Ronald and Kevin: Two failed revolutions separated by history

When Keynes’s masterpiece ‘The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money’ came out in 1936, Schumpeter, by then the senior member of the Harvard economics faculty, told his students to read the book and told them also that Keynes’ work had totally superseded his own earlier writings on money. Keynes, in turn considered Schumpeter one of the few contemporary economists worthy of his respect. Yet Schumpeter considered Keynes’ answers to most economics questions as wrong. Schumpeter and Keynes are often contrasted politically with Schumpeter being portrayed as the ‘conservative’ and Keynes the ‘radical. The opposite is more nearly right. Politically Keynes’ views were quite similar to what we now call ‘neo-conservative’. His theory had its origins in his passionate attachment to the free market and in his desire to keep politicians and governments out of it. Schumpeter, by contrast, had serious doubts about free markets.

Peter Drucker’s ‘The Frontiers of Management’ , 1983.

In just about every rich country, the global financial crisis has morphed NOT into the triumph of Keynesian economics but into the fiscal crisis of the modern welfare state. The Tea Party rebels and the bond kings are advancing on Capitol Hill, the British are enduring their most bracing budget austerity in generations and there are street riots in European cities. This hasn’t happened here for one reason: Australia escaped the rich world recession not because our budget stimulus was much bigger or better than the rest, as Wayne Swan suggests in his weekend ‘Keynesian in the Recovery’ essay for the Fabians. We’ve stood out because of the unique China boom…. The Treasury calculates that Swan’s 2012-13 budget surplus still would be propped up by the unsustainable high iron ore and coal export prices. The budget will remain in an underlying "structural" deficit until 2019-20 on its reckoning. This amounts to a serious national vulnerability.

Michael Stutchbury, Economics Editor, The Australian 12/4/ 2011.

My G20 colleagues, many of whom have experienced deep recessions in their own countries, also know better than most how effective Australia’s fiscal policy has been and how strict our fiscal rules are.

Treasurer Wayne Swan, The Australian 14/4/ 2011.

I finally saw the light. Slowly, I discovered that the left was inherently totalitarian…… The Reagan revolution could never be won unless the establishment politicians and opinion makers gave our ideas a fair hearing. They had to be convinced that sound money, lower tax rates, and a vast curtailment of federal spending, welfare, and subsidies was the only recipe for sustained economic growth and social progress…… The abortive Reagan revolution proved that the American electorate wants a moderate social democracy to shield itself from capitalism’s rougher edges. Recognition of this in the Oval Office is all that stands between a tolerable economic future and one fraught with unprecedented perils.

From the cover sheet: Despite the powerful mandate given to President Reagan by the American people, his program faces increasing difficulties as it encounters political realities. Even those members of Congress who favor spending cuts in principle hastily vacate the battle field when this conflicts with powerful demands of their own constituencies. Eventually Stockman, the revolutionary, is forced to accept the reality of his theories, which looked so convincing on paper, have been based on a profound misjudgement of the American political system.

"The Triumph of Politics: Why the Reagan Revolution Failed’ by David Stockman published 1986, Director of the Office of Budget and Administration 1981-1985.

 

HEAD-NOTE EXPLANATIONS

1. Peter Drucker is acknowledged as one of the leading economic and business strategists of his age and his bio is obviously available on Google. From our readings over the years we believe that Drucker favoured Schumpeter over Keynes. Schumpeter held that a modern economy was always in dynamic disequilibrium, it is forever growing and changing, and is biological rather than mechanistic in nature. Keynes was more inclined to believe in the certainty of macro economics, a more prescriptive approach.

2. Michael Stutchbury, in our view, is an extremely balanced economics writer and takes issue with the self-serving and convoluted approach to Keynes adopted by Treasurer Swan. Keynes did not promote unfettered or loose government spending as the path to prosperity.

