The Times Australia
Google AI
Business and Money

Yes government debt is cheap, but that doesn't mean it comes risk-free

  • Written by Tony Makin, Professor of Economics, Griffith University

The financial response of Western governments to the COVID-19 crisis has been gargantuan, with boosts to health expenditure, enhanced JobSeeker-like payments, and JobKeeper-like wage subsidies to keep workers attached to jobs.

While a strong response has been necessary, it has come with costs.

These have been huge budget deficits and sky-high government debt.

The International Monetary Fund is expecting global budget deficits of around 14% of world gross domestic product this year, up from 4% last year, and almost three times the peaked reached after the global financial crisis.

Additionally, governments are providing the same amount again in “off-balance sheet” support, most notably loans to banks, and government guarantees for bank loans.

To the extent these off-balance sheet loans become contingent liabilities of governments and are not repaid, they will add more to government debt.

Global gross public debt was already high before the crisis, at about 80% of one year’s world GDP. It has since ballooned to more than 100% and exceeds the previous peak recorded after post World War II.

This budget, Keynes is back…

Keynesian thinking, which ignores public debt because it never figured in John Maynard Keynes’ original 1930s theory[1], was relatively dormant in the decades before the global financial crisis, but has come back with a vengeance.

Before the financial crisis the preferred means of managing the economy was monetary policy, run by the central bank and involving interest rates.

Now it’s fiscal policy, run by governments and involving tax and spending.

It doesn’t come without a cost, although we are often told that it costs little[2], because with interest rates so low, the required payments are also low.

Believing that this means we can keep borrowing is like thinking we can keep bathing in sun while ignoring the risk of melanomas.

Gross public debt to GDP ratio, actual and forecast

Commonwealth Treasury, July 2020 Economic and Fiscal Update Commonwealth gross debt to GDP ratio, July 31. 2021 is a forecast. Commonwealth Treasury, July 2020 Economic and Fiscal Update[3]

…but debt comes with costs

High public debt can stymie economic growth in several ways. It increases the demand for funds that might otherwise be used for private investment.

Commercial banks are party to this when they buy government bonds (meaning they lend funds to governments) instead of lending funds to businesses for investment.

Australia’s budget deficits are mostly funded from overseas, which boosts foreign debt.

Read more: The spending splurge matters, regardless of what modern monetary theory says[4]

Servicing that debt is a drain on Australia’s national as well as government income. The interest paid abroad, currently around A$15 billion, detracts from national income.

When lenders get worried about rising public debt, they demand a risk premium[5]. In Europe, Italy has to pay in excess of two percentage points more per annum on its debt than Germany.

Boosting spending might dampen spending later

Debt creates uncertainty about what governments are going to do down the track to pay the debt down, whether it be spending cuts or tax increases. This unsettles business and household confidence.

It means that even though stimulus measures increase consumer spending at the time, they can act as a drag on consumer spending and business investment down the road.

Weak business investment means a weak expansion of the economy’s capital stock (machinery and equipment) which means lower incomes than otherwise for future generations.

Read more: Explainer: what is modern monetary theory?[6]

A number of empirical studies[7] find that a 10 percentage point increase in the public debt to GDP ratio is associated with a decrease in annual economic growth of 0.15 percentage points or more.

If this holds true in Australia, our looming 20 percentage point increase in public debt to GDP will drag down annual economic growth by 0.3 percentage points (and through offshore interest payments drag down national income growth by as much as 0.5 percentage points).

The phenomenon of compounding means that in 20 years time the next generation might be 10% worse off than it would have been.

To the extent that central banks continue to monetise public debt by buying government bonds (“printing money[8]”), the future could be darker still, with high consumer price or asset price inflation.

This is usually thought to take 18 to 24 months to show up, meaning that what will boost this budget will make budgets harder to put together in years to come.

Authors: Tony Makin, Professor of Economics, Griffith University

Read more https://theconversation.com/yes-government-debt-is-cheap-but-that-doesnt-mean-it-comes-risk-free-145848

Business Times

Insolvencies have spiked – would a law change let more businesses…

New Zealand has been experiencing a striking rise in company failures, focusing attention on the role of directors when...

How Businesses Are Generating Profits in a High-Inflation Economi…

Inflation in Australia and globally has surged to multi-decade highs since 2021, driven by pandemic supply shocks, energy...

The Effects of the War in the Middle East on Australian Small Bus…

The war in the Middle East is not a distant geopolitical event for Australia. In an interconnected global economy, confli...

The Times Features

How Modern Specialist Accommodation is Redefining Accessible Living

For decades, the concept of accessible housing was synonymous with clinical functionality. The foc...

Insolvencies have spiked – would a law change let more businesses trade their way out of trouble?

New Zealand has been experiencing a striking rise in company failures, focusing attention on t...

The New Inheritance Problem Costing Australian Families Their Wealth

Australians are sleepwalking into a digital inheritance crisis by failing to include provisions fo...

Resmed’s Global Sleep Survey Reveals Sleep is One of the Top Health Priorities, but Quality Rest Remains Out of Reach

Insights from 30,000 people across 13 countries, including Australia, show global sleep health aware...

Seeing the same midwife or doctor in pregnancy and labour reduces the risk of birth trauma

Every pregnant woman wants to deliver a healthy baby. During labour and birth, women also want...

Cobram Estate | Heart Health Month Backed By Science

A dedicated time to elevate awareness of cardiovascular wellbeing and support healthier lifestyles...

Heidi Launches Evidence and Acquires AutoMedica to Accelerate Its AI Care Partner Platform

New evidence layer and UK acquisition expand Heidi’s role across the clinical workflow Heidi, the...

OUTRIGGER Resorts & Hotels Elevates Wellness Travel in 2026 With Immersive New Programs in the Maldives

Movement, mindfulness and hands-on rituals anchor a renewed wellness focus at OUTRIGGER Maldives Maa...

Major maintenance dredging campaign begins at Port of Devonport

TasPorts will begin a major maintenance dredging campaign at the Port of Devonport next week, su...