10:21 Sat, 19 May 2012
The Sydney Morning Herald's Ross Gittins has a good article on how monetary policy and
fiscal policy as implemented by Australia's Reserve Bank and the Dept of Treasury
interact over both short and medium terms to produce low inflation and good economic
growth.
Australia has seen both for a few decades, much of it built on the foundations of
Treasurer Paul Keating in the 1980s.
The article, which is pretty much a summary of key points made by Secretary of
Treasury Dr Martin Parkinson in his annual post-Budget speech, gives a good overall view
and is worth a read for a layman's summary of how it all works.
In a nutshell, Australia's fiscal policy includes automatic stabilisers that offset
periods of low or high growth, and monetary policy includes the ability to change things
in the immediate short term with adjustments that can be small or large if needed.
Both of these things combined have provided stability and continued growth with low inflation.
[continued...]
12:56 Mon, 27 Feb 2012
There is a great divide between the public's perception and the insiders' perception
of Kevin Rudd.
Rudd has a much higher public approval rating than Julia Gillard. Yet the Labor Party
has now twice voted for Gillard against Rudd. In the lead up to today's leadership
challenge, some Labor parliamentarians were even quoted as saying they would vote for
Gillard although it might mean they would lose their seats at the next election.
How can this be so? Why would a politician commit suicide rather than reinstate a
leader who is popular with the public?
The answer is that those that knew Rudd when he was Prime Minister knew that he was
completely dysfunctional in that role. He was an accident waiting to happen and, more
importantly, a potential train wreck for the Party.
He is not a team player, a fatal flaw as a politician and especially so for one in the
Labor Party.
He would declare policy, apparently without having consulted Cabinet or the Department
responsible. Who knows where it came from.
[continued...]
09:02 Sun, 04 Sep 2011
New technology and science in crime fighting means that old crimes from 20 or 30 years
ago are now being solved, mainly from DNA evidence.
One of the perhaps unexpected outcomes is that there are more elderly prisoners than
before, to the point that prisons are having problems coping with them.
An example of the change is in Victoria's prison system where the number of prisoners
over 50 has doubled in the last ten years, and there are more new prisoners in their 70s
and 80s, which used to be a rare event.
Australia Bureau of Statistics figures show that over the last ten years the number of
Australians over 50 has grown by 31%, whereas in prison it has grown by 84%.
The implications are wide: some of elderly prisoners can't use the top bunk, can't wash
themselves and can't get around to do exercise without a frame. It also means that
prison hospitals are increasingly being used as aged-care facilities.
We might end up like the U.S. and have special nursing home prisons. More in The Age.
10:15 Tue, 30 Aug 2011
Australia is "debating" changes to the law that will force ISPs and telecommunication
companies to keep data on their users. I put "debating" in quotes, because the
government is forcing the bills through without any sort of meaningful public input.
The bills are a disgrace. As one commentator (see link below) says, we don't accept
that the government can open our letters and read them, so why should email or text
messages be any different? We also haven't been told whether a history of our day-to-day
browsing the Web will be kept, or for how long, or who would have access to that
information.
The trouble with broad-reaching legislation is that, despite reassuring comments at
first, the legislation inevitably gets used in the widest possible way, much beyond what
the original intent was. For this reason alone, we should be concerned about it.
In the interests of fairness, I link to The
Age's opinion piece by Robert McLelland, the Federal Attorney-General, who is
replying to a previous critical piece. Make sure you read the comments to McLelland for several very good
reasons why the legislation should be rejected.
09:55 Sat, 30 Jul 2011
The U.S. debt ceiling crisis gets weirder. For what was initially a three
party squabble (Democrats, moderate Republicans and the Tea Party), it
has a new party. The latest addition is God.
As reported in The Age's story Tea
Party Calls the Tune and Republicans Dance to the Right Senator Tim
Scott is now claiming that divine inspiration leads his vote.
''Divine inspiration already happened,'' said Mr Scott, a liaison
to party leadership for Republicans newly elected to the House. ''I'm a 'no'.''
I suppose some religious people could accept divine guidance in ethical matters, but to
think that God has inspired guidance for a simple squabble over economics? It's a
measure of the limited mindset of these Senators that they haven't considered hubris
instead of God.
11:59 Sat, 22 Jan 2011
Now that the mop-up is taking place after the overwhelming Queensland and Victorian
floods, we are starting to talk about how to fund the rebuilding.