3. Wayne Swan just learns his lines and ignores the failed policies that have come from the Rudd and Gillard governments which have pushed interest rates up, national debt up, actual and prospective budget surpluses down, and taxes up. In an economy as exposed as ours to world trade and growth, squandering earned income is economic folly.

4. Ronald Reagan is portrayed as the saviour of the American capitalist system with such famous quotes as " A recession is when your neighbour loses his job. A depression is when you lose yours. And recovery is when Jimmy Carter loses his" and "Government exists to protect us from each other. Where government has gone beyond its limits is in deciding to protect us from ourselves." This latter policy quote was lifted from the writings of Ayn Rand, who met Reagan in 1949 as a Hollywood scriptwriter before going on to publish her famous works "The Fountainhead" and Atlas Shrugged" .

Rand is acknowledged By Alan Greenspan as the person who ‘broadened my horizons far beyond the models of economics I’d learned. I began to study how societies form and how cultures behave, and to realize that economics and forecasting depend on such knowledge. Different cultures grow and create material wealth in profoundly different ways. All of this started with Ayn Rand. She introduced me to a vast realm from which I’d shut myself off.’

Ronald Reagan was president of the USA from 1981 to 1989 and might have been in early stage dementia for a good part of his second term. Ecinya is of the opinion that Reagan was the first architect of the end of capitalism in America. As evidence of this, page 332 of Stockman’s book throws up – ‘Newt Gingrich, the self-proclaimed conservative gadfly from Georgia, had made the outstanding assertion that Ronald Reagan was not significantly different from Jimmy Carter’. Ayn Rand initially endorsed Reagan’s candidature but withdrew her endorsement when he mixed religion and politics. Reagan preached small government, but sowed the seeds of fiscal recklessness into the fabric of the American dream.

 

PURPOSE OF THIS WEEK’S INSIGHT

The mistakes of the past are oft repeated and economists are said by Drucker to be the slowest learners of all as they are ‘prisoners of totally invalid but dogmatic theories’. The last term of the Howard government spent too much and expanded the role of government beyond reasonable limits. Mr Rudd then got elected by portraying himself as a conservative and when the GFC came saw it as his opportunity to be a revolutionary. He was resisted in this by Lindsay Tanner, but encouraged by Messrs Gillard and Swan and then influenced Treasury, or was encouraged by them, to attack the American and European financial crisis with massive Keynesian expenditures lest we became ensnared in the sub-prime crash web. The waste that resulted now means that we are under-funded to meet the challenges of the Queensland, Northern NSW and Victorian floods, not to mention higher oil prices, skills shortages, and the Japanese quake, and basic infrastructure needs.

To compound the problem Keynesian theories are being twisted to cover-up inept policy and inept execution. For example, we are embarking on a National Broadband roll-out of dubious merit, proposing to tax the mining industry, and proposing a carbon tax which is currently a confusion. All of this at a time when the consumer is going on strike and committing the unpardonable sin of saving rather than borrowing to consume at elevated interest rates. Also we have a number of high cost desalination plants around the country and other infrastructure errors soaking up scarce resources. Policy has become a patchwork that seems to reflect massive disequilibrium without Schumpeter’s dynamism.

 

CAPITALISM IS DEAD AND WE SHOULD ACKNOWLEDGE THAT FACT

It is relatively easy to say that there are four systems of government – capitalism, socialism, communism, and totalitarianism. Ecinya is of the belief that what we need is BALANCED FREE ENTERPRISE and we have been banging this drum for so long that one of our regular readers is sick of hearing it. Today, in developed economies we have governments in all of its various forms (federal, state, municipal) running at somewhere between 20 and 30% of the economy, squeezing the private sector. The capitalism vs socialism debate is not worth having for neither exists in abundance in the developed world, nor even in most parts of the emerging world.

