There’s been a wealth of lessons to be learned as economies try to recover from the pandemic.
Most are
being ignored.
A return to
pre-pandemic days is what most policy makers appear to want.
Back to the
days which have produced the mess we are now in.
The pandemic
has brought all our problems into sharp focus.
We have a
lopsided economy.
Capital and
profits have increased their share of the national pie at the expense of wages.
The trickle down effects haven’t eventuated. Asset prices have risen instead. Owners want a return on their capital and to
that end the financial sector has been
tasked with extracting more and more from
the real economy leading to a more unbalanced economy. Government spending has
been unable to keep up with the needs of the economy.
Are we going
to rely on tax reform to help rebalance the economy?
We might be
waiting a long time.
This note is
intended to review the state of play and look for other ways to relieve the
pressure on services delivery, particularly for State governments, the engine
rooms for so many services that are crucial to our well-being.
Post
pandemic policies have shown how government spending, borrowing and the role of
the Reserve Bank interact.
As a rule
most focus is either on the role of the General Government or the RBA. They are
rarely considered as a consolidated Group.
Only when
they are treated as one, does a realistic picture emerge of what is happening.
Peer at the economy through an accountant’s lens and the view looks awfully
like what Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) adherents see when they view the
economy.
Government
spending creates private assets. Budget repair will reduce private assets. Do
those promoting budget repair understand this simple iron law of accounting?
Banks are intermediaries in the settlement process, interposed between the government (RBA) and the people. If instead of having a/cs at various banks for settlement purposes, everyone had an a/c at the RBA, then government spending would be directly credited to peoples’ a/cs. The balance of peoples’ a/c at the RBA would appear as a liability of the RBA just as notes and coins do.
But they’re not debts that the government need
to repay. This is one of the fundamental points most commentators and
scaremongers fail to grasp.
With banks
as intermediaries, reserves are created each time the government spends.
Convention dictates that some of the reserves need to be swapped for government
bonds should the government wish to spend and finds itself without any money.
It’s a
convention not a necessity.
A recent
development that eventually made it to Australian shores, has seen the central
bank, the RBA, purchasing some of the government’s issued bonds.
A close look
at effect of spending on the consolidated government (which includes the RBA)
shows it makes no difference if the government spends what’s in its RBA a/c, or
whether it runs an overdraft at the RBA or whether it raises funds
by issuing bonds which are bought by the RBA and subsequently written off.
A government
borrowing from itself doesn’t impose a burden. The reverse is more likely.
Private assets are boosted when spending occurs.
Looking at
the consolidated government, gives a more realistic view than focusing on just
one of the members of the consolidated group, the General Government.
It is
instructive to look at the Australian government’s financials, which aren’t included
with the Annual Budget, but do appear 5 months after year’s end usually in November.
When RBA Governor
Lowe tells us RBA bond buying is not supposed to indicate a new way to finance
government spending is he saying net government borrowings of $684 billion at
June 2021 compared to gross borrowings of $888 billion, the difference being
those bonds bought by the RBA, is a figure without meaning.
What does it
mean then?
Surely it
must mean the government only owes $684 billion to third parties.
Then why does
everyone parrot on about a trillion dollars of debt?
Is it a
rounding problem or a lack of understanding of what consolidated accounts mean?
As to where RBA
got the money to purchase bonds, and how it was recorded in its accounts, this can
be answered by having a look at RBA’s cash flow statement. It reveals how money
is created in a modern economy.
The means to
create money isn’t confined to the RBA. Most is created by private banks. Outsourcing money creation to banks is an
enormous privilege.
‘Creation’ is the operative word here. As the
Bank of England reminded us in 2014, loans are not made from existing deposits.
Loans create deposits. The Commonwealth Bank’s cash flow statement reveals this
reality, with operating activities divided between income and expenses on one
hand, and new loans and deposits on the other. It is a tell tale snapshot of
how banking in a modern economy works as opposed to how most people imagine it
to work.
The pandemic
and the subsequent response have emphasised the crucial role State governments
play in service delivery in a wide variety of important areas. Compared to the measures
enacted to help banks by the RBA, much more could have been done.
If the
Tasmanian experience is any guide, reporting income on a profit and loss basis by
State governments, has helped disguise the cash flow losses that are likely to
persist for quite a while, with the supply of services likely to fall further behind
what’s needed.
Tasmania’s
looming fiscal sustainability problems have been well documented but largely
ignored by politicians. Admitting to problems always prompts questions about
what the proposed solutions are and why has it taken so long to confess.
At this
stage there are no firm solutions. The progress of tax reform is glacial, and
like glaciers in the era of climate change are just as likely to melt before much
progress is made.
The prospect
of Stage 3 tax cuts and possible budget repair which will reduce Australian Government
coffers even more, suggests States aren’t a priority for the Australian
government/RBA.
We need a backup
plan to assist them.
The RBA
needs to be given an enhanced role in the Federation, not just as banker to the
private banks but helping States and Territories as the pre-eminent deliverers
of services to the people.
When the
Federation is viewed as a consolidated whole, government financing and spending
by the States can be carried out in the same way as the activities of the
Australian government since March 2020.
All
government spending increases private assets.
But the key
to the future is grasping the fact that government liabilities created by
spending aren’t necessarily debts which must be repaid.
They only
become debts if we so choose.
We need to run the show for the benefit of the people not the banks.
Preamble
It hasn’t
taken long for the new Federal Labor government to start using the same excuses
as its predecessor, citing the trillion dollars of government debt inherited
from its predecessor as a reason for not pursuing particular policies.
At the same
time there is a growing public awareness that much of government’s increased
debt has been bought by the Reserve Bank (RBA), the government owned bank,
which means amounts owed to persons outside the government sector hasn’t
changed much over the last two years.
The public
debate has been pushed along by followers of Modern Monetary Theory (MMT).
Possibly the
worst thing MMT’ers did, and most readily admit it, was to describe their approach
as ‘modern’ and as a ‘theory’.
It is not a
‘theory’ in the sense that it’s a policy prescription that will, if taken, cure
our current ills.
Rather it’s a
collection of observations about how monetary systems work.
Neither it
is it particularly modern. Georg Knapp wrote about what would now be considered
MMT over a century ago.
And there
have been many others since, including Abba Lerner, Hyman Minsky, Wynne Godley
and the prolific and rigorous Bill Mitchell, who have contributed insights into
MMT.
It’s a
description of what happens.
MMT provides
a lens through which one gains a different view of how economies work compared
to what is presented in most mainstream textbooks and by most commentators.
For someone
with an accounting background, the lens provides a common sense, readily
understandable view of how economies operate.
