To hear Scott Morrison and Josh Frydenberg tell it, yesterday’s interest rate rise has nothing to do with them. It’s exactly what should be expected because they handled the pandemic so brilliantly, and if rates are rising sooner than expected, it’s because of international inflationary pressures.
Nothing to see here, they don’t hold a hose, etc, etc.
And true, interest rates weren’t going to stay at 0.1%. Maybe they were never even going to stay there until 2024 — although under the Reserve Bank’s now-abandoned “wages first” policy, we might have been waiting until the 2030s for wages growth to get above 3%.
But in assessing the timing of an interest rate rise given increasing inflation, the Reserve Bank and its board would have taken into consideration the government’s fiscal policy. Remember, Philip Lowe spent much of his pre-pandemic period as RBA governor calling for the government to do more with fiscal policy to stimulate the economy and lift inflation. Fiscal policy is a crucial input to the RBA’s decision.
And fiscal policy? A $134 billion deficit this year. Next year, $80 billion. The year after, $80 billion. In fact, budget deficits into the 2030s. Because the government has permanently increased the size of its spending to more than 26% of GDP — and more than 27% for the moment — while failing to lift tax receipts to cover the cost. They’ll peak only at about 23% — way higher than under Labor, but still short of what is needed to cover spending.
It’s the kind of spending and deficit stimulus that you need when unemployment is at 10%. But unemployment, the government proudly tells us, is 4% and falling.
The bizarre reality of so much stimulus spending when unemployment is at record lows got far less attention than it deserved back when the budget was released.
So while the government is withdrawing the level of stimulus next year, it’s still spending $80 billion more than the macroeconomic circumstances demand. And so much of it is empty calorie spending to buy reelection — pork-barrelling, unnecessary infrastructure that will drive up construction inflation, middle-class welfare to wealthy seniors, petrol excise cuts — rather than spending that might strengthen productivity or address emerging real infrastructure gaps in decarbonisation and electrification (electric vehicle charging batteries being the best example).
After the budget, we said this would fuel inflation and push the RBA to lift rates. Except we were too optimistic and thought there’d be no rate rises until after the election. But the RBA has decided the numbers are ugly enough to move now. And Crikey has been the only outlet to consistently point out we have permanently increased the size of government without bothering to raise taxation enough to cover the cost.
In fact we’re giving middle- and high-income earners a big tax cut from 2024. The only good thing about that is that they have a much lower propensity to spend than low-income earners.
It’s not just the federal Coalition either. The Andrews government (also facing reelection) has just handed down a budget with a $22 billion increase in spending, and deficits through to the second half of the decade. All while unemployment is at 4% in that state.
And note the big warning in Lowe’s post-meeting statement — his forecast that GDP growth would fall from more than 4% this year to just 2% in 2023, even as inflation keeps running at 4%. That’s a high-inflation, low-growth environment, or stagflation, that reflects what happens when you aim spending at electoral sugar hits and not productivity.
So yes, it’s true that Morrison and Frydenberg couldn’t have stopped interest rates from normalising, and shouldn’t have tried to. And yes, there are international pressures on inflation that we can’t control. But in an environment where the RBA is worried inflation is taking hold domestically, the government’s fiscal policy is petrol on a fire threatening to get out of control. So sorry, prime minister and treasurer, but you own a slab of yesterday’s decision.
And whoever wins on May 21 will be stuck with having to tell Australians that with between 27% of GDP spending and 23% of GDP taxation something’s gotta give — otherwise interest rates are going to rise a lot higher for a lot longer.
The fetish about, and constant raising public expectations about, lowering taxes being a good thing does the country a huge disservice. There is clear evidence around the world that high taxing countries with good public services have better standards of living(visit Scandinavia and see I in the flesh), while those that practice rorting and corruption for the powerful (not to be named but many) serve their communities demonstrably more poorly. Which do we want to be? This election pretty damn important
Sco Mo has said “if” in opposition he will fight against a FEDERAL ICAC.
Couple of factors here,(1) is that every Independent wants a FEDERAL ICAC and (2) is that he will NOT be Opposition Leader .
He will be damaged goods if he loses the Election and will be cast aside, unless he jumps ship first.
Also! Who was it that said they were good economic manages ( when all points beg to differ) who was it that claimed interests rates will always be low under there watch?
The tide has turned against there lies and deceit ( not unusual) and they will not own up to the fact they failed on all counts!