Balanced free enterprise means that there is a valid and useful role for government including the provision of social and commercial infrastructure that provide appropriate community solutions. The genuinely disadvantaged have to be helped. Government is essentially an agency function where taxpayer’s money comes back to them via constructive government initiatives in education, health, infrastructure, security, law and order etc. Our editor’s recollection of the best years of government in Australia have been the Menzies era, the Hawke-Keating-Walsh years and the Howard-Costello years. The worst years have been Whitlam, Fraser, and now Rudd-Gillard.

 

AMERICA

We believe that the best of America is the best that is available and though we decry the concept of American exceptionalism much of what the world enjoys today has come from American enthusiasm, creativity, and engineering skills. But America now finds itself in a horrendous situation with huge federal debts running at 100% of GDP, a seemingly intractable domestic deficit, a current account deficit, insolvent states and municipalities, falling house prices, high unemployment , a falling currency, huge energy dependence, and ongoing wars.

Over the past two decades, except for a brief period under the Clinton- Newt Gingrich axis, things have accelerated to the downside.. America has –

  • Exported jobs to Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, China.
  • Fought a number of wars that have gone over-time and over-budget and are still continuing to varying degrees.
  • Experienced two major bubbles……dot-com and sub prime.
  • Failed to address structural problems in taxation, banking, politics and manufacturing.

 

DAVID ROSENBERG

David Rosenberg was the Chief Strategist at Merrill Lynch prior to the takeover by Bank of America. He now works for Gluskin Sheff of Canada and his views are always worth a visit. His 10 policy ideas for the USA were published on 21 January 2011 and they do indicate the depth of the American malaise plus they strike a harmonic chord with our Australian experience today and yesterday.

  1. An energy policy that truly removes U.S. dependence on foreign oil (shale case, coal, nuclear).
  2. A complete rewrite of the tax code that promotes savings, investment, and a revamp of the capital stock. Cut tax rates, eliminate loopholes and costly tax breaks. Tax consumption, promote savings and investment. That is crucial. But it will take political courage (ask Brian Mulroney).
  3. A credible plan that reverses the runup in the debt to GDP ratio. This includes not just on-balance sheet items but new rules governing entitlements too. We need delineation of the future of Fannie and Freddie if there is any … they became wards of the government nearly three years ago and there is still no clarification on this file (slightly more important than these periodic consumer spending gimmicks that have surfaced over the past few years). We need a complete rewrite of social contracts and a reversal in sacred cows that have been created over the years that are completely unaffordable. Plus, people are not going to learn to live within their means if our politicians continue to set a bad example. The act of dipping into Social Security, incentivizing companies who are already cash-rich to spend more on new equipment and extending a Bush tax cut that always had a 10-year expiry date at the expense of the already severely strained public purse was political expediency at its worst.
  4. A massive mortgage write-down by the banks — a Jubilee of biblical proportions — that provide much-needed equity to upside-down homeowners.
  5. A creative strategy to put people to work instead of paying them to be idle — having nearly half of the unemployed ranks out of work for over 15 weeks and a 25% youth jobless rate is unacceptable at any level.
  6. Tort reform. The only way to rationally bring down health care costs to more manageable levels.
  7. And from six — use whatever proceeds they can save to enhance their education skills, especially in the sciences and mathematics where the U.S.A. is sliding down the global scale.
  8. Financial sector regulatory reforms that actually have some teeth.
  9. Change tax policy to free up the hundreds of billions of dollars of corporate cash sitting in reserve in overseas accounts — bring this money home!
  10. Our Republican friends may not like this too much but in Canada, we understand the importance of immigration inflows and the U.S.A. should be doing more on this front to stimulate its long-run growth potential. This is where Japan’s decade of lost growth became two decades but its decision to resist immigration rule changes is more cultural in nature. The U.S.A., like Canada, is already extremely diverse. But as economists, what goes into economic growth is both simple and complicated. The simple part is merely identifying the two ingredients: growth in the population (more specifically, the part of the population that is working) and productivity (what most of the other nine ideas listed above would attempt to generate). But the dependency ratio is working against the U.S.A. and a smart immigration policy would help at least stem the runup.