Yet some in
the economics profession view MMTers as crazy outliers and resist many of their
ideas, often because they raise doubts about some of their long-held precepts.
But what
MMTers see when they view an economy, is very similar to what an accountant
sees.
For every
debit there’s a corresponding credit.
And perhaps
more crucially, all liabilities aren’t debts that have to be repaid.
Take
government spending for instance. Private assets are boosted. But is the
corresponding credit a liability that must be repaid?
Take budget repair
to which the new Labor government is committed. This means reducing public
borrowings by running government surpluses which further implies reducing
private assets.
If you asked
a focus group whether they supported a policy which would reduce private assets,
there wouldn’t be much support. Few understand the full implications of budget
repair including, dare I say, a few economists.
The lack of
understanding is perpetuated by emphasis given to the annual budget’s cash
outcome which mainly focuses on income and expenses in the general government
itself.
How can one understand
the overall position of a government (the general government plus its wholly
owned subsidiaries, the most important of which is the RBA) if the Budget
papers don’t contain a consolidated set of financial statements?
Annual
Budget papers show detailed financial statements of the General Government sector
for the budget year plus three years of forward estimates.
For the Non-Financial
Corporations sector (mainly the NBN) and the Financial Corporations sector
(mainly the RBA) there’s figures for the budget year only.
But nowhere in
the Budget papers is there a consolidated set of financials for the whole
government sector to give readers a chance to understand the government’s overall
position.
It’s a
perfunctory occasion when a consolidated set of financial statements for the
Australian government finally appears in December, five months after year’s
end. There’s no public discussion to mark the event.
Commentators
continue to pontificate on the economy’s past and future without even a cursory
glance at what the consolidated statements mean.
There’s a tendency,
that because the RBA is operationally separate from its owner, there’s no need
to view them as one.
Lots of
business groups have members which operate separately. How can one understand a
group without a group set of accounts?
The matter
of government debt being acquired by the government’s wholly owned bank, the
RBA is also harder to understand without reference to a consolidated set of
accounts. So much of the discussion occurs with inadequate information.
Accounting
for government spending
A recent on-line
post The economy exists within society, not vice-versa: Saul Eslake on the
GFC, debt-and-deficit and why we need to pay more tax highlights the relevant issues.
Let’s start
with the following paragraphs where the RBA buying already issued bonds (known
as quantitative easing) is discussed:
“What
governments and central banks have done through quantitative easing is to
substitute fixed-rate debt for floating-rate debt. This is very poorly
understood.”
“If
governments issue bonds to the investing public, they are in effect taking out
fixed rate loans. If you issue a 10-year bond at two per cent, that rate is
fixed [for the life of the bond].”
“But
the Reserve Bank pays interest [on those deposits] at the cash rate minus ten
basis points. Now that the cash rate has gone up to 1.35%, the Reserve Bank is
paying the [commercial] banks 1.25%. If the cash rate goes up to 2.5% by the
end of this year, which I think it will, then the Reserve Bank will be paying
2.4% per annum.
“People
are going to say: ‘Why is the government giving the commercial banks, who make
lots of money, all these billions of dollars in interest?’ The answer is that
they have a legal obligation to. But at some point, people are going to ask why
is that happening.”
It is likely the first para was a
misquote and what Saul was referring to was that quantitative easing involves central
banks substituting floating rate debt for fixed rate debt, not the other way
around. For that is what has been happening with the RBA buying government
bonds on the market.
Anyone who has read Stephanie
Kelton’s book The Deficit Myth will know she referred to the two types of government
liabilities as ‘green dollars’ and ‘yellow dollars’’.
‘Green dollars are what we call bank
reserves or exchange settlement accounts, which currently attract a floating
rate of interest. Whether or not debt is
an accurate description of bank reserves is a moot point. They appear as
liabilities on RBA’s balance sheet.
But they are not debts in the sense
they will have to be repaid. They may be
liabilities, but so is owner’s equity.
On the other hand, ‘yellow dollars’
are what we call government bonds, fixed rate borrowings over a specified term. They can be classed as debt because there is
a repayment condition. In practice, as Saul notes later, government debt is
rarely repaid. It is usually replaced with new borrowings.
Reserves (‘green dollars’) are
swapped for bonds (‘yellow dollars’). Then the RBA buys the bonds from the
bondholder and restores the bank reserves that were there in the first place.
Only banks have accounts with the RBA.
Banks are intermediaries in the
settlement process. When the RBA is directed by the government to pay someone,
the payment is made to the account the person’s bank has with the RBA (the
bank’s reserve a/c). Simultaneously the customer’s a/c with the bank is
credited.
Bank reserve a/cs show as liabilities
in RBA’s a/cs.
Settlement involves three parties:
the RBA, the customer’s bank and the customer.
Where do reserves, the ‘green dollars’,
come from and why is it necessary to convert some into ‘yellow dollars’? That
is the key to understanding government spending/financing arrangements.
Bank reserves are created every time
the Federal government spends.
How government spending occurs is best
described by Warren Mosler, an important contributor to MMT thinking, when he
wrote back in 2010 referring to the US:
Government
spending is all done by data entry on its own spreadsheet called “The U.S.
dollar monetary system.”
Here is a
quote from the good Federal Reserve Bank Chairman, Ben Bernanke, on 60 Minutes
for support:
SCOTT
PELLEY: Is that tax money that the Fed is spending?
CHAIRMAN BERNANKE:
It’s not tax money. The banks have accounts with the Fed, much the same way
that you have an account in a commercial bank. So, to lend to a bank, we simply
use the computer to mark up the size of the account that they have with the
Fed.
Computer data doesn’t come from anywhere. Everyone knows
that! Where else do we see this happen? Your team kicks a field goal and on the
scoreboard, the score changes from, say, 7 points to 10 points. Does anyone
wonder where the stadium got those three points? Of course not! Or you knock
down 5 pins at the bowling alley and your score goes from 10 to 15. Do you
worry about where the bowling alley got those points? Do you think all bowling
alleys and football stadiums should have a ‘reserve of points’ in a “lock box”
to make sure you can get the points you have scored? Of course not! And if the
bowling alley discovers you “foot faulted” and lowers your score back down by 5
points, does the bowling alley now have more score to give out? Of course not!
We all know how data entry works, but somehow this has gotten
turned upside down and backwards by our politicians, media, and, most all, the
prominent mainstream economists.
Just keep this in mind as a starting point: The federal
government doesn’t ever “have” or “not have” any dollars.
