Weekend Times


Google Workspace

Business News

Australia's biggest economic threat isn't home-grown. It's a recession, originating in the United States

  • Written by Peter Martin, Visiting Fellow, Crawford School of Public Policy, Australian National University
Australia's biggest economic threat isn't home-grown. It's a recession, originating in the United States

A recession in the US usually brings on a recession in the rest of the world, although not always in Australia.

Australia has escaped such a re recession twice in the past 50 years.

We avoided the early-2000s so-called tech-wreck[1] recession, and we avoided the so-called “great recession”[2] during the global financial crisis.

Amid ominous talk about yet another US-led global recession, there’s a chance we could escape for a third time.

But it will require being prepared to change our budget and interest settings in a heartbeat. That’s something our new treasurer Jim Chalmers – who many don’t realise was an advisor to the treasurer during the global financial crisis – knows a good deal about.

The hunt for savings, now and then

Right now, Chalmers and finance minister Katy Gallagher say they are going line by line[3] through the budget to look for waste and rorts. They’ll find a lot.

That’s how it was 15 years ago for another new treasurer, Wayne Swan, and his finance minister Lindsay Tanner.

Swept into office with Prime Minister Kevin Rudd in 2007, in an election marked by plummeting unemployment, a mid-campaign interest rate hike, and growing inflation, they identified A$3 billion[4] they could cut without blinking.

It was, said Tanner, “just for starters”.

Cuts are easy – at first

Incoming governments can always find savings because their priorities are different, and because the outgoing government has grown used to spending big.

Desperate to stay in office, the Howard government shovelled $500 cheques[5] to senior citizens on its way out. The Morrison government handed them $250 cheques, dressed up as cost of living payments[6].

Chalmers and Gallagher say they’ll save $350 million[7] instantly by removing funds from the Coalition’s marginal-seat-focused[8] community development program, and millions more by axing the $500 million regionalisation fund[9] announced in the March budget before it gets started.

But circumstances can change

But even before Swan and Tanner had handed down their first budget in 2008, they were confronted by realities that made them wince.

As Swan tells it[10], he took a call at 6.30am, while sheltering in his car from bucketing rain near a beach on Queensland’s Sunshine Coast, from US Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson.

It was January 10 2008, one year into the US sub-prime mortgage crisis[11]. Fifty US mortgage companies had declared bankruptcy. Paulson had asked for the call.

As Swan remembers it, Paulson told him:

Look, if we can avoid a meltdown in house prices, then we might be able to see a way through this.

That was a very big “if”, Swan thought, later writing he suspected the aside might be the real reason for the call.

“It seemed a dicey prospect that the health of the entire US economic system was underpinned by the housing market stabilising,” Swan wrote. What if the US housing market didn’t recover?

Jim Chalmers on avoiding recession. MUP[12]

Swan sought advice from Australia’s treasury, which warned him the risks to the global economy from the US housing market were “substantial”.

From that day on, Swan performed a balancing act[13] – as Chalmers, then the treasurer’s advisor, later wrote.

On one hand, Australia was facing accelerating inflation, which would necessitate higher interest rates and “savage across-the-board” spending cuts.

On the other hand, by the end of the 18 months it would take for those spending cuts to really hurt, the world might be in crisis.

Swan withdrew the harshest cuts, warned in his budget speech about “economic turbulence[14]” and looked on in dread as the Wall Street giant Lehman Brothers[15] collapsed and the globe slid into recession.

A US recession is entirely possible

Fast forward to 2022, and the US economy was once again in trouble, even before Russia invaded Ukraine on February 24.

Inflation had climbed above 7% for the first time since the 1979 oil crisis. It is now above 8%[16] and the US Federal Reserve is ramping up interest rates[17] in an increasingly desperate attempt to contain it.

The world’s leading economic journalist, Martin Wolf, believes it won’t be able to do it without bringing on a recession[18].

Read more: Fed hopes for ‘soft landing’ for the US economy, but history suggests it won’t be able to prevent a recession[19]

If the entire United States can be made to spend less, it will indeed restrain global prices. (This isn’t true for Australia, which has too few people to affect the global price of commodities such as oil.)

But it is enormously hard to get right; all the more so if Americans decide to spend the savings they’ve built up during COVID.

