How did Australia dodge the GFC?



Martin Hutchinson tells how a number of countries have recovered well after the GFC but omits the real standout economy -- Australia -- possibly because Bondi beach is all he knows about Australia. So maybe I should fill in a little gap there.

The first point to note is that Australia had NO crisis at all. A Leftist government had come to power just a couple of months before the global financial meltdown and paraded around spending money and offering government guarantees but that was just typical Leftist approval-seeking. They wanted there to be a crisis that they could seem to solve so they went around pretending that there was one.

The major Australian banks were never in trouble and in fact continued to make profits and pay dividends at around their normal levels. And unemployment is about half the U.S. level -- again at around its historically normal levels: A dream by world standards. And, as I have got about half my share portfolio in Australian banks, I am acutely aware of all that. By way of example, I have a parcel of shares in Westpac bank and in the year of the crisis, Westpac announced a profit decline from the previous year -- of only 1.5%

So Australian banks would be the obsessive subject of study by all the economists of the world if there were any mystery about why they did so unusually well. But there is no mystery. The answer can be given in one word: DEREGULATION. Australian banks were extensively deregulated a couple of decades ago and promptly went wild. With the government not telling them what to do they embarked on all sorts of "innovative" lending policies and got badly burnt in the process. The various banks owned by State governments all went bust in fact.

So they learnt their lesson. The surviving banks worked out how to do prudent lending and stuck firmly to those policies from that point on. And there were no government laws dictating that they make unwise loans, unlike the USA. Hence they didn't have any significant overhang of bad debt when the crisis struck. They had all bought small amounts of American paper because of its attractive yields but their now ingrained caution meant that they largely stuck to their own knitting. So losses on the American paper could be absorbed from domestic profits.

All that I have just said any economic historian should be able to dig up but it is not the full story. In my usual wicked way, I will now tell you the rest.

The American practice of making poorly secured loans and apparently thriving by doing so was deeply impressive worldwide and was therefore copied in many other countries -- and they suffered for it along with America in due course.

And in Australia also there sprang up a slew of financial intermediaries who offered what they called "low doc" loans. And they DID suffer from the GFC. But not too badly. They were mostly just taken over by the banks and everything continued on as normal.

So how come they did not cause a huge crash? Easy. As in the USA, the people who were given the poorly secured loans were mostly minorities. But Australia's big minority is very different from America's two large minorities. Australia's big minority is East Asian, mostly Han Chinese racially. And if you know anything about the Han you know that they would rather DIE than default on a home loan. The loss of face would be unendurable. If in trouble they would just get a third job. So loan defaults were relatively rare in Australia because Australia has a better class of minorities. Do you see why no-one else would ever tell you that?

3 comments:

  1. This misses a very important part. The Australian economy for the past decade+ has not been driven by mining etc,. It`s been driven by increasing immigration. Howard stared with migration rates of 40,000 per year, and he slowly racked that up, year by year. At the end, it was 120,000 per year. Krudd did the same thing, but he increased migration rates exponentially - to 300,000 within 3 years from when he came into power.

    If you keep immigration levels static, then the housing, auto, energy, finance, food, services, etc industries do not grow, and are vulnerable to recession. But if each year, you increase migration bit by bit, you keep all of those industries slowly growing to keep up paces.

    It`s a totally artificialy way to prop up an economy, because once you stop or cut back migration rates, it`s a house of cards that falls.

    That`s why even Tony Abbott only proposed to cut immigration levels back to "about 170,000" - and even that would have been temporary. Any major cut to our immigration, and our economy - which is mostly a Services sector economy now, would go into major recession.

    This also creates a housing bubble which would burst if immigration levels were significantly cut.

    Worst of all - is the destruction of our country and culture by the masses of 3rd world haters we bring here, who despise us and our way of life.

    We are doomed - because neither Labour nor Liberal can now stop it, unless they want to unleash a great economic collapse.

    Just think - Gill-Rudd brought in almost over 1/2 a million migrants since the 2007 election. By the next election, they will have brought in at least that many - mostly from Labour voting 3rd world cultures.

    Labour will be unbeatable through demographics.

    We are doomed.

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  2. Australia dodged the GFC because it could hide behind China. Australia is just a huge quarry for China .53 percent of the countrys income is from China ..i.e mining . And it must be said the 4 banks are kept on a tight lease. The no doc loans jerks did get burnt . The country works like this .. the govt gets money from mining royalties and then it wastes it mostly on building unnecessary govt building, school facades and roads to 'keep the economy going' .Sort of like Pharaoh building the pyramids .I'd prefer if they just sent me my share

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  3. You fail to connect the unemployment in the USA to the foreclosure crisis. How do you expect anyone who had a good job but lost it from no fault of their own and now has to work 3 minimum wage jobs (which is half that of Australia's by the way) and still barely has enough to make ends meet, to pay their bad mortgage loan? And then there were illegal foreclosures. It's all a mess...a total of 10 million foreclosures. The juvenile comment at the end, frankly makes your credibility questionable. I recommend a book "A Dream Foreclosed: Black America and the Fight for a Place to Call Home," by Laura Gottesdiener. AlterNet has a good interview with Laura about it. Check it out. And stop being so divisive...it is not productive.

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