It’s just like the stadium, which doesn’t “have” or “not
have” a hoard of points to give out. When it comes to the dollar, our
government, working through its Federal agencies, the Federal Reserve Bank and
the U.S. Treasury Department, is the score keeper. (And it also makes the
rules!) You now have the operational answer to the question: “How are we going
to pay for it?” And the answer is: the same way government pays for anything,
it changes the numbers in our bank accounts.
The federal government isn’t going to “run out of money,” as
our President has mistakenly repeated. There is no such thing. Nor is it
dependent on “getting” dollars from China or anywhere else. All it takes for
the government to spend is for it to change the numbers up in bank accounts at
its own bank, the Federal Reserve Bank. There is no numerical limit to how much
money our government can spend, whenever it wants to spend. (This includes
making interest payments, as well as Social Security and Medicare payments.) It
encompasses all government payments made in dollars to anyone.
This is not to say that excess government spending won’t
possibly cause prices to go up (which is inflation).
That’s government spending in a nutshell. It happens
regardless of any balance the government may have in its a/c at the RBA.
Government spending creates private assets for those who
receive the payments.
But it also creates bank reserves held by bank intermediaries
who are positioned midway between the government (as spender) and the private
sector (as the beneficiaries of the spending).
Bank reserves only exist because of the design of our
financial system which interposes banks between government spending and the
recipients of the spending.
A greater understanding of the process requires a look at
what happens with all the players.
Let’s consider the General Government (GG) and the RBA which
together (for the purpose of this explanation) comprise the Consolidated
Government, and the Non-Government (NG) sector (essentially the banks and everyone
else in the economy).
Let’s start by seeing what happens when the government
spends:
(Note:
A= asset L= liability. If an asset increases, there must be a corresponding
increase in a liability or a corresponding decrease in another asset. The reverse
and the converse are also true.)
In
the GG, its bank a/c with the RBA falls, as does its equity position.
At
the RBA, the GG’s a/c falls and reserves a/cs rise.
Combining
the two, the GG and the RBA, the consolidated government’s position shows a
fall in its equity position and a rise in reserve a/cs.
On
the other side of the transaction, the NG sector shows a rise in reserve a/cs
and an increase in NG’s equity.
Ipso
facto government spending creates private assets.
When
bank customers spend whatever is in their bank accounts, bank reserves are
transferred to the bank of the person to whom the customer has made a payment.
Reserves
get transferred around the banking system. That is their raison d’etre.
Although
bank reserves are bank assets and RBA liabilities, it is not a debtor-creditor
arrangement. Bank reserves aren’t debts which must be repaid.
Banks
as intermediaries in the payment settlement system have no option but to hold
the reserves and to transfer them to other banks as part of day-to-day
settlement procedures in the economy.
Now
let’s assume a slight variation where GG doesn’t have any funds with the RBA,
yet proceeds to spend:
The
GG’s bank overdraft with the RBA increases instead of its bank a/c falling as
per Chart 1.
Apart
from that there’s no other change. It produces the same outcome as Table 1.
Spending has created reserves, government equity has fallen, and non-government
equity has risen.
Let’s
proceed to see what happens when GG borrows from NG before spending:
The
GG’s borrowings increase, and its equity consequently falls.
There
is no change with the RBA. Reserves a/cs will decrease and GG’s a/c will
increase as funds are raised, but both are reversed when GG spends.
The
consolidated government position reflects how borrowings have increased and equity
has fallen.
In
the Non-GG sector, the reverse has occurred, with its assets (government bonds)
increasing, thereby increasing its equity.
Compare
these outcomes to what happened in both Charts 1 and 2.
For
the consolidated government the increased reserves have been replaced by
increased borrowings.
From NG’s perspective increased reserves have been
replaced by increased holding of government bonds.
To
paraphrase Stephanie Kelton ‘green dollars’ have been swapped for ‘yellow
dollars’.
What
happens when the RBA proceeds to buys bonds from NG as it has been doing over
the past two year (quantitative easing), is shown below:
The
outcome is the same as in Chart 1 and 2 above. The ‘yellow dollars’ have been
swapped back into ‘green dollars.
Whether
GG has funds at the RBA, or whether it avails itself of an RBA
overdraft or whether GG borrows from NG and subsequently the RBA
buys the issued bonds from NG …… the result is the same.
That’s
certainly not something that’s widely understood.
In
all three instances spending has created reserves, government equity has
fallen, and non-government equity has risen.
Government
spending however it is financed, creates private assets. Whether spending is
inflationary won’t depend on the way it’s been financed.
What
happens if the RBA writes off the newly acquired bonds as per Chart 4.
GG
borrowings fall as does RBA’s holding of bonds.
Which
means there is no change to the consolidated government’s position resulting
from the debt w/off. It’s just a book entry.
NG’s
position doesn’t alter either.
Which
means if we look at Charts 4 and 5 combined where GG spending is accompanied
with GG borrowing/RBA bond purchase/ RBA bond write off, the outcome looks like
this:
It’s
the same outcome as Charts 1 and 2.
In
other words, whether GG has money with RBA, or whether it runs an
overdraft with RBA, or whether it goes through the routine of
borrowing/RBA bond buying/RBA bond write off, the outcome is the same.
The
only issue is whether the banks in the NG sector hold reserves or bonds. Green
dollars or yellow dollars.
It’s
probably an opportune time to look at what happens if GG raised funds via taxes
before spending. The outcome looks like this:
There
are no changes. Reserves are drained when taxes are raised but restored when GG
spends.
The
overall position of the government and NG doesn’t change. Hopefully the
government spending manages to shift resources within the NG sector. For
that is the very point of public policy, to shift resources around for the
benefit of all.
Just
to digress a little, taxes are a crucial policy instrument to address
inequality and inefficiency problems, and/or dampening down an overheated
economy, or as Bill Mitchell describes it ……. “creating
the non-inflationary
real resource space to absorb the scale of government
spending desired”……. not as the sole source of funds for government
spending.
If
we ever get to the stage where a government proceeds with so called budget
repair, this is what will happen:
GG
borrowings will fall meaning its equity position will rise.
There
will be no change in the RBA’s position.
The
consolidated government position therefore shows, a fall in borrowings and a
rise in its equity position.
On
the other hand, the NG’s assets (bonds) will fall and hence its equity position
will also fall. It will see a temporary rise in reserves as bond redemption proceeds
are received, but these will be returned to the government when taxation exceeds
spending, which is what will happen with budget repair.
Budget
repair means running down private assets. This is not widely understood.
To
sum up government spending creates reserves. From time to time some are
converted to government bonds. If the
RBA buys the bonds, reserves are restored.
As
Saul Eslake observed above, both bonds and reserves are paid interest.
By
increasing reserves when RBA purchases government bonds the level of reserves
attracting interest will rise. At some point as Saul says, people are going to
ask, why are we paying banks all this interest?
