The consternation continued until the ANU’s Professor John Pitchford told the econocrats to wake up. All the international borrowing and lending was occurring in the private sector between “consenting adults”. They should be free to act as they saw fit – and bear the consequences should any of their decisions prove unwise.
With hindsight, it’s easier to see, as Smith has, that the economy was simply adjusting to the removal of the controls on inflows and outflows of financial capital, which had been part of maintaining a fixed exchange rate. After the float, foreigners could more easily invest in Oz, and Australians could more easily invest overseas.
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Plus, back then we had to remember that the balance on the current account of the balance of payments represents the difference between how much the nation’s households, companies and governments choose to invest in new housing, business plant and structures, and public infrastructure, and how much those three sectors choose to save via bank accounts and superannuation etc, company retained earnings, and budget operating surpluses.
To an economist, the current account deficit equals national saving minus national investment. So, invest more than you save during a period – as we almost always do – and your current account is in deficit. You fund that deficit by borrowing the savings of foreigners, or allowing them to own Australian shares, businesses or property.
Which brings us to compulsory super. Keating and his ACTU mate Bill Kelty decided to introduce the “superannuation guarantee” mainly to give ordinary workers something better than the age pension to live on in retirement, but also because the econocrats decided Australians should be saving more.
The other rich countries had introduced national retirement schemes after World War II, but Keating’s scheme was very different. Whereas their schemes had contributions going straight into the budget, and pension payments coming out of that year’s budget, our contributions go to a private sector super fund for investment, with the same fund sending you regular payments once you’re in “pension mode”.
We’re not only saving more than we used to, we’re saving more than other rich debtor countries.
It’s mainly because our scheme has money invested and piling up in super funds, and because roughly half that money is invested on foreign sharemarkets, that our net foreign liabilities have fallen so far relative to GDP – and may one fall to the point where our foreign liabilities become our foreign assets. Our super savings now total $4.2 trillion, with O’Mahony estimating they could be as high as $38 trillion by 2063.
The national super scheme has been far more successful than expected in increasing Australia’s rate of saving. We’re not only saving more than we used to, we’re saving more than other rich debtor countries.
Largely as a consequence, we’ve been running a surplus on our international trade in goods and services since June 2018. And although we still run a current account deficit, it’s much smaller – about 2 per cent of GDP.
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Back in the ’80s and ’90s, our net foreign liabilities were high because as well as our high and growing net foreign debt, we also had much foreign equity investment in Australia, particularly ownership of our mining industry.
But this equity liability to foreign owners of Australian companies and shares has steadily been outweighed by our growing ownership of shares in foreign companies. In June this year, our net foreign equity assets of $760 billion offset our (still-growing) foreign debt of $1420 billion, to reduce our net foreign liabilities to $660 billion, a mere 24 per cent of GDP.
And although it’s had help from an undervalued Aussie dollar and an overvalued world share market, most of the credit for this “extraordinary” fall in our net liabilities to the rest of the world goes to our unusual national super scheme.