An extract from a Michael Pascoe article:
The weak world champion
"Given
the problems in the rest of the developed world, Australia extending
its run into a third decade of unbroken growth is an amazing
achievement, but you’d be hard pressed to find anyone cheering.
The
December quarter national accounts confirm Australia’s status as
the (developed) world champion of economics – yet the attitude of
business and much commentary remains that of weakness and misery.
The Australian Bureau of Statistics figures show
gross domestic product grew by 0.6 per cent in the December quarter
to give a final score for 2012 of either 3.1 or 2.9 per cent,
depending on whether you prefer the trend or seasonally adjusted
version.
Let’s
split the difference and call it 3 per cent – which is “about
trend”, as the Reserve Bank had been forecasting.
Given
the problems in the rest of the developed world, Australia extending
its run into a third decade of unbroken growth is an amazing
achievement, but you’d be hard pressed to find anyone cheering.
Instead,
we continue to look for ways to find the glass half full. And if
you look, you can indeed find some dark lining to the silver cloud.
For
a start, the spark in the annual figure was provided by the first
half of the year – the December half was running at an annualised
pace of about 2.5 per cent.
And
the biggest impetutus for the December quarter growth was a
surprising lift in investment by governments. That’s surprising
because governments of all shapes and sizes are busily trying to
reduce their spending. That December quarter lift is likely to be a
bit of a one-off.
So
the RBA’s forecast of economic growth in 2013 of about 2.5 per
cent looks more likely than anything stronger. In the conservative
language of central bankers, that becomes “a bit below trend”.
The
problem for much of Australia is that we have become used to doing
“about trend” and better. The adjustment that’s taking place
in our economy over the next year or so rules that out and –
despite what politicians and much of the commentariat might try to
tell you – there’s precious little the government can do about
it.
It
has been Australia’s extraordinary achievement to experience a
massive terms of trade windfall and explosion in private capital
investment without the economy getting seriously out of kilter.
Yes, some regions and industries have done better than others, but
that’s always the case. Overall, we’ve come through the bubble
part of the boom without inflation getting out of hand –
something we’ve never managed before.
We
are now going through a double adjustment that won’t be as easy
as the unsustainable pre-GFC boom years when we were partying very
hard indeed.
The
first adjustment has had plenty of publicity: the construction
phase of the commodities boom tailing off. Based on last week’s
ABS capital investment survey, it looks like the tailing off will
be nicely gradual, but it’s tailing off nonetheless. Our economy
won’t be getting the lift to growth that it received when the
capex numbers were skyrocketing.
What’s
less understand is the second adjustment that would be occuring
with or without the resources boom: returning to normal behaviour
by collectively living within our means.
That
was the core of RBA governor’s “Glass-Half-Full” speech last
year. The boom and bubble period from about 2003 to 2008 was not
normal, we were spending everything that came in the door and a bit
more. The Federal Government made the situation worse by throwing
tax cuts and more middle-class welfare handouts at us. From the
mid-1990s to 2008, per capita real consumption growth averaged a
massive 2.8 per cent and consequently, our household savings ratio
fell to zero.
That
was not sustainable at all. Adjusting to a more normal economy is
painful for those in the front line, but there really is no
alternative. Politicians on both sides can prance around and
pretend otherwise, but they can’t change those fundamentals.
(Just
a reminder the period between 2003 and 2007 was under the Howard
Government ~ The Worker)
We have had growth for over 21 years most people can't remember the bad times, is it a case of "you have to have the bad times to really appreciate the good?"
The Worker
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