s Statement of Monetary Policy — will have to address the crisis in Victoria and the damage done to the bank’s forecasts as a quarter of the economy goes into lockdown.
That may include another signal that the bank is committed to supporting the economy for a long time to come: it is already targeting the three year bond rate at 0.25% and has repeated several times that the current cash rate of 0.25% will prevail for years to come; possibly that language will be strengthened further.
So the Morrison government has to make some sort of new fiscal statement. Through no fault of its own, the July update may as well now be prehistoric, and the October budget is too far away. We can’t drift in uncertainty while sweating on the numbers out of Victoria every day through this month and then September, but nor can the budget be brought forward significantly. Yesterday’s pandemic leave payment announcement is a start but nothing more.
Some statement, along the lines of an extension of JobKeeper and JobSeeker at current rates until the end of the year, and another, much bigger construction industry support package (aimed at social housing, like literally everyone in the construction sector is crying out for) as well as more funding for a much more tightly regulated aged care sector (can we finally have mandated staff ratios?), is thus necessary in coming days.
Daniel Andrews is right. This is a disaster. And not just for Victoria. The federal government, and the rest of us, will be trying to rebuild from it for years to come.
How much blame does Daniel Andrews deserve for the looming economic crisis? And what steps should the federal government take? Let us know your thoughts by writing to letters@crikey.com.au. Please include your full name to be considered for publication in Crikey’s Your Say section.
“And all thanks to the Victorian Government.”
Really?
Seriously?
EFFING SERIOUSLY??????
So it’s got nothing whatsoever to do with a virus? Nothing to do with people sick and dying?
Nothing at all to with Andrews trying to save lives? Or maybe following the advice of medical experts?
There’s better journalism scrawled on the walls of my local park toilet block.
If Crikey has made an editorial decision to move to the right and try and grab some of Rupert’s market share, at least have the guts to say so. I renewed my subscription just last Monday. I regret doing so.
One moment . . . whilst take soft pencil am biting down upon. Share your angst Graeski.
Two points: Andrews accepts responsibility. Morrison does not. Andrews, fingers and toes hanging in and doing everything humanely possible, scrabbling to gain control and avoid the inevitable.
What was tipping point? Why did Morrison fail to act knowing full well Aged Care was his ‘watch’?
The aged care tsunami drowned all of Andrews endeavours. Done and dusted! Andrews had inherited an Age Care collapse. Andrews didn’t blink. Just went harder and declared “Disaster”. But Covid had found niche and away. Damn near every Australian in every State knew Aged Care had ‘failed’ decades ago . . . and so did virus accept the vulnerability. Bernard, You know this to be true.
Agree.
I agree. I took out a subscription at the full price to continue to support independent journalism. But it has to be good journalism. I do not have to agree with the journalist. If there is reasoned argument I can still enjoy the cut and thrust.
This article is not an example of the promised quality journalism. This drop in quality is happening too often. I do not need to work myself into a frenzy about someone trying to feed me rubbish. I stopped buying and reading Murdoch many years ago and with great sadness stopped supporting The Age/Sydney Morning Herald in recent years. I can see myself saving my money and my blood pressure by not reading Crikey if this standard does not improve. I already am not reading every issue.
Seconded.
Me too. Hung in for a year, but will not extend. Also stopped with the age today, it sways to biased information and the comments section is appalling. Impartial info is hard to find these days.
It’d be nice if Bernard could go beyond the binary, but I can’t see that ever happening – this is old man journalism. Something for the front page of The Australian. Blaming individual governments instead of the very structure of the society. Insecure work, insecure work, insecure work. Repeat it with me. It’s neoliberalism of course, with its emphasis on efficiency, efficiency, efficiency that has its end result in the quarantine system that was run here. A neoliberalism for which Bernard has always been a cheerleader. Pathetic mate. Take some responsibility yourself for a change maybe? If anyone has blood on their hands it’s clowns like Bernard Keane who’ve spent their lives supporting this system.
Harsh words indeed Mark, but true enough.
BK is an illogical outlier here, and the flak he copped last week on the same matter has escaped him entirely.
Poor journalism for sure, if he believes Andrews is responsible explain why in detail. Otherwise blame the Morrison team where the blame really belongs.
Agree. Too many journalists take the easy route of finding someone to blame rather than doing the analysis.