This
raises two points:
First,
the RBA isn’t required to pay interest at the rate it currently does. It could
pay a lower rate. There have been times when reserve a/cs attracted no
interest.
Second,
reserves only exist because banks have been interposed between the RBA and
customers. If we were to design a settlement system for today’s age, we
wouldn’t have the system we currently have.
Over
time banks provided customers with cheque facilities. The need for banks to settle
amongst themselves on behalf of all customers led to the interbank settlement
arrangements we still have. Reserves are a necessary part of that system.
It
would be a simple matter to rid the system of the arcane requirement to have
reserves.
If
instead of customers having a/cs at individual banks the system was tweaked so
that everyone had an a/c with the RBA, and their nominated bank simply provided
the necessary services to operate that a/c, that would mean we all had an a/c with
the RBA. A bit like the NBN which
requires us to arrange an internet provider, we’d arrange for a bank provider
to service our a/c at the RBA.
That
would mean there would be no bank reserves. Depositors’ a/cs at the RBA would
appear as an RBA liability replacing bank reserves. It wouldn’t be a debt that
the RBA would ever pay. We went off the gold standard many, many moons ago.
If
we refigured the system from the current settlement arrangements with a few
large private banks as intermediaries, to a system where everyone had an
account with the RBA, this is what would happen when the government spent:
GG’s
spending would lead to a rise in depositors’ a/cs (a liability) for the
consolidated government. Its equity would consequently fall.
For
the NG, deposit a/cs (asset) rise. So does its equity.
Removing
reserves from the system, replacing them with direct deposits with the RBA
would remove the problems of paying interest from the public purse to already
profitable banks with reserve a/cs. Any interest would be paid direct to
deposit holders.
Of
course, banks would resist the changes. They would have to pay interest at rates
greater than the RBA would pay on deposit a/cs, to entice depositors to
transfer deposits to them. With the current system there’s a huge swathe of
deposits which attract little or no interest. Banks would have to fight a bit
harder to attract deposit liabilities needed to balance their positions every
time they created more long-term assets in the form of customer loans.
Prudent
banking under the current system requires a bank to have sufficient reserves to
look after its customers’ needs, but excessive reserves tend to be
underperforming assets from a bank viewpoint.
They
much prefer to own bonds to excess reserves.
Recent
bond buying by the RBA which was intended to drive down interest rates to help
the economy recover from the pandemic has given windfall profits to banks. As
interest rates fell the market price of the fixed rate bonds rose. Therefore,
banks have probably made handy capital profits from selling bonds to the RBA.
They’re unlikely to have sold at a loss.
It
is not surprising therefore that MMT’ers sometimes describe issuing bonds to
drain excess reserves from the banking system as welfare for banks…. as handouts
to those who least need them.
Some
bonds and a lot of other financial assets were also sold to the RBA with repurchase
arrangements in place (repos to use bankers’ lingo) as part of the Term
Funding Facility. The RBA offered banks $188 billion worth of loans at the
bargain basement rate of 0.1 per cent, hoping banks might make loans to
business customers they otherwise wouldn’t make and at lower rates, to help the
economy recover post pandemic. It was a surprising vote of confidence in the
banking sector given the findings of the recent Royal Commission into banking. Unsurprisingly
most of the new loans were for housing which only served to raise house prices.
Most
banks took up the RBA’s offer. Money for jam. Banks transferred assets to RBA.
RBA gave them loans in consideration.
Essentially
banks handed over assets as collateral and the RBA credited their reserve a/cs.
Reserve a/c balances rose as did assets on RBA’s balance sheet.
At
the end of the term, the repurchase agreement means the assets acquired will be
transferred back to banks. Reserve a/cs will fall and the assets will be
removed from RBA’s balance sheet.
The
difference between the sale and purchase prices of the banks’ assets transferred
to and from the RBA, represents interest on the deal, which at only 0.1 per
cent pa won’t amount to much more than a row of beans.
Meanwhile
the banks have made huge profits. Paying the RBA 0.1 per cent on loans whilst
receiving interest on reserve a/cs (currently 1.25 per cent) surely can’t be
the best use of public money. The extra cash on banks’ balance sheets made book
balancing easier as more loans were created principally for housing, further
unbalancing our lopsided economy.
The
banks as intermediaries are reaping windfall profits for doing very little
apart from being in the right place at the right time, profiting from their privileged
position in banking arrangements designed in the pre digital age.
The
above comments about removing reserves from the system is not a policy
recommendation per se, rather a way of emphasising that reserves represent the
de facto equity depositors have in our nation, and which arise as a consequence
of having a system of bank intermediaries in the settlement process. Reserves are not debts that have to be
repaid.
Consolidated
government financial statements
The
consolidated financial statements for the Australian government issued in
December each year are worth a look if one wishes to understand the make up on
the total government sector.
Just
a quick glossary:
·
GG is the General
Government comprising departments and agencies. The Future Fund with assets of
almost $200 billion at 30th June 2021, is included with GG.
·
PNFCs are Public
Non-Financial Corporations, the large ones being, in order, NBN, Snowy Hydro,
Australia Post and Australian Rail Track Corp.
·
PFCs are Public
Financial Corporations the most significant by far being the RBA.
When
the three sectors, GG, PNFC and PFC are consolidated to produce consolidated
financial statements for the Australian government, inter sector amounts are
eliminated. For instance, GG’s bank a/c at the RBA is eliminated because
there’s an offsetting a/c in RBA’s books (as occurred in the above Tables 1 to
9).
We’re
interested in the balance sheets, the statements of position of the sectors.
