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THURSDAY, JULY 03, 2025
The era of big fiscal spending has only just begun

Analysis

Daniel Moss, Bloomberg
13 May, 2021, 01:15 pm
Last modified: 13 May, 2021, 01:17 pm

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The era of big fiscal spending has only just begun

Australia's approach to fight Covid is a warning to the world

Daniel Moss, Bloomberg
13 May, 2021, 01:15 pm
Last modified: 13 May, 2021, 01:17 pm
The Covid-19 crisis has led to reforms in the business assessment process. Photo: Collected
The Covid-19 crisis has led to reforms in the business assessment process. Photo: Collected

Australia is fortifying the economy with huge government spending that will last well beyond this year's projected global rebound. With Covid-19 infections resurgent in Asia, prompting fresh curbs on activity, it's time to shift our thinking about the longevity of big-ticket stimulus. This isn't going to be a one-shot deal. 

Prime Minister Scott Morrison's team forecast this week a shortfall worth 5% of gross domestic product in the year through June 2022, greater than anticipated. Finances will be in the red at least until 2025, officials predict. (This, in a country once fixated on a balanced budget.) The message contrasts starkly with pledges by Morrison and Treasurer Josh Frydenberg in late 2019 that they would deliver surpluses. Treasury, meanwhile, expects GDP will rise 5.25% this calendar year, before cooling to 2.75% in 2022. The government is also trying to drive unemployment down to levels rarely seen in the past half-century. 

Australia certainly isn't the only place to unleash fiscal stimulus to combat the pandemic; the US, Japan and Europe have all primed the pump. What's distinctive is that previous antipathy to deficits has gone out the window. When you consider that the country's borders are likely to stay effectively shut through late 2022 and the vaccine rollout is severely delayed, the approach makes more sense. "The pandemic has heralded an era of permanently larger public spending," Marcel Thieliant, a senior economist at Capital Economics, wrote after Frydenberg's annual budget speech Tuesday. It doesn't hurt that the central bank is sending strong signals that it will extend quantitative easing and, possibly, the practice of capping yields on some government bonds. Both measures would hold down the cost of borrowing to finance deficits.

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The budget's political appeal is potent: An election is due next year and Morrison's conservative bloc commands a narrow majority in parliament. It may only be this year's economic expansion that matters to voters. The opposition Australian Labor Party, which came close to defeating Morrison in 2019, has struggled for a message since the pandemic began. Labor can hardly accuse the government of jeopardizing the recovery through austerity now.

The message could ultimately have more resonance beyond the island continent. Before the pandemic, it had been fashionable to think Australia had some secret sauce, enabling it to cruise for three decades without a recession. It survived the Asian financial crisis of the late 1990s, the dotcom bust of the early 2000s and the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. I was in the audience at a luncheon address to the Economic Club of New York a few years ago when Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said, only half-jokingly, that Australia seemed to have escaped the ups and downs of business cycles.

If people are still paying attention to what Australia does, it's a sobering message. Normal economic policy just got abnormal for the long haul. The budget challenges any idea that business will come roaring back. Australia allocated A$2.1 billion ($1.6 billion) to support aviation, tourism, the arts and international education providers. They will need it. Few places in Asia look ready to let anyone go much of anywhere.


Disclaimer: This article first appeared on Bloomberg, and is published by special syndication arrangement

Top News / World+Biz / Global Economy

Fiscal spending / Economy growth / Economy / Economic Growth / Global economic growth / Global economy / Spending

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