Cannot accept this critique from BK et al. What about the roles of Border Force, Feds oversight of aged care, and what about the virus itself. There was some very bad luck after the first lockdown, but it was not recognised by anyone just how slippery this virus works its way around. But there were many who were responsible for the financial management of the health system, and that is the feds. They still havent even started to fix it
THANK YOU. Yes, there have been errors but no government is immune from that. To lay all the blame at Andrews’ feet is both unfair and ignores the decades of structural inequities and poor policy making that led to insecure casual work, reduced unionisation, exploitation of temporary migrant labour, unsafe work places and procedures (with organisations from security contractors to law firms deciding that money was more important than the health of their staff and the public), decades of neglect and funding cuts in the areas of public housing and aged care, all of which contributed to the mess we’re in now. NEOLIBERALISM and the untrammelled worship of “The Economy” as if it’s a sacred entity independent of society or the people which constitute the community led us to this point.
Andrews was one of the first Premiers to recognise the threat and implement protective restrictions, while Morrison and his cheerleaders were banging on about wanting a round of golf or to go to the footy or a Hillsong convention, shilling an app which doesn’t work and demanding that schools reopen. This is not to say his response to this, or his government as a whole, has been perfect – I have serious concerns about increased police powers and what seem to be knee jerk reactions in relation to criminal law, for instance; the refusal to reconsider extending a road straight through a sacred Djap Warrung site also undermined the state government’s claimed commitment to listening to First Nations people, etc – but he’s clearly doing his best in extremely trying circumstances.
I thought Keane’s tedious “Andrews sucks” rhetoric would be given a rest after the 2018 Victorian election when it was revealed that Victorians actually quite like having a government which does useful things (like the rail crossing removals).
Not being in Victoria, I have to rely on local news media here in NSW to get a picture of what’s going on. So I was glad to see this piece by Crikey in today’s email, as I thought it might give me a clearer view of what the positive steps and errors of the Andrews government have been to this point, and what NSW might learn from it. I’m disappointed that apart from vague warnings about future reckonings and valid concerns about yesterday’s announcements, I’m no clearer after reading it as to what could or might not have been done to avoid the current situation?
I add my voice to condemning this appalling article. Really, heaping the blame on Dan? Which party, at the behest of the plutocracy, has been pushing for privatisation of essential services, outsourcing of labour, casualisation of the workforce and social Darwinism throughout the community? Certainly not the Premier of Victoria.
Comment speaks for my mind too.
Most Australian media and audiences are not interested (if at all) in nuance nor detail on various related issues and phenomena, over time vs. clever media PR, promoting US style radical right libertarian ideology that has seeped into all parts of society, and changing how people think, or better, not at all.
These details or elements of information or news are required for good analysis; including Australian politics, the electorate and society which have been nudged towards the libertarian right over decades to simply become a bad knock off or replica of the declining US (and UK)….. the ageing more mono-cultural Australian centre are the new conservatives (and led to believe it).
PS Maybe articles such as these receive such a reaction, leading to more digital visibility, hence why they appear?
I guess to a couple of “political journalists” with a hammer. Every problem needs to be dealt with by hammering a nail into the most convenient politician.
Not really very good journalism though. As Graeski has noted, Crikey’s going to have to do better than this to survive.
Similar thoughts this end. Nothing enlightening in this piece, I know everyone’s tired, but… nah.
Was just about to toss in a bit more for IQ, but maybe West this time round.
If you are going to blame the Andrews Government I think you need to justify that claim.
What a complete load of utter bollocks, Bernard, your anti-Labor bias is showing again.
Remind us, Bernard-
Who continued to allow rich Australian tourists to return from the ski fields of Aspen (a known hot-spot for Covid) back in February-March? The Feds.
Who allowed a shipful of Covid infected passengers to disembark from the Ruby Princess, in spite of the issues with the Diamond Princess in Japan? The Feds.
Who dragged their feet in terms of implementing restrictions in crowd sizes, physical distancing & border crossings-forcing the State Premiers to do all the leg work? the Feds.
Who point blank refused to implement any kind of Paid Pandemic Leave until this week, & had to be dragged-kicking & screaming-to even implement the poorly managed JobSeeker & JobKeeper payments? The Feds.
Who utterly failed in their management of the private Aged Care Sector-in spite of numerous demands to clean up the industry over the last half a decade? The Feds.
The sad fact is, Bernard, that Victoria is paying a very high, but delayed, price for the complete mess that was created by a Federal Government more concerned about a Budget Surplus than they were about preventing the virus from getting out of control.
Also, tell us Bernard, when NSW inevitably ends up in a worse position than Victoria (because apparently they can’t afford to upset the owners of the Casino) then will you write a similar article deriding Glad Bags? I seriously doubt it based on your past record.