Table 10: Aust Govt balance sheet by sector at 30th
June 2021 |
|||||
GG |
PNFC |
PFC |
Elims(a) |
Consol |
|
|
$m |
$m |
$m |
$m |
$m |
Assets |
|
|
|
|
|
Financial assets |
|
|
|
|
|
Cash and deposits |
62,411 |
2,166 |
896 |
-57,739 |
7,734 |
Advances paid |
81,403 |
15 |
4,957 |
-14,825 |
71,550 |
Other receivables |
60,014 |
2,275 |
126 |
-3,127 |
59,288 |
Investments, loans etc |
191,633 |
1,236 |
540,067 |
-206,750 |
526,186 |
Equity investments |
147,789 |
244 |
819 |
-61,518 |
87,334 |
Total financial assets |
543,250 |
5,936 |
546,865 |
-343,959 |
752,092 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Non-financial assets(c) |
|
|
|
|
|
Land |
12,070 |
1,763 |
252 |
- |
14,085 |
Buildings |
43,311 |
3,980 |
470 |
-12 |
47,749 |
Specialist military equipment |
74,387 |
- |
- |
- |
74,387 |
Other P&E & infrastructure |
17,714 |
51,609 |
158 |
- |
69,481 |
Intangibles |
9,795 |
3,735 |
93 |
51 |
13,674 |
Investment property |
192 |
156 |
- |
- |
348 |
Inventories |
10,606 |
184 |
60 |
- |
10,850 |
Heritage & cultural assets |
11,861 |
- |
- |
- |
11,861 |
Tax assets |
- |
1,394 |
5 |
-1,399 |
- |
Other non-financial assets |
4,872 |
743 |
54 |
-49 |
5,620 |
Total non-financial assets |
184,808 |
63,564 |
1,092 |
-1,409 |
248,055 |
Total assets |
728,058 |
69,500 |
547,957 |
-345,368 |
1,000,147 |
Liabilities |
|
|
|
|
|
Interest bearing liabilities |
|
|
|
|
|
Deposits
held |
598 |
18 |
415,609 |
-60,211 |
356,014 |
Government
securities |
888,419 |
- |
- |
-204,504 |
683,915 |
Loans |
10,540 |
28,390 |
4,192 |
-14,556 |
28,566 |
Leases |
19,440 |
12,508 |
25 |
-9 |
31,964 |
Other
int bearing liabs |
7,871 |
572 |
2,955 |
- |
11,398 |
Total int bearing liabilities |
926,868 |
41,488 |
422,781 |
-279,280 |
1,111,857 |
Provisions & payables |
|
|
|
|
|
Superannuation
liability |
406,940 |
27 |
539 |
- |
407,506 |
Other
employee liabs |
37,779 |
1,964 |
227 |
- |
39,970 |
Supplier
payables |
9,964 |
3,857 |
91 |
-44 |
13,868 |
Personal
benefits payable |
3,015 |
- |
- |
- |
3,015 |
Subsidies
payable |
989 |
- |
- |
-13 |
976 |
Grants
payable |
6,800 |
21 |
- |
- |
6,821 |
Aust
currency on issue |
- |
- |
95,485 |
- |
95,485 |
Tax
liabilities |
- |
1,090 |
1 |
-1,091 |
- |
Other
payables |
2,425 |
599 |
2,839 |
-2,814 |
3,049 |
Other
provisions |
58,481 |
891 |
1,772 |
-324 |
60,820 |
Total provisions & payables |
526,393 |
8,449 |
100,954 |
-4,286 |
631,510 |
Total liabilities |
1,453,261 |
49,937 |
523,735 |
-283,566 |
1,743,367 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net worth |
-725,203 |
19,563 |
24,222 |
-61,802 |
-743,220 |
The
GG, PNFC and PFC balance sheets are listed in the first three columns. The
consolidated figures are derived by adding the first three columns and eliminating
those assets and liabilities with offsetting amounts in another sector.
The
eliminations in the column highlighted in green sum to zero. For every credit
that’s eliminated there’s a corresponding debit elsewhere that’s also
eliminated.
The
major eliminations are:
·
Cash and deposits
(assets for GG and PNFC) are reduced because there are offsetting deposits at
the RBA (liabilities in PFC.)
·
Advances paid
(mainly from GG) are offset against loans (liabilities) to PNFC’s. GG’s loan to
NBN falls into this category.
·
GG’s equity
interest in PFCs and NFPCs are offset against the equity/net worth of PFCs and
NPFCs.
·
RBA holdings of
bonds (included as assets under investments, loans etc in PFC) are offset
against bonds listed with GG as Government securities.
As
a consequence of the bond eliminations, the net liability for government
securities at 30th June 2021 for the consolidated government was $683.9 billion,
compared to the liability stated in GG’s balance sheet of $888.4 billion, an
elimination therefore of $204.5 billion. Essentially these were the bonds held
by RBA on 30th June 2021.
Assets
under the label ‘Investments, loans etc’ include the other assets transferred
to RBA as collateral for the $188 billion Term Funding facility (in PNFC) and
assets of the Future Fund (in GG).
The
figures in the consolidated column are the figures which arguably should be
used in public discussions about governments and budgets.
In
order to understand the full effects on the government’s consolidated position
it is instructive to look at the consolidated position at 30th June
2020 compared to 12 months later. The 2021 year was the first full year of the
post pandemic era.
The
column highlighted in green displays the changes in the balance sheet items
over the 12-month period.
Table
11: Aust Govt balance sheets consolidated 2021 & 2020 |
|||
|
2021 |
2020 |
change |
|
$m |
$m |
$m |
Assets |
|
|
|
Financial assets |
|
|
|
Cash and deposits |
7,734 |
7,981 |
-247 |
Advances paid |
71,550 |
64,784 |
6,766 |
Other receivables |
59,288 |
66,684 |
-7,396 |
Investments, loans etc |
526,186 |
394,595 |
131,591 |
Equity investments |
87,334 |
63,043 |
24,291 |
Total financial assets |
752,092 |
597,087 |
155,005 |
|
|
|
|
Non-financial assets(c) |
|
|
|
Land |
14,085 |
13,621 |
464 |
Buildings |
47,749 |
47,353 |
396 |
Specialist military equipment |
74,387 |
72,147 |
2,240 |
Other P&E & infrastructure |
69,481 |
67,600 |
1,881 |
Intangibles |
13,674 |
13,059 |
615 |
Investment property |
348 |
369 |
-21 |
Inventories |
10,850 |
9,987 |
863 |
Heritage & cultural assets |
11,861 |
11,975 |
-114 |
Other non-financial assets |
5,620 |
5,724 |
-104 |
Total non-financial assets |
248,055 |
241,835 |
6,220 |
Total assets |
1,000,147 |
838,922 |
161,225 |
Liabilities |
|
|
|
Interest bearing liabilities |
|
|
|
Deposits
held |
356,014 |
78,985 |
277,029 |
Government
securities |
683,915 |
725,868 |
-41,953 |
Loans |
28,566 |
18,960 |
9,606 |
Leases |
31,964 |
32,476 |
-512 |
Other
int bearing liabs |
11,398 |
10,331 |
1,067 |
Total int bearing liabilities |
1,111,857 |
866,620 |
245,237 |
Provisions & payables |
|
|
|
Superannuation
liability |
407,506 |
431,077 |
-23,571 |
Other
employee liabs |
39,970 |
34,425 |
5,545 |
Supplier
payables |
13,868 |
11,914 |
1,954 |
Personal
benefits payable |
3,015 |
4,670 |
-1,655 |
Subsidies
payable |
976 |
1,027 |
-51 |
Grants
payable |
6,821 |
2,859 |
3,962 |
Aust
currency on issue |
95,485 |
90,102 |
5,383 |
Other
payables |
3,049 |
4,027 |
-978 |
Other
provisions |
60,820 |
72,104 |
-11,284 |
Total provisions & payables |
631,510 |
652,205 |
-20,695 |
Total liabilities |
1,743,367 |
1,518,825 |
224,542 |
|
|
|
|
Net worth |
-743,220 |
-679,903 |
-63,317 |
The
jump in Investments, loans etc of $131 billion is due mainly to the extra
assets on RBA balance sheet. It is not the Australian government bonds that
were bought, for they were eliminated during the consolidation process. It’s
other financial assets, including bonds issued by State governments, that were
acquired as part of the RBA quantitative easing and the Term Lending processes.