Claiming unemployment is down when someone working less than 20 hours a week on minimum wage ( if lucky) is counted as employed is a abhorrent, deceitful lie.
The so-called ‘4% unemployed figure’ is a horrible farce. The voting population deserves a more detailed profile of who is working and how many hours they are working. It’s not difficult to produce more detail about ’employment levels’ but the current ‘government’ is not interested in the truth.
All the unemployment rate measures is the percentage ready to start work immediately- if you can’t start work immediately because you can’t afford childcare or there’s no vacancies in your area or you’re caring for an elderly or disabled relative, you can’t start work immediately and you don’t count as unemployed. It doesn’t matter that you’re looking for work and you’re actually unemployed, you don’t count. Want to bring the unemployment rate down? Make childcare unaffordable and force women to stay home and mind the kids. Want to bring it down fast? Burn the childcare centres down so all the women have to stay home and mind the kids. Our increasingly right wing Christian parliaments would like that.
The unemployment rate doesn’t measure unemployment at all and was never designed to do so. It’s only a guide for employers. It’s worrying them at the moment because they’ve run out of excuses not to lift wages- hence the push to flood the country with cheap, temporary labour again.
It’s quite possible to have a low unemployment rate combined with record numbers of unemployed individuals and Jobseeker recipients. It’s happened before and that’s leaving out absurdities like an hour a fortnight counts as employed.
How very true? There is no mention of those who want to do more hours, have more job security and be able to access the ‘good’ thinks of life like some very privileged sections of the workforce can. There is no real desire in this miserable excuse of a government to help reduce the level of casualized workers in the workforce.
Rather the privileged with their noses in the trough hypocritically drone on about there is nothing wrong with being part-time/casual. Well if this is true why don’t more of the fat cats’ engage in this kind of work?
Equally pathetic is the paternalistic call from the privileged that part-tome/casual work is a ‘stepping stone’ to higher paying full-time jobs. This kind of trash talk should be called out for what it is absolute garbage. There is no evidence so far as I am aware that this is the case. Rather much casual work is simply dead end work with little or no chance of advancement.
Australia is safely in the top ten nations in terms of the per cent of its workforce that is in precarious work. This tells me that having approximately 25% of your workforce in precarious work is a choice made by government and business not an inevitability. For example from my experience as a causal academic in the university sector the university administration loves the flexibility to hire and dispense with casuals as the mood suits with the least amount of difficulty.
In other words the causal workforce is used by employers as a means to an end. This is a morally bankrupt way in which to treat people who by virtue of their humanity are deserving of respectful treatment.
Small wonder that this poor policy choice of a large casualzed workforce came back to whack us big time with the deaths of so many in aged care homes during COVID19. So what is the old saying/ something like (‘… what goes around comes around’).
The Unemployment Rate and the Under-Employment Rate need to be combined to get a truer picture if the Market.
Plus, it is lower than normal due to the limited number of tourists, especially backpackers, and immigrant coming into the Country. These are some of the people that normally fill a lot of lower income jobs, such as in hospitality.
Very obvious the economy has little to do with the Teflon PM .I would to add another to all the other “not my problems”
We now appear to have accepted as fact the COVID virus can be air born .The original breakdown of the quarantine procedure was very quickly traced to poor ventilation. Why did the Morrison government continue to fail to take action based on this information until it was dragged screaming to finally take action and roll-out portable air treatment units in public buildings including schools some 18 months later?
Just another example of Sco Mo ,To Slo, No Show ,Not My Job ,I don’t hold a hose Not my fault .What does the PM do?
ICAC NOW
Is it not amazing Eric that Mortison decries the value of a Federal ICAC, that in itself shows he and his ship of fools have a lot to hide.
This mob are definetly deserving of a ICAC, and Morrison will have no sway in it’s implementation as every independent is screaming for it and even if Morrison is relegated to Opposition ( we can only hope) he will no longer be leader!
Let’s hope that the ship of fools are soon on the Raft of the Medusa, waving frantically in vain as NewsCorpse steam off over the horizon, having no interest in losers.
At least, as I heard an economist point out on the radio, the Victorian government’s spending will result in assets (new infrastructure etc) whereas tax cuts, petrol excise cuts etc is money gone for ever.
It can be seen as Good or Bad. Labor Governments tends to always build Assets, and along the way of doing that increase the underlying Debt. Then when the Coalition get into Government they rant and rave about the Debt, then start Privatizing Assets to get a quick fix on their Budget bottom line, then they start cutting Services, so they can hand out un affordable Tax Cuts.