You don’t have to agree with all of Rosenberg’s policy ideas them to realise that much work needs to be done. Ecinya lives in the hope and indeed the expectation that the next president of the United States can avoid the cult of celebrity, the idiocy of presidential infallibility, and have a sense of humour beyond slapstick that delivers fundamental messages of peace and prosperity to the world. The turmoil of the George W Bush years are behind us, though America seems to be still addicted to cheap oil. A vibrant America is of the utmost importance to the world. It is a pity that Obama wasted so much time and energy on healthcare when the healthiest thing that anyone can have is a good education and a worthwhile job.

America has become a cash flow statement with an unsound profit and loss account and a stressed balance sheet.

 

WHY TALK OF AMERICA AND AUSTRALIA AT THE SAME TIME

Our editor has been around the world enough times to have an appreciation of how it hangs together. At Ecinya we have had the mistaken belief that Australia was clever enough and pragmatic enough to adopt the best of British (integrity, respect, good manners, a sense of fair play) and the best of America (effort, innovation, established wealth, positive thinking). However, that has not been the case and we have adopted the worst of British (excessive welfare and low productivity) and the worst of America (celebrity and profligate politicians, excessive consumption, excessive debt, low productivity, no attention to small business).

But America is 20% of the world economy and China is about 9%. So the world’s largest economy is a major historical ally and the fastest growing economy is our major trading partner. A lot of what is happening in America is happening here and we have to be aware of historical precedent lest we squander our chances for sustainable prosperity.

 

Ecinya Insights: Economic Update

This has been written to attempt a brief articulation of a major concern that far from saving Australia from the ‘global financial crisis’ the actions, rhetoric and policies of the current Australian government are going to totally immerse us in it, or delay our recovery from it, or both. We are just 1% of the global economy. Time is needed to see where the stimulus packages of China, America and Europe will lead the world. Current local policy prescriptions seem to be pre-emptive, excessive, and poorly targeted.

Ecinya essay of 8/2/2009 reproduced as an Ecinya Insights article on 1/9/2009 – "A reflection: Australia and the global financial crisis".

RAZOR GANG ORDERS MORE BUDGET CUTS: Disaster recovery costs soar/ pressure on growth forecasts – federal cabinet’s powerful expenditure review committee has told ministers to find a new round of budget savings from their departments as it scrambles to fund a natural disaster bill that threatens to reach $8billion. It is expected that budget growth growth forecasts will be revised down for 2010-11 from 3.25 per cent to 2.5 per cent as a result of the disasters here and in Japan.

Front page The Australian Financial Review April Fool’s Day 1/4/2011.

The papers are saying that the Prime Minister cannot ignore facts. This is nonsense. If he cannot ignore facts he has no business being in politics

From Sir Humphrey Appleby KCBs 1989 diary. British TV series ‘Yes Prime Minister’

We have moved beyond the days of big government and big welfare to opportunity through education and inclusion through participation. We have always acknowledged that access to opportunity comes with obligations to seize that opportunity – to work hard, to set your alarm clocks early, to ensure your children are at school. We are the party of work, not welfare. That’s why we respect the efforts of the brickie and look with a jaundiced eye on the lifestyle of the socialite.

Prime Minister Julia Gillard at the inaugural Gough Whitlam oration in Sydney 31/3/2011.

 

COMMENT ON OUR HEAD QUOTES

1. Prime Ministers who would rather be Presidents love a global financial, or any other, crisis as it makes them appear to be Presidential. But the GFC would have had little impact on Australia once bank borrowings were guaranteed and some simple measures including a payroll tax holiday implemented. The excessive response depleted the coffers, and waste and fraud resulted.

2. The inevitable outcome of the GFC response has been revealed today. We can now expect a cacophony of statements saying it is all due to the floods, the earthquakes, etc. But being ‘tough’ today means I might be able to give you some tax cuts when I next ask you to vote for me. Austerity is good for all of us and is a demonstration of our economic maturity though we were the ones who squandered the surplus.