Additional
equity investments of $24 million mainly relates to shares held by the Future
Fund.
There
were negligible changes in non-financial assets such as land buildings
infrastructure, military equipment etc.
Deposits
held (liabilities) increased by $277 billion. That almost entirely relates to
the extra reserves created by the RBA as part of quantitative easing, by buying
Australian government bonds and other financial assets, and entering repo
arrangements with banks as part of the Term Loan Facility.
Net government securities on issue actually fell in the year, down by $42 billion. This means the RBA acquired more bonds than were issued by GG during the year. Our debt to third parties was reduced.
The
other major change, a reduction in the superannuation liability largely
resulted from changes to actuarial assumptions.
The
liabilities highlighted in yellow mostly come from RBA’s balance sheet. Of the
$356 billion of deposits at 30th June 2021 (2020: $79 billion), $341.8
billion are Reserve a/cs (2020: $73.5 billion).
Currency
in circulation $95 billion at June 2021 (2020: $90 billion) is also an RBA
liability, issued when banks swap reserves for currency usually at the request
of customers.
Although
currency on issue is a liability for RBA, it is not a debt that has to be
repaid by the RBA. It gets passed around the system.
Reserves
too are accounting liabilities.
Reserves
represent people’s equity in the Australian government, created by government
spending.
Lest
we forget, government spending creates private assets. Reserve a/cs simply
reflect the existence of the banks as intermediaries in the settlement system.
Allow
everyone to have an a/c with the RBA and there wouldn’t be reserves. Peoples’
equity in the system would be reflected by the balances in their deposit a/cs.
Therefore,
both currency on issue and reserves comprise people’s equity in the Australian
government. The Australian government doesn’t have contributed capital like
companies.
But
realistically it does have owner’s equity represented by reserves and currency
on issue. This de facto equity at 30th June 2021 was $437 billion.
If
these amounts were to be reallocated to equity, alongside the government’s net
worth, this is what the 2020 and 2021 balance sheets would look like
Table
12: Aust Govt balance sheet consolidated
2021 & 2020 (adjusted) |
|||
|
2021 |
2020 |
change |
|
$m |
$m |
$m |
Assets |
|
|
|
Financial assets |
|
|
|
Cash and deposits |
7,734 |
7,981 |
-247 |
Advances paid |
71,550 |
64,784 |
6,766 |
Other receivables |
59,288 |
66,684 |
-7,396 |
Investments, loans etc |
526,186 |
394,595 |
131,591 |
Equity investments |
87,334 |
63,043 |
24,291 |
Total financial assets |
752,092 |
597,087 |
155,005 |
|
|
|
|
Non-financial assets(c) |
|
|
|
Land |
14,085 |
13,621 |
464 |
Buildings |
47,749 |
47,353 |
396 |
Specialist military equipment |
74,387 |
72,147 |
2,240 |
Other P&E & infrastructure |
69,481 |
67,600 |
1,881 |
Intangibles |
13,674 |
13,059 |
615 |
Investment property |
348 |
369 |
-21 |
Inventories |
10,850 |
9,987 |
863 |
Heritage & cultural assets |
11,861 |
11,975 |
-114 |
Other non-financial assets |
5,620 |
5,724 |
-104 |
Total non-financial assets |
248,055 |
241,835 |
6,220 |
Total assets |
1,000,147 |
838,922 |
161,225 |
Liabilities |
|
|
|
Interest bearing liabilities |
|
|
|
Deposits
held |
14,214 |
5,488 |
8,726 |
Government
securities |
683,915 |
725,868 |
-41,953 |
Loans |
28,566 |
18,960 |
9,606 |
Leases |
31,964 |
32,476 |
-512 |
Other
int bearing liabs |
11,398 |
10,331 |
1,067 |
Total int bearing liabilities |
770,057 |
793,123 |
-23,066 |
Provisions & payables |
|
|
|
Superannuation
liability |
407,506 |
431,077 |
-23,571 |
Other
employee liabs |
39,970 |
34,425 |
5,545 |
Supplier
payables |
13,868 |
11,914 |
1,954 |
Personal
benefits payable |
3,015 |
4,670 |
-1,655 |
Subsidies
payable |
976 |
1,027 |
-51 |
Grants
payable |
6,821 |
2,859 |
3,962 |
Other
payables |
3,049 |
4,027 |
-978 |
Other
provisions |
60,820 |
72,104 |
-11,284 |
Total provisions & payables |
536,025 |
562,103 |
-26,078 |
Total liabilities |
1,306,082 |
1,355,226 |
-49,144 |
|
|
|
|
Net worth represented by |
|
|
|
Accum
losses and reserves |
-743,220 |
-679,903 |
-63,317 |
Equity |
437,285 |
163,599 |
273,686 |
Total net worth |
-305,935 |
-516,304 |
210,369 |
In
the 2021 year, by treating reserves and issued currency as de facto equity in
the Australian government, its net worth/equity position improved by $210
billion for the year during the pandemic recovery year.
The
rosy picture painted for 2021 with reserves treated as equity will likely
change when the repurchase arrangements which led to banks transferring bonds
and assets to the RBA is triggered. RBA holdings of these financial assets will
reduce as will reserve a/cs. The net worth of the government as presented in
the unadjusted consolidated a/cs won’t change.
The
point of reclassifying currency and reserves as equity is to demonstrate that
government spending should not be regarded as debt, as a burden on future
generations.
Every
time the Australian government spends, reserves are created.
When
people spend, reserves get passed around the system from bank to bank. The total
of bank reserves, a liability at the RBA, doesn’t change.
Reserves
only reduce under two scenarios.
First
when Australian government taxes are paid.
Second
when governments issue bonds. When green dollars are swapped for yellow dollars.
It’s done for several reasons, some more convincing than others.