Prime Minister Gillard won't give an unequivocal answer, but has floated the idea of a
one-off tax levy and some tight budget constraints on government spending elsewhere.
My first reaction is to ask why nobody is mentioning the dreaded "debt" word.
It is a failure of Australian politics, both at the State and Federal levels, that debt
has become a complete pariah. It is a hangover from the 1980s and 1990s when Labor
State governments were fiscally irresponsible and had to be brought to account. But the
pendulum has swung too far when the very mention of the word sends politicians running
away.
There is nothing wrong per-se with government debt. It is the cheapest funding
available. It is the right way to fund projects that have huge capital costs and where
the benefits to the nation from those projects are realised over decades. There is no
reason why current generations should pay the full cost of benefits that they and
future generations will receive.
[continued...]
11:24 Sat, 08 Jan 2011
There's been some kerfuffle in the last week when retailers mounted a
campaign to lower the duty-free tax threshold. They claim they are
unfairly losing business to on-line offshore sellers because buyers
don't have to pay GST on imports less than $1,000. The argument is
summarised in The Age here.
According to that, the retailers have been stunned by the
backlash against them.
The retailers just don't get it, and it shows in the major tactical
blunder they made. They argued that their prices were disadvantaged
because local shoppers had to pay GST, whereas on-line shoppers going
offshore did not.
Their blunder was that on-line shoppers, by definition, are internet
savvy and quite used to doing price comparisons on the web. These
shoppers know that on-line prices are not cheaper by the 10% or 15% of
the GST, but by 30% or 50% or even 75%.
Shoppers immediately called foul and filled newspapers comments.
[continued...]
12:56 Sat, 18 Dec 2010
Bank of America announced last week that it will no longer process
payments that could end up at Wikileaks. It gave no real reason other
than Wikileaks "may be involved with activities that are inconsistent
with our internal policies", which could mean anything since BoA did not
explain which internal policies or what they were.
Combined with similar actions by PayPal, Visa and MasterCard, this is
a worry. When I first read it, I immediately thought that America seems to
be returning to a form of McCarthy-ism. Previously, I would have thought
it impossible for America to turn back to those bad days of
trial-by-innuendo and character assassination.
Why am I singling out BoA from the others? The answer is that BoA is a bank
and banks are the core of the payments processing that is a
fundamental necessity of any economy. (Credit card companies are also payment
processors technically, but ultimately must settle via a
bank.) Because BoA is a bank, it has a much higher standard to
meet to ensure it is neutral in transaction processing. It should
not take sides. In fact, in my country it would probably attract the
attention of the regulator for this action.
[continued...]
19:26 Mon, 29 Nov 2010
The result is in at last after 3 days of waiting for recounts in
marginal seats. Labor has conceded and the Liberal/National Party
coalition will form the new government in Victoria.
I suspect most Victorians will be surprised that the result was a
change in government. I think this result was a strong protest vote
against the insular and stale Labor rule, and particularly against
the remote Premier, Brumby. I'm not so sure Victorians definitely
intended to change government.
All I can say now is that the NSW Labor party must be quaking in its
boots. It is going to get absolutely creamed in next year's election.
Not without due cause, either.
The NSW Labor Right faction has dominated policy making in the Labor
party for years, way more than its strength in numbers and way more than
a naive viewer might expect it to. It's reach extends beyond NSW state
politics into the national Labor party and most state Labor branches.
It is ruthless in ensuring that loyalties hold, favours are repaid and
that its viewpoint dominates, sometimes even at the expense of the
[continued...]
10:31 Sun, 30 May 2010
Ross Gittins in The Age writes an
excellent artice on the new mining tax that the Government is
proposing to replace royalties.
It's worth a read in full, but I'll summarise a couple of the key points
that aren't being widely discussed:
- Royalties are inefficient. They make no distinction between low-cost
and high-cost mining: think open-cut versus underground, the royalty is
the same. As well, they are usually fixed price which means in poor times they
can contribute to a mine's shutdown since they add to the ore's
extraction cost.
- Royalties are unfair: the fixed price per tonne means we, the
owners of the ore, don't get the benefit of higher prices in boom times.
The good thing about the new mining tax is that the tax will be high
when prices are high and low when prices are low. As well, mines with
high extraction costs will pay less than mines with low extraction
[continued...]