3. Our current Prime Minister routinely ignores facts such as the Building the Education Revolution fiasco; talking about brickies, but not insulation installers; threatening to punish inefficient states where government has just changed from Labor to Liberal and knowing that the new governments are blameless; the absence of an adequate feasibility study on the NBN; facts surrounding global warming and Australia’s relative position in the global warming quantities.

4. It is rather ironic that a speech given in the name of our worst fiscal PM in post war history (Mr Gough Whitlam) should deliver lines so vacuous as to be laughable.

 

PURPOSE OF THIS WEEK’S INSIGHT ARTICLE

The purpose of this week’s article is to put some perspective on recent economic opinions and data.

Though we consider the primary drivers of stock-market activity to be interest rates, confidence and company earnings (‘ICE’) the health of the economy is an important context. However, as we have pointed out before economic forecasts can be misleading and deceptive and must always be approached with caution. Economists have a very bad track-record in calling turning points in both the economy and stock-markets. Winston Churchill, talking about desirable qualifications in a politician (which can be applied to many economists as well) said: "The ability to foretell what is going to happen tomorrow, next week, next month, and next year. And to have the ability afterwards to explain why it didn’t happen."

Another purpose is to discipline ourselves to get ‘up to speed’ on the economic stats and the accompanying rhetoric ourselves.

 

REAL GDP FOR AUSTRALIA. (gross domestic product – the value of all goods and services produced in the economy)

  • The Economist Outlook book of December 2010 forecast GDP growth of 2.6% for calendar 2011.
  • The March 2011 Economist magazine revised this up for 2011 to 3.1% and gave a 2012 forecast of 3.7% and revised inflation up to 3.1% for 2011.
  • The AFR of 1 April 2011 schedules the views of 23 bank and institutional economists as having a median forecast of 2.9% for 2011 with a high of 4.2% residing with Barclays Capital and a low of 1.7% from ANZ Bank. Median headline inflation is 3.1%
  • The same AFR issue has a median GDP forecast of 3.9% for 2012 with a high of 4.6% and a low of 3.1%. ANZ is at 4.2%, Barclays 4.3%.
  • From International Monetary Fund stats of October 2010, Australian GDP averaged 3.8% in the 10 years to 2001, and 2.8% in the 10 years to 2010. If we exclude 2008 and 2009 when GDP averaged 1.7%, the other 8 years averaged 3.1%.

Observations: Apart from the ANZ in 2011 the consensus is fairly firmly in the camp of on-trend growth for 2011 around 3.0%. Our guess is that calendar 2011 will be a sluggish year with an overall growth rate around 2.0%. This is closer to the ANZ view than the consensus.

 

THE RESERVE BANK CREDIT STATS TO FEBRUARY 2011

We all know that money and credit makes the world go round and that when confidence is high and growth is readily apparent that people and businesses borrow and spend more.

Stats for the year to February 2011 and corresponding years back to 2008 from the RBA credit statistics indicate –

  • Owner occupied housing rose 6.8% in the year to February 2011. This compares with the 2010 year of 9.9%, 2009 8.3% and 2008 11.9%
  • Investment housing rose 7.5% for 2011, 5.3% for 2010, 4.2% for 2009, 10.8% 2008.
  • Other personal credit 0.7% for 2011, 1.3% 2010, negative 6% 2009, and 11.4% 2008.
  • Business credit for 2011 negative 1.7%, 2010 negative 7.1%, 6.3% for 2009, and 21.9% 2008.

Observations: All of the credit Numbers were in double-digit territory in 2008 with business being particularly strong at almost 22%. personal credit has slowed dramatically. Owner-occupied housing has slowed significantly. Business credit has slowed dramatically. Overall these statistics indicate that the economy is sluggish. Anecdotal evidence in the retail sector confirms the personal credit stats.