Bonds
are a useful tradeable asset for players in the financial sector, and gives the
RBA a way to influence interest rates
The
least convincing reason, that GG needs to have money in the bank before
spending, is based on the budget constraint myth. If GG doesn’t have enough
funds on hand, then it needs to borrow reserves from banks. That’s what the
budget constraint myth implies. Reserves need to be swapped for bonds before spending.
This is the myth which underpins most peoples’ understanding of the government
budgetary process.
‘Green
dollars’ need to be swapped for ‘yellow dollars’ so the government can create
more ‘green dollars’.
It’s
a fairy story.
As
we saw above with Table 1, 2 & 3 the outcome is the same regardless of
whether the government had money in the bank.
All
that happens is that reserves (a liability but not a debt) is swapped for bonds
(a debt).
The
budget constraint myth asserts the governments have to borrow back reserves
they’ve created before they can create more.
As
Warren Mosler explained citing Ben Bernanke:
The Chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank is telling us in
plain English that they give out money (spend and lend) simply by changing
numbers in bank accounts. There is no such thing as having to “get” taxes (or
borrow) to make a spreadsheet entry that we call “government spending.”
We need to be careful however when using the term ‘creating
money out of thin air’ (I’m as guilty as many in that regard) because as soon
as people hear the phrase they immediately assume reckless behaviour.
It’s not at all like that, it’s simply the way money creation
in a modern economy works. Governments do it. So do private banks.
How the newly created government money enters the system is
best seen in RBA’s cash flow statement. The 2021 cash flow statement is as
follows:
Pretty
simple.
New
deposits are created and more currency issued on the liability side. More bonds and financial assets on the asset
side.
Money
creation by private banks
Banks
create money in a similar fashion to governments. Extra loans to customers on
the asset side and extra deposits from customers on the liability side.
The
reality of how money is created by private banks has gradually gained currency
ever since the Bank of England’s seminal 2014 paper on money creation pointed
out the precept that banks require deposits before lending was false.
A
closer look at banks’ financial statement confirms how banks account for money
creation in their financial statements.
Take
Commonwealth Bank (CBA) as an example. Its 2021 cash flow statement is quite
revealing, summarised below to make it more accessible:
Chart 14: CBA cash flow statement 2021 |
|
|
$m |
OPERATING
ACTIVITIES |
|
Operating cash |
|
Interest received |
25,203 |
Interest paid |
-6,424 |
Other op income received |
4,775 |
Expenses paid |
-9,886 |
Income tax paid |
-3,672 |
Insurances business net |
145 |
Total operating
cash (net) |
10,141 |
Changes in op assets
& liabilities |
|
Incr deposits & other public borr (net) |
61,189 |
Increase loans etc |
-39,858 |
Increase repos (net) |
2,441 |
Other changes net |
7,399 |
Net cash from
changes in op assets & liabs |
31,171 |
Net cash from
operating activities |
41,312 |
|
|
INVESTING
ACTIVITIES |
|
Disposal controlled entities |
682 |
Purchase other assets (net) |
189 |
Net cash from
investing activities |
871 |
|
|
FINANCING
ACTIVITIES |
|
Dividends paid |
-4,132 |
Debt securities (net) |
-31,756 |
Term funding RBA |
50,357 |
Loan capital (net) |
4,183 |
Principal payments of lease liabilities |
-428 |
Other financing |
87 |
Net cash from
financing activities |
18,311 |
|
|
NET CHANGE IN CASH |
60,494 |
Under
Operating Activities, revenue (interest and other income) is offset against
interest paid, expenses and income taxes, which produces Total operating cash(net)
of $10.1 billion. This represents the revenue and expense side of operations.
The
money creation side of Operating Activities is listed under Changes in
operating assets and liabilities. The yellow highlighted bits show the major
items, $61.2 billion (net) extra deposits (liability) and an increase in loans
to customers (asset) of $39.9 billion. Essentially this demonstrates how loans
create deposits. Deposits aren’t a prerequisite for loans. The reverse is true,
loans create deposits, contrary to popular belief.
Investing
Activities are small given the scale of CBA…...buying new plant equipment,
intangibles, disposing of old stuff, selling off non-core parts of the
business. For 2021 this represented a small inflow in total.
Under
Financing Activities can be found the ins and outs of financing the bank’s operations.
Not funds for lending, for they are created under Operating Activities, rather
funds to square up CBA’s books to ensure it satisfies prudential
requirements.
Financial
Activities for the 2021 year showed a $18 billion net inflow as the Term Loan funds
from the RBA flowed in which were used in part to discharge $31.7 billion of
existing debt securities. (as an aside,
the net fall in debt securities disguises the reality that CBA and the other
major banks bought each other’s debt securities to satisfy prudential
requirements. Were consolidated financials prepared for the bank cartel there
would be an elimination of the cross holdings of reserves/debt securities. More
evidence the RBA operates for the prime benefit of banks maybe?)
The
rise in overall cash of $60 billion overstates the increase in CBA assets, as assets
transferred to RBA as collateral for the Term Loan facility were not recorded
in the cash flow statement. Note: CBA net assets only improved by $6.78 billion
for the year.
The
following is a snapshot of CBA’s balance sheet for 2021 and 2020.
Table
15: CBA balance sheets 2021 & 2020 |
|||
|
2021 |
2020 |
change |
|
$m |
$m |
$m |
Assets |
|
|
|
Cash and
liquid assets incl reserves |
100,041 |
44,165 |
55,876 |
Loans
and other receivables |
811,356 |
772,980 |
38,376 |
Investments
& other fin assets |
154,342 |
170,099 |
-15,757 |
Other
assets |
26,223 |
28,227 |
-2,004 |
Total assets |
1,091,962 |
1,015,471 |
76,491 |
|
|
|
|
Liabilities |
|
|
|
Deposits
|
766,381 |
703,432 |
62,949 |
Debt/borrowings |
103,003 |
142,503 |
-39,500 |
Term
funding RBA |
51,856 |
1,500 |
50,356 |
Other
fin liabilities |
45,926 |
50,673 |
-4,747 |
Provisions |
3,733 |
3,461 |
272 |
Other
liabilities |
12,985 |
14,607 |
-1,622 |
Loan
capital |
29,360 |
27,357 |
2,003 |
Total liabilities |
1,013,244 |
943,533 |
69,711 |
|
|
|
|
Shareholder's equity |
78,718 |
71,938 |
6,780 |
It’s
a simplified version of the statutory a/cs, but it highlights what banks do and
what CBA did in particular.
In
2021 80 per cent of CBA’s assets were customer loans ($811 billion). The rest
mainly comprises cash and other investments.
On
the liability side deposits from customers represented 75 per cent of the total
with the remainder mostly comprising debt (wholesale funding), term funding of
$51 billion from the RBA, loan capital (from investors) and other financial
liabilities.