Wolf says the Federal Reserve has to run the risk of recession in order to tame inflation. It has to “screw up its courage and do what it takes”.

Treasury is on to it

Chalmers and his officials are attuned to what’s happening overseas.

There’s speculation China’s zero-COVID lockdowns are sending its economy backwards[20] – though there’s also speculation that, even if that’s happening, it’s unlikely to be reflected[21] in China’s official figures.

After briefings with treasury officials, Chalmers warned last week that while commodity prices have been stronger than expected, there was no guarantee[22] that would remain the case by the October budget.

References

  1. ^ tech-wreck (www.thebalance.com)
  2. ^ “great recession” (www.federalreservehistory.org)
  3. ^ line by line (ministers.treasury.gov.au)
  4. ^ A$3 billion (cdn.theconversation.com)
  5. ^ $500 cheques (archive.budget.gov.au)
  6. ^ cost of living payments (ministers.treasury.gov.au)
  7. ^ $350 million (cdn.theconversation.com)
  8. ^ marginal-seat-focused (thenewdaily.com.au)
  9. ^ $500 million regionalisation fund (webarchive.nla.gov.au)
  10. ^ Swan tells it (allenandunwin.com)
  11. ^ US sub-prime mortgage crisis (www.federalreservehistory.org)
  12. ^ MUP (www.mup.com.au)
  13. ^ balancing act (www.mup.com.au)
  14. ^ economic turbulence (archive.budget.gov.au)
  15. ^ Lehman Brothers (www.investopedia.com)
  16. ^ 8% (tradingeconomics.com)
  17. ^ ramping up interest rates (tradingeconomics.com)
  18. ^ bringing on a recession (www.afr.com)
  19. ^ Fed hopes for ‘soft landing’ for the US economy, but history suggests it won’t be able to prevent a recession (theconversation.com)
  20. ^ backwards (www.wsj.com)
  21. ^ unlikely to be reflected (observer.com)
  22. ^ no guarantee (ministers.treasury.gov.au)

Authors: Peter Martin, Visiting Fellow, Crawford School of Public Policy, Australian National University

Read more https://theconversation.com/australias-biggest-economic-threat-isnt-home-grown-its-a-recession-originating-in-the-united-states-184058

The Weekend Times Magazine

The best Nike shoes you can buy right now

You certainly have a few pairs of Nike sneakers around the house, but you may not be aware that the brand famous for its Swoosh was not always known as...

How To Gain Financial Freedom In Retirement

Planning for retirement? Retired already? Discover how you can gain financial independence during your golden years. Hitting retirement is a joyous milestone - a just reward for a lifetime of hard...

Top Applications of Sandstone Crazy Pavers

Crazy paving may not seem like an expensive flooring option, but it is well worth your attention and thought. It refers to the ‘crazed’ appearance of a completed area and...

AI Landing Pages for Product Launches: Reusing Headless CMS Content with Speed

Product launches come with a deadline and pressure to be right, effective, and implemented quickly. Landing pages, for example, are the first step in such pages with customers ultimately seeing...

Why Car Sharing is dominating Car Renting

Sustainability, budget, urban living, lack of parking – these are just a few of the reasons that many people are choosing not to buy cars in today’s environment. ...

CHECK.CHECK.CHECK. The new ‘Slip, Slop, Slap,’ for a night out campaign

CHECK.CHECK.CHECK. The new ‘Slip, Slop, Slap,’ for a night out launched by the Night Time Industries Association A new campaign Check. Check. Check. encouraging punters to do their...

What to do in Canada during your holiday?

Canada has over 1.6 million square kilometers of protected natural land offering a world-class national park system. The country is one of the first in the world to establish a...

How to work from home and not get divorced

Covid has triggered life-changing decisions for some people and has put a lot of relationship strain on couples. The stress of working from home and having to home school the...

How pool putty can be a lifesaver when it comes to pool repairs

Pool putty is a great way to repair your pool. It works well for all types of repairs, especially when you need to patch up a hole in the liner...

hacklink hack forum hacklink film izle hacklink testjetbahistipobetslogan bahis girişirocket play casino australiapadişahbetgalabetjojobetjojobet