ONE of world’s most vocal economists blames the critical state of the global economy on a failure to learn from past mistakes.
Former US Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan criticises bail-out methods used to address the European debt crisis.
“You do not solve excess deficits by funding them. The long-standing culture of intra-Eurozone lending from the north to south has not changed,” he told a recent Australia-Israel Chamber of Commerce
breakfast.
“Saving rates are much higher in northern Europe while debt in Greece is about 120 per cent of its gross domestic product – the highest in the European Union (EU). It is hard to resolve such imbalances until there are significant changes.”
Greenspan warns climbing debt will steer the global economy into a new credit crunch unless EU member states take action.
“International Monetary Fund studies show developed countries tend to resolve crises by raising taxes, which has a negative effect on economic growth. However, cutting spending has a lesser adverse effect,” he says.
“It is possible to reduce costs with a permanent merger between governments or eliminating the euro currency altogether. Political union is the least bad option.”
However, Greenspan describes downturns as inevitable in cyclical market economies.
“In 2008, we had an international lockdown of the stock market, money, mutual funds and global trade credits. We have not experienced such a breakdown of financial institutions since 1907. The global financial crisis was the worst the US had ever faced," he says.
“However, unless you change human nature, this will continue to happen when dealing with a market economy.”
He warns Chinese currency revaluation and political pressures will impact on Australia’s resources boom, predicting a high Chinese renminbi (RMB) will intensify economic contraction and political unrest.
“China is being pressured to allow the RMB to rise, but the Communist leadership fears it will bring significant contraction in job creation,” he says.
“The allure of party ideology is long gone, leaving the leadership with only prosperity to offer the people. Unemployment often creates political instability.”
Such developments would reduce demand for iron ore, forcing producers to sell at more competitive prices. Greenspan believes Australia could follow the example of Norway, which established a sovereign wealth fund (SWF).
“The danger lies in how there is no way to sterilise adverse effects such as rising interest rates. Norway successfully avoided this scenario despite continued oil production in the North Sea by channelling proceeds into a SWF,” he says.
Proceeds from SWFs can be used to fund better health services for the ageing population, natural disaster-proofing, Indigenous Australian initiatives and offsetting the new carbon tax.
IT IS TIME TO LEARN FROM PAST: GREENSPAN
14 May 2012
)
Latest News
From $13,000 to $20 million: how a PCOS diagnosis and a pair of scissors built Xali Organics
Inspired by a medical diagnosis and driven by innovative marketing,...
Cedar Woods secures $63.4m in new land acquisitions as record presales underpin pipeline push
Perth-headquartered residential developer Cedar Woods Properties (A...
Australia's long-term beer decline hits home as Lion plans to close Boag's brewery in Launceston
Australia's decades-long decline in beer consumption has claime...
Downer EDI seals $310m Transurban contract to maintain Sydney motorway network
Infrastructure services group Downer EDI (ASX: DOW) has secured con...
Propel Funeral Partners expands New Zealand footprint with trio of acquisitions worth $9.1m
Sydney-based death care provider Propel Funeral Partners (ASX: PFP)...
Partner Content
For most Australian homeowners, the house gets the attention and the land gets taken fo...
Ventures & VisionariesAdvertisement

)