Unlike
politicians after winning elections, one never hears from newly promoted bank CEOs
rueing the legacy of debt left by predecessors. Most get the job because they
plan to increase debts.
Yet
governments are pilloried for what is considered virtuous entrepreneurial behaviour
by banks.
There are far more similarities in the way banks create money compared to
governments, than there are differences.
Money
creation and government spending: Key points
Just
as many were slow to accept the underlying science of climate change, so too
are many reluctant to accept the accounting realities from observing how financing
modern economies occurs.
·
Bank loans (bank
assets) create deposits (bank liabilities).
·
Loan repayments reduce
deposits.
·
Existing deposits
aren’t lent. From a bank’s perspective they are needed to balance up customer
loans on the other side of the balance sheet.
·
Government
spending creates reserves and increases private assets.
·
Taxation reduces
reserves and private assets.
·
Replenishing the
government’s bank a/c at the RBA is not essential before government spending
occurs.
·
Bank reserves aren’t
lent. They are assets transferred from bank to bank as part of settlement
procedures.
·
Reserves only
exist because banks operate as intermediaries in the payments settlement
system.
·
If everyone had
an a/c with the RBA there wouldn’t be any reserves.
·
Paying interest
on reserves is optional.
·
Reserves are RBA
liabilities for accounting purposes, but they are not debts that need repaying.
·
Swapping reserves
for bonds is optional and is done partly for monetary policy reasons and partly
as a favour to banks.
·
Budget repair implies
government surpluses which will reduce private assets
·
Most money is
created by private banks making loans not by government spending.
·
If new loans
exceed loan repayments, then money in the economy will keep growing.
·
Taxation serves
other purposes in an economy other than providing funds for spending.
The
budget constraint myth stifles sensible government spending.
There
are mutterings about tax reform. There always are. It will happen at some stage.
But we can’t wait for that to happen pretending when it does occur, we’ll be
able to spend a little more on where it’s needed.
We
can’t afford to wait that long.
But
like climate change, the clock is ticking towards midnight.
Yet
our political leaders keep ignoring the problems and make little attempt to
understand how the system works, relying instead on outdated platitudes.
What
does this mean for State governments?
The
term ‘government’ used thus far has related to the Australian government unless
otherwise specified.
If
we were to include the governments of States and Territories, and local governments,
we would have a consolidated government sector for the whole Federation.
As
we saw above, the position of the consolidated Australian government is the
same after government spending, regardless whether the GG has funds at the RBA,
or is granted an overdraft facility by the RBA or
raises funds with a bond issue which are then acquired by the RBA and written
off.
It
therefore follows that the public sector as a whole across Australia can pursue
the same approach.
It
only needs a tweak in Federal State relations.
The
Australian government needs to share the money creation advantages of the RBA
that it has used as part of various pandemic response measures, with the States.
It’s
the only way States will be able to deliver the services people need.
In
Tasmania the 2016 Fiscal Sustainability Report showed the massive problems
ahead for the Tasmanian government, with projected revenues falling well short
of outlays. The gap between services delivered and those needed will inevitably
widen.
The
2021 update was even bleaker. The first real admission by governments was in
Treasurer Ferguson’s 2022/23 Budget speech on May 2022 when he told Parliament
he’d “tasked
Treasury with providing advice to me on strategies to ensure our debt levels
remain within manageable limits into the future so we can again use our balance
sheet to shield Tasmanian jobs and families should external shocks to our
economy occur in the future.”
Debt levels have to manageable, so the Treasurer says.
We are such a long way from doing anything about raising
State taxes in Tasmania if the bogus economic arguments used in the last six
months to bestow favours on poker machine operators and cut land tax, are any
guide.
Which leaves more debt as the only other option currently on
the table.
Budget reporting by State governments is also misleading. Budget
bottom lines always focus on a profit figure, which is pointless when
sustainability is questionable, cash is scarce and service delivery falling
further behind, except maybe in WA. The bottom line of the cash flow statement
is much more significant.
Furthermore, States report capital grants from the Australian
government as revenue in their P&Ls which ignore capital outlays.
For such a small country as Australia making sense of the
fiscal sustainability of the Federation is harder due to the lack of
consistency between States and the Australian government.
To put this into its proper perspective, the Australian
government currently produces cash deficits every year, which will continue
into the foreseeable future, and must borrow to make capital grants to States,
thereby increasing losses and reducing its equity, whilst the States record the
grants as income, ignoring the subsequent outlays.
It has led to the absurd situation where Tasmanian Treasurers
skite about profit surpluses and hoped for surpluses in the not too distant
future, whilst running cash deficits propped up by capital grants from the
Australian government funded by borrowings.
It’s not a sensible basis to make sensible decisions about
the Federation.
Capital grants to States (plus some to Local Governments) total
about $20 billion per year in Australia. So, it’s not small beer. A large chunk of Australian government
accumulated losses are due capital grants to States.
Capital grants from the Australian government are, for all
intents and purposes, equity contributions from a parent company into members of
a Group.
We need to view the Federation in that context. The
Federation is a Group, wholly owned by the people of Australia.
There
is no evidence that spending on essential services is what’s causing current
inflation. The culprits are Putin’s war, supply disruption in China, floods and
the pricing power of some monopoly suppliers.
If
spending on more essential services won’t exacerbate inflation and State
governments are the pre-eminent service delivers, and there are ways to spend
internally generated funds which won’t burden future generations with debt, why
aren’t we doing it?
RBA
Governor Lowe has pointed out that the RBA buying government bonds including
bonds issued by State government is not supposed to signal a way for governments
to finance operations. He’s implying that government consolidated financial
don’t mean what the figures suggest. What do they mean then?
There’s
a hint that quantitative easing, bond purchases, will be reversed. Quantitative
tightening as it has been labelled will occur at some stage. When hasn’t been determined?
The RBA makes it up as it goes, methinks.
If
more reserves are needed back in the system, why sell the bonds? So banks can
be rewarded with more interest on their reserve a/c balances?
Why
not create more reserves with more properly targeted spending, provided of
course there’s a need and resources are available?
Or
perhaps make the payments direct from the RBA to State governments say,
bypassing Australian budget arrangements?
It’s
not within RBA’s mandate to look after the States, so they don’t bother too
much. Behind the noble aims enshrined in statute, RBA is a bank which tends to
be run for the benefit of private banks.
We’re
constantly told we can’t spend too much. It’ll be inflationary and there’s already a
trillion dollars of debt.
Stockholm
syndrome is rife. We have become hostages of a system that serves a privileged
few.
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