Treasury
plans for next crisis with Rudd-style stimulus off the agenda
TREASURY
has warned that the European crisis is "spiralling out of
control" and indicated it expects the government to dump its
commitment to a budget surplus if a new crisis sweeps the world.
1
June, 2012
Treasury
secretary Martin Parkinson revealed yesterday that his department had
been conducting intensive contingency planning for a new crisis since
before last Christmas and said the policy response would be very
different from that of the Rudd government following the collapse of
Lehman Brothers in September 2008.
"Almost
certainly we would not deal with the next one the same way we dealt
with the last one," Dr Parkinson told the Senate's economics
committee yesterday.
Treasury
expected that a crisis caused by Greece's insolvency would primarily
affect financial markets.
"That
can be managed more easily for us because of the health of the
banks," Dr Parkinson said.
Financial
markets steadied yesterday after a torrid night in Europe where
investors dumped Italian and Spanish bonds, pouring money into
Germany - where government bond yields fell to zero - and
Switzerland, where government bonds went negative. That meant
investors were paying the Swiss government to borrow their money.
The
Australian market was supported by new business investment figures
showing the resources boom was still on track, with spending by
mining companies over the next year expected to reach $118 billion,
up 47 per cent.
However,
the Australian Bureau of Statistics' investment report also
highlighted the weakness of business investment elsewhere in the
economy.
The
challenge facing the non-mining economy was also shown by a sharp
fall in the number of new building approvals, with fewer private
houses gaining council approval in April than in any month since the
GST was introduced in 2001.
Dr
Parkinson said Treasury had been intensively planning for what it
would do in the event of Europe generating a new crisis.
He
qualified Wayne Swan's comment to the National Press Club after the
budget that if Australia's economy were to soften, he would cut
further to maintain a surplus, saying this would not apply if there
were a global crisis.
"We
could if necessary go back into deficit to support activity," Dr
Parkinson said.
Whereas
the Rudd government launched a fiscal stimulus package and banking
guarantees within less than a month of the Lehman collapse, Dr
Parkinson suggested the different circumstances now would allow a
more measured response.
"Were
there to be a shock now, the first thing to do would be to rely on
monetary policy," he said.
He
noted that interest rates had already come down by a full percentage
point since late last year.
The
government would then allow the deficit to rise. This is known as the
"automatic stabilising" support that government provides in
a downturn as spending on unemployment benefits rises while the tax
the government takes out of the economy falls.
"Would
we (then) move to discretionary fiscal policy? That's where a lot of
the additional debt has emanated from," he said. "That
would depend on the magnitude of the issues."
Dr
Parkinson made it clear he still believed in the power of
discretionary budget spending, and said Australia had "very
extensive capacity to respond". However, he implied that it
would be more of a last resort. "Fiscal policy now has a
medium-term focus," he said.
In
a financial crisis, Dr Parkinson said, it was vital to give people
confidence in the financial sector.
"There
is a range of things we can do," he said. "Some we could do
early and some reluctantly (later). We've mapped out all the
instruments available to us and thought about what we might use and
when."
Although
he did not spell it out, Treasury's reluctance likely relates to the
sweeping wholesale and retail banking guarantees that were adopted
around the world in the wake of the 2008 crisis.
He
said the new financial claims scheme, under which the first $250,000
of all retail bank deposits is guaranteed, would help, as would the
fact that Australia's banks had already raised all the money they
needed to support lending for a six-month period.
Dr
Parkinson noted that Australian banks were so strong foreign
investors were asking them to issue more international bonds.
Normally banks have to go to investors to sell bonds. He said
Australia's financial regulation system had proven equal to the 2008
crisis and had been strengthened since then.
Dr
Parkinson said he expected Australia would be helped through a
financial crisis by the continuing strength of the Chinese economy.
China
would still be affected by a sharp downturn in Europe - its biggest
export market - however, Dr Parkinson said, the investment that
consumed Australia's raw materials was increasingly devoted to
servicing China's domestic market.
The
head of the Treasury's macro-economic division, David Gruen, said the
recent run of weak Chinese economic reports had not upset budget
forecasts that China would achieve growth of 8.25 per cent or more
this year and next.
Treasury
also believes the recent weakness in commodity prices, with iron ore
falling by 10 per cent since the budget, remained consistent with the
budget forecasts. However, it is increasingly pessimistic about
Europe.
"Financial
markets have lost confidence in the ability of the political classes
to reach a resolution," Dr Parkinson said.
He
was sharply critical of the European Central Bank's low-interest
loans to banks, amounting to more than E1 trillion ($1.27 trillion),
saying the money had been used by the banks to buy their government's
bonds.
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