Ross Gittins blogs for Troppo

Well, kind of.  I’m on his list of people who receive his Christmas e-mail complete with his speech to the Australian Business Economists Annual Forecasting Conference in Sydney on December 9, 2008. It’s below the fold.

AUSTRALIAS OUTLOOK FOR POLITICS AND GOVERNMENT IN 2009

According to the conventional wisdom, in his first year of office Kevin Rudd has had the huge misfortune of being hit by a global recession thats likely to drag our economy down, disrupt his many plans and possibly see him thrown out of office after just one term. But thats not the way I see it. I think hes had the great good fortune of having the world economy let him off the hook and greatly improve his chances of being re-elected. He and his ministers must be privately delighted.

Dont blame me, its the GFC

As I observed in my talk a year ago, this was not a good election to win. Federal governments usually lose office only after theyve presided over a recession, but John Howard got tossed out before any recession. As he left office, however, the economy was in its 17th year of expansion and close to full capacity, with the headline inflation rate heading for 5 per cent and the Reserve Bank stepping ever heavier on the interest-rate brakes so as to engineer a period of below-trend growth and rising unemployment. So the chances of a recession during the Rudd Governments first term were high. It would then have had to convince the electorate this was due to the negligence of its predecessors, not any mismanagement of its own. Coming after Peter Costello had spent 11 years reinforcing the publics natural suspicion that Labor isnt good at running economies, this would have been a tall order. Post-war history says no federal government has ever been turfed out after one term, but this time last year I thought Mr Rudds chance of being the first was quite high.

All this Labor understood full well even before it won the election. Thats why it set about from the very start criticising its predecessors economic management and dramatising the extent to which inflation was blowing out. As we know from the national accounts, tight monetary policy caused the economy to slow to stalling speed in the September quarter without much help from the rest of the world. But thats not the way the public sees it, nor is it the way the Government is encouraging us to see it. The global financial crisis that followed the collapse of Lehman Brothers on September 15 was so scary its now burnt into the publics brain and the obvious cause of all the nastiness thats to follow. So, as long as the Rudd Government keeps reinforcing that rewriting of history, its off the hook. Dont blame me, its the GFC.

All past Australian recessions have occurred as a result of a combination of domestic imbalances and world recession. This one will be no exception. But politicians from the Whitlam government on have always had trouble shifting the blame to overseas factors beyond their control. The punters almost always think local. But thats what different this time. If Mr Rudd can portray himself as just the guy cleaning up the mess after an international conflagration, and doing so with reasonable competence, his chances of re-election are, paradoxically, much enhanced.

Rudd as an economic manager and reformer

Last year I speculated on what Mr Rudd would be like as an economic manager, but this year weve got a lot more evidence to work with. I think the key to understanding him is his boast that hes not ideological. Its true, hes not – which means he doesnt have deeply held convictions about how the world works and how it should work. The closest he comes is that hes a great believer in process. By training and by instinct hes a bureaucrat. Governments job is to run the country and to do so in an orderly, considered, usually consultative way. That makes him a bureaucratic fixer. A leaders job is to work his way through a list of all the things that are going wrong and need to be put right. Lacking strong views about how the world should work he doesnt have priorities in any genuine sense, he has a to-do list. The fact that hes a control freak also militates against him having genuine priorities.

Mr Rudd keeps saying hes an economic conservative. I think thats true. Its mainly something you say to protect yourself in a Costello-created world obsessed by budget surpluses, but I doubt it will inhibit him all that much in allowing the automatic stabilisers to work and in applying an appropriate degree of fiscal stimulus on the top. When even the most respectable economists are calling on you to spend money, few politicians resist. On a deeper level, I think Mr Rudd is pretty conservative – in all things. He has no great desire to change the world in radical ways. He has no ideology driving him in such a direction and, in any case, radical change would annoy a lot of people and possibly cost him votes. You might think his resolve to do something about climate change doesnt fit with this but, in fact, the great promise of an emissions trading scheme is that its the way to tackle the problem with least disruption to the status quo.

What being an economic conservative definitely doesnt equate to is being an economic rationalist. Rationalists are ideological and want radical change. Mr Rudd is pro-business, not pro-market. He knows Labor cant occupy government without the at least tacit support of big business and people otherwise inclined to vote Liberal. Having no strong commitment to smaller government or means-tested welfare, he has no burning desire reduce middle-class welfare. Being of bureaucratic inclination he is, almost by definition, an interventionist. If you want a label for him, Michelle Grattan has found the best: hes a pragmatic interventionist.