 

WESTPAC BANK ECONOMIC BRIEFING NOTES FOR MARCH 2011

These flash notes from Westpac are very sound and probably excellent. We are only attempting a quick precis of their contents and conclusions. They may not be available to non-Westpac customers, but all of the banks produce regular economic updates. The main thing we are looking for when reading any of the economic notes that we access on a regular basis is a change in the rhetoric ….. the nuance…..we have found over the years that economists are slow to react and downgrade, or even upgrade, their opinions. Generally, we find that the stock-market itself is head of the economists. Also when a cogent argument is not reflected in the market you can wait until the market catches up, or chooses to ignore it.

2 March 2011 Bulletin: The Australian economy… a mixed end to 2010… Q4 GDP 0.4%, 2.7% for the year. Apart from inventories the contributing inputs were muted…..domestic demand growth low, housing in negative territory, business investment lacklustre. Westpac is expecting just one interest rate rise in 2011, out of step with the consensus view which is expecting more. Ecinya is closer to the Westpac position, though there is the possibility that the Australian and the world economy might weaken such that the RBA drops interest rates.

3 March 2011 Bulletin: Australia’s trade surplus holds at $2bn despite Queensland floods. Volatile fuel imports slumped $754m which helped coal and iron ore export weakness.

3 March 2011 Bulletin: Australian dwelling approvals slump as flood hit combines with reversals in apartments spike… year on year approvals negative 24.8%

9 March 2011 Bulletin: Consumer sentiment dips despite steady rates…. the Westpac-Melbourne Index of Consumer Sentiment fell by 2.4% in March falling from 106.6 to 104.1.

9 March 2011 Bulletin: January finance falls 4.5%. Housing finance dropped significantly in January, with the approvals process disrupted by the floods that devastated Queensland and parts of NSW and Victoria.

10 March 2011 Bulletin: Jobs growth negative 10k… job creation stalled over the last 3 months. The Australian economy entered a soft patch as 2010 ended and this has extended into 2011. ….The annual pace of growth in total hours worked slowed to 2.3% from a peak of 4.3% in August 2010.

16 March 2011 Bulletin: Leading index falls….. The annualised growth rate of the Westpac-Melbourne Institute leading Index, which indicates the likely pace of economic activity three to nine months into the future, was 3.5% in January 2011, slightly above its long term trend of 3.3%, but down on the 4.6% pace recorded in December and the very strong 9%+ growth recorded early last year. The growth rate of the Coincident Index was 2.0%, well below its long term trend of 3.3%.

17 March 2011 Bulletin: Westpac-ACCI survey of industrial trends… conditions jump, reversing ground lost in 2010… there is now a clear majority of respondents who expect that the general business situation will improve…. Manufacturer’s plans for investment spending on plant and equipment for the next 12 months strengthened markedly…. profit expectations are solid, reflecting rising sales expectations, despite concerns about rising costs and limited pricing power.

31 March 2011 Bulletin: Australian retail sales… another solid gain but conditions flat ex Queensland.

31 March 2011 Bulletin: Australian dwelling approvals… slide deepens.. year on year negative 21.8%…… even allowing for weather related impacts the data does suggest a weaker trajectory for approvals into 2011.

 

OVERALL CONCLUSIONS: The Westpac analysis is mixed and tending towards caution but overall activity seems reasonable. As most of the data relates to February and prior, it will be interesting to see whether, or not, the April data deteriorates in context of the likely budget outlook and the carbon tax ‘debate’. Ecinya expects a volatile year for economic statistics generally and major hesitancy on the part of consumers. We do expect a drop in interest rates sometime after the May budget. The oil price is a worry against the background of the Libyan and broader Middle East geo-political and military happenings.

 

THE INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND 25 JANUARY UPDATE

Growth remains subdued in the advanced economies with unemployment still high and renewed stresses in the euro area contributing to downside risks. In many emerging economies growth remains elevated but inflationary pressures are building. Downside risks to overall recovery remain elevated and policies to redress fiscal imbalances and financial systems require rapid and comprehensive action.