Cooling
Mine Boom Pressures Australia Budget
Return
to Surplus Questioned, as Windfall from Resource-Related Revenue
Disappears and Big Mine Projects Are Shelved
WSJ,
30
August, 2012
It
is getting harder for the government of Prime Minister Julia Gillard
to meet a promise to return to a budget surplus this fiscal year, as
iron-ore prices plunge and the country's biggest mining company
cancels billions of dollars in new projects amid a slowdown in
Australia's resources boom.
Erasing
a 44 billion Australian dollar (US$46 billion) budget shortfall is a
pillar of the government's economic policy ahead of a general
election expected late next year. The revenue to pay for this
economic blueprint was supposed to come partly from a new tax on
profits from the sale of mineral resources and higher corporate-tax
receipts, driven by what the government still boasts is a
once-in-a-century mining boom.
But
the sharp slide in commodity prices and signs of retrenchment by
Australian miners over recent months has put that plan at risk. From
copper mines in tropical Queensland state to big iron-ore pits in the
country's west, mining companies are idling equipment and laying off
workers.
BHP
Billiton Ltd., the world's largest mining company by market value,
said it would lay off some employees after it shelved plans last week
to invest an estimated A$30 billion to expand a copper and uranium
mine in South Australia. In an effort to conserve cash, the company
also said Monday it agreed to sell its Western Australia uranium
deposit to Cameco Corp., CCJ -0.18% of Canada, for US$430 million,
subject to regulatory approval.
Commodity
prices have been declining globally since early this year, in line
with slower growth in China, but while coal prices recently have
stabilized, the fall in iron-ore prices—Australia's biggest export
commodity—has deepened.
Iron
ore traded Thursday at $88.70, having dropped 24% in August alone—far
below government estimates. In April, when the government was
completing its budget, the global spot price for iron ore was at
US$149.40 a ton.
With
coal prices at half their peak of 2008 and iron ore now below $100 a
ton, some economists are forecasting about a A$10 billion shortfall
in the government's expected tax receipts. Iron ore and coal account
for a third of Australia's total exports, and the largest share of
its outbound trade with China.
Adam
Boyton, chief economist at Deutsche Bank, estimates a revenue
shortfall from the price drop will create a budget deficit equivalent
to 1.5% of the country's A$1.4 trillion economy.
"They
will have to save billions through new decisions if they are going to
get the surplus," said Chris Richardson, a partner at Deloitte
Access Economics and a budget analyst.
In
its latest forecast in June, the Bureau of Resources & Energy
Economics, said it expected iron ore, a steelmaking ingredient, to
average US$136 a ton in the current year, and US$131 in 2013. At the
same time, it forecast thermal coal, a poorer quality fuel used
across Asia for power generation, would average US$115 in 2012,
sharply higher than Monday's spot price of US$89.05. BREE's forecasts
are used by the government's economic planners to guide policy.
Treasurer
Wayne Swan played down the impact of falling commodity prices at a
Tuesday news conference, saying the government will hit its
budget-surplus target.
The
government is scheduled to present a budget update before the end of
the year, and is expected to stick to a forecast of a A$1.5 billion
surplus for the fiscal year ending June 30.
Some
economists are betting the shortfall in resources-related revenues
would force a change of policy to meet that goal, including heavy
spending cuts and new tax sources.
Either
move at bolstering the budget would be unpopular with voters. Since
coming to power in 2010, Ms. Gillard has been hurt in opinion polls
by reactions to her handling of key policy issues, including a new
tax on emissions and a rise in the number of asylum-seekers
attempting to reach Australia..
In
a survey of 1,400 voters released Monday by pollster Nielsen, support
for the ruling Labor Party was at 46% on a two-party preferred basis,
below the 50% the party won in the 2010 election. The main opposition
Liberal-National coalition was at 54%. The poll has a margin of error
of plus or minus 2.6%.
The
economy had been one of the government's main bragging points. It had
hoped that planned investments of A$500 billion in mining and
resources projects would ensure the economy continued to sidestep the
woes faced in Europe and the U.S. That spending drive has lost steam,
while banks have become less willing to lend.
Moreover,
the controversial mineral-resources rent tax, or MRRT, which since
July 1 has imposed a 30% levy on profits from iron-ore and coal
production, is expected to miss a target to bring in about A$6.5
billion over the next two years.
Without
deep spending cuts, Macquarie Securities is forecasting a budget
deficit of about A$9 billion in this fiscal year as the falling
commodity prices and lower company profits wipe about A$10 billion
from forecast tax receipts.
The
longer the government delays any decision on adjusting its budget
based on lower revenue "the larger the cuts would have to be to
rescue the surplus," said Brian Redican, a senior economist at
Macquarie.
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