I dont want to shock you, but Mr Rudd is so lacking in ideology he sees economic rationalists not as people arguing propositions that are either right or wrong, but as just another interest group needing to be squared away somehow. You can see that perfectly in his car plan: the rationalists got continued falls in tariffs; the industry policy advocates got massive government spending. Whats your problem? Similarly, with climate change the rationalists get emissions trading and the environmentalists get renewable energy targets.

One of the most disappointing things about the Rudd Government is its obsession with dominating the 24-hour news cycle and its insatiable need for announceables. Utterly contrary to Mr Rudds commitment to good process, this is a preoccupation that wastes the time of its bureaucratic advisers, perpetually distracts the attention of ministers and gives spin doctors primacy over policy wonks. It makes me think were getting an antipodean version of Tony Blair and New Labour – superficially intelligent and committed to sensible, middle-of-the-road policy but, actually, preoccupied with re-election and, ultimately, disappointing and disillusioning.

Mr Rudd is a timid leader, one anxious to avoid offending many voters and lacking the courage of his convictions – manly because he doesnt have many. The Government seems far more worried by what the Opposition will say about things than it needs to be. So Malcolm Turnbull will carry on about a budget deficit – so what? Labor is so obsessed by its unjustified reputation as a bad economic manager that it fails to see all the advantages of incumbency it possesses. Governments monopolise the microphone. When it comes to budgets, what the Treasurer says drowns out what anyone else says (including yours truly).

Rudd Governments first year

Mr Rudds first year had some high spots – the ratification of Kyoto, the apology to the Stolen Generation – and quite a few low ones, such as all the nonsense about petrol and grocery price watches. The $6.2 billion car plan and Mr Rudds statements about not wanting to be the leader of a country that doesnt make things was disappointing. Its noteworthy that the global financial crisis was used to help justify the car plan, a sign that we can expect more exercises in the New Protectionism, all in the name of protecting jobs. How can protecting jobs be bad?

Labors first budget purported to involve a significant tightening of fiscal policy so as to reduce the pressure on monetary policy and interest rates, but didnt. We were told to expect tough spending cuts but they were few and far between, with their place taken by increases in the taxes on alcopops, luxury cars and petrol condensate. With storm clouds gathering internationally, the Government took a punt that a tightening of fiscal policy wouldnt be needed and its bet paid off. Even so, a once-in-a-government chance to spring clean government spending with political impunity was lost. We were told the Government hadnt had enough time to properly review spending programs and that a proper review would be implemented in next years budget, but Ill believe that when I see it.

Despite the lone campaign being conducted by an Australian newspaper, Labors replacement of Work Choices with its own Fair Work was almost completely consistent with its election commitment. It was a reasonably even-handed exercise, to which the main employer groups took little exception, unless you believe that fairness is an irrelevant consideration in industrial relations and that efforts to stamp out collective bargaining are in the best interests of all sides. Remember that Work Choices had already been heavily modified by John Howard with his late insertion of a fairness test. As an example of Labors moderation, note that the guidelines devised for the Fair Pay Commissions setting of minimum wages were little changed when handed over to Fair Work Australia.

Mr Rudd and his ministers have put much effort into achieving productivity improvement through co-operative federalism and revitalisation of the COAG process. About 90 special purpose payments have been reduced to five broad categories and national partnership payments introduced as an incentive for the states to achieve certain targets. But progress has been slow and how much actual improvement is achieved remains to be seen.

Generally speaking the Government did well with its decisive response to the global financial crisis in late September and October. Its one significant error was that, when it finally produced details of its guarantee of bank deposits, it didnt pull back sufficiently so as to reduce flow-on problems for other institutions.

Policy prospects for 2009

Next week the Government will publish its white paper on its Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme, including its target for reduction in emissions by 2020. I fear well see a demonstration of Mr Rudds lack of courage and lack of conviction. Well be off to a very slow start – with a reduction of maybe only 10 per cent by 2020 and a fixed or tightly capped carbon price – plus a lot more concessions to polluters than are warranted.

Next years budget will be an important one, no doubt with a lot more fiscal stimulus. We know it will contain increased payments to single pensioners combined with, we must hope, reform of the interface between tax and transfers. We know Ken Henrys root and branch tax review has also been called on for advice about superannuation arrangements – though not about the tax-free status of payments to the over-60s. The budget will incorporate already-announced spending on infrastructure projects. Note that spending from the nation-building funds will add to the budget deficit but not to the borrowing requirement. The budget will contain the second round of tax cuts promised in the election campaign – which, though already included in the forward estimates, will add to the fiscal stimulus. The thing to note here, however, is that as they stand, those cuts deliver little to low and middle income-earners, and so will have to be supplemented by additional cuts that arent in the forward estimates.

Speaking of the tax review, its supposed to report late next year, but I have a feeling it wont figure largely in the governments pre-election figuring, except to the extent that, as with transfer payments and with super, its called on for special advice on a specific issue. Next year will be some sort of moment of truth for the Rudd Government as the many inquiries it has commissioned report and recommend action. The Government has been running a line that says: terribly sorry, we assumed wed have a big budget surplus to play with, but now the GFC has robbed us of that well have to be much more selective in what we can agree to. I find this a curious argument. If we were still running big surpluses that would mean we were still close to full capacity and so the Government shouldnt be spending big. On the other hand, in my experience periods of recession and deficit are times when governments spend freely and become less discriminating, not more. So perhaps this line is the Governments way of belatedly admitting that, in commissioning so many inquiries, it bit off a lot more than it could chew.

My summary judgement on the Rudd Governments performance to date: good but far from great.

Observations on monetary policy

Towards the end of the monetary policy tightening cycle that ran for six years, the Reserve Bank developed a clear and simple modus operandi in which it waited for the quarterly CPI release, revised its inflation forecast on the basis of the new information and then adjusted the stance of policy if necessary at the board meeting about two weeks later. It aligned its quarterly statements on monetary policy so they followed the board meeting after the CPI release and they preceded its six monthly appearances before the parliamentary committee. This simple MO had many advantages for the Reserve, but also for the markets. Particularly because the Reserve moved in steps of 25 basis points, predicting the size and timing of rate rises became childs play.

But in these comments last year I observed that this MO would not be suitable in times when you needed to move fast, nor during an easing cycle. I noted that this MO would last only as long as it suited the Reserve. Well, thats one thing I got right. As soon as the Reserve began its easing cycle in September the old, predictable way of doing things disappeared. When youre cutting interest rates theres never any political resistance – from the government or the lobby groups – so you dont have to worry about carrying the public with you. And, just as the old saying says the dollar goes up by the stairs and down by the lift, so you need to ease a lot faster than you tightened. I think this is because the effect of rate rises isnt linear. When business and consumers are in an optimistic mood, you can keep tightening time after time and not have much effect on demand. But then one day you give it one more turn and suddenly the mood switches to pessimism and caution. The economy begins slowing rapidly and you need to cut quickly to avoid a hard landing.

When the world is hit by a global financial crisis of almost unprecedented scariness, and when it becomes clear that almost all the major economies are already in recession, then the need to achieve a rapid change in the stance of policy is clear. When interest rates are a long way from neutral – in either direction – you probably shouldnt stay there for long, and you need to act quickly if you discover the stance is no longer appropriate. On this occasion, the Reserve moved the stance from quite restrictive to clearly expansionary in just three moves spread over two months. In that time it cut the cash rate by a remarkable 40 per cent.

In the process, however, the Reserves signalling to the market went awry and a lot of market participants and business economists were caught out. So lets try to explain what happened. We now know that, at both the October and November board meetings, the rate cut that was recommended in the board papers was increased at the meeting itself. Some people have wondered whether surprising the market by cutting more than expected was a ploy intended to increase the favourable impact of the move. It wasnt. The explanation was simply that, in the short period between the recommendation and the meeting, more worrying information arrived to cause the governor to decide that an even greater cut was warranted. Monetary policy has always been set in the governors gut.

Some people were led astray by a speech Ric Battellino gave in which he observed that the big inflation task could limit the Reserves room for manoeuvre on monetary policy. This hardly seemed to fit with the move less than a week later to cut by 75 points. So how was it explained? Well, Ric is an independent thinker, he has strong and non-conformist views which, as a member of the board in his own right, hes not afraid to express. Theres no danger of group think while Rics around. He expressed his view but, in the end, it didnt prevail.

Its clear Glenn Stevens regards the threat to our economy from the global recession as very great and decided to get rates down to the right level as quickly as possible. But while the Reserve does not see it as its job to provide the markets and business economists with an everlasting one-way bet, it also knows that if it goes on surprising people it will lose some goodwill. I think well find that, when the minutes of the December meeting are published, the cut of 100 points was what had been recommended in the board papers.

Remember, too, that in response to the markets urging, the Reserve puts out a lot more material than it used to – a statement after every board meeting, even when theres no change; minutes of board meetings, and Mr Stevens giving a lot more speeches than Ian Macfarlane did. But the more material the Reserve puts out, the greater the scope for misunderstandings.

Looking to next year, there are a few things we can say. Im sure the board will meet in January if that proves necessary, but the normal gap until early February provides a welcome opportunity for the Reserve to sit back and take stock. It has made a very large change in a short time, taking the cash rate down to its previous low. To some extent its got ahead of the data, relying heavily on liaison (regular and systematic consultations with key firms and industry groups), anecdote and intuition. It has assumed that whats been happening abroad will have a big effect on us, but it will now need to see the hard data confirming this.

The world recession looks like being significantly more severe than weve experienced before. If so, theres little doubt well be pushed into recession as well. Its already apparent that our economy is softer than was forecast as recently as the November SoMP. We now know the first quarter has made a contribution of just 0.1 per cent to the forecast of GDP growth over the year to June 09 of 1.5 per cent. Similarly, the first quarter has made a contribution of minus 0.3 per cent to a forecast for non-farm growth of 1 per cent.

So its clear that, even though the cash rate is already as far from normal/neutral on the downside as weve seen, the Reserve has further to go next year. But if you thought it likely on present indications to go no further than the low 3s, just one more cut of 100 points would see it done. This suggests the Reserve will soon have to level out, making smaller cuts of 50 points or even 25.

The Reserve will respond to developments as they occur. But there are two things to remember about next year. First, the cuts to date have had an expectation of more bad news to come factored in. So when the expected bad news actually arrives, you need to respond only to the extent that its worse than you originally allowed for. That is, you have to avoid double counting. Second, because the Reserve has acted with such alacrity, were reaching a point where things continue getting worse, but it doesnt respond because its already done all it considers appropriate. This is an inevitable consequence of the pre-emptive approach to monetary policy, but that wont make the appearance of inaction any easier to accept by the public – and maybe even some business economists.

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observa
observa
16 years ago

I see Ross has had an ‘Austrian’ moment in the SMH titled- “It’s not inflation that did us in, it’s the borrowing”

‘WARNING: The following comment benefits from the wisdom of hindsight. It’s an idea that’s crossed my mind several times in the past decade but now I’m sure of it: for all that time the world’s central bankers have been on the wrong tram, worrying about inflation when they should have been worrying about excessive borrowing.
It’s the old case of generals still fighting the last war.’

….’This is the point that’s yet to sink in: recessions come not from excessive braking to control inflation, but from excessive borrowing and the bursting of asset bubbles. These days we have balance sheet-driven recessions.’

Ross almost gets it- ‘It’s the money supply stoopids!’

observa
observa
15 years ago

No Ross it’s not balance sheet driven recessions, just the ritual cleansing by real savings, investment and production as every Louis Leech and Gordon Gecko leverages off the real economy due to those excessive monetary claims loaded on to its back until eventually it cries enough. It’s easiest to see in the Big Cahuna US right now. Govts grown fat on those taxes when 25% of corporate profits were derived from financial intermediation and now look at them all and the irony as the great productive names come with the begging bowl, after they too were seduced like the GMACs and GE money Genies by the lure of easy money. How can they resist one more hit of funny money on top of all that has gone before and their complicity in it all, described historically well here-
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Global_Economy/JL11Dj01.html
Detroit, the symptom of a raging disease in the West right now and the only answer from its movers and shakers is more credit creation and fiscal bankruptcy to match their moral and intellectual bankruptcy. Is there a politician among us who can say no to more of the same and tell it like it is and has to be? Back to real savings, investment and production, just as soon as we’ve all borne those real losses and the fanciful public and private claims on production have deleveraged to some semblance of economic reality.

observa
observa
15 years ago

And if you want a lesson in Austrian Economics 101 Ross go here- http://www.adpemploymentreport.com/ner/charting.aspx
and check the boxes ADP Overall and ADP Goods Producing employment for the time period Dec 2006 to current.