Wednesday, 12 February 2020

Australian Economy 2020 Outlook



Driving growth
Interest rates look set to go lower, but will it be enough to break the consumer strike?
How do regulators kick-start the country's stubbornly sluggish economy? A leading economist says the answer could be for the Government to get out of the way of small business in 2020.

BetaShares's chief economist David Bassanese thinks the Government should focus more on supporting the nation's small businesses, rather than throwing money at households in the hope they will spend it.

Despite record low interest rates and more than $5 billion in tax offsets pumped back to low and middle-income earners late last year, household spending has remained stubbornly low.

"When you give money to households, you rely on them spending and not saving it. But households are telling us they don't want to do that. They're saving the tax cuts and the interest rate cuts,"Mr Bassanese says, pointing to high levels of household debt and a focus on paying down borrowings.

"A far better solution, I think, is to have more productivity-enhancing reforms. Reduce regulation and red tape.

"The compliance burden for taxes in Australia is very high by global standards. More pro-competition changes to the economy and an improved tax system would give businesses more of a competitive edge."

The Business Council of Australia is running a campaign asking business owners to share personal stories of how excessive red tape or regulation has held their business back. The lobby group claims excessive regulation - in areas such as payroll tax, licensing, trading hours and approvals - costs the economy $176 million each year.

Echoing these sentiments, Mr Bassanese says relieving some of the burden on small business could help drive employment growth, boosting wages and getting the economy out of a seemingly intractable catch-22 in 2020.

"Consumer spending can't really fire until wages pick up, and wages can't pick up until the economy is firing. So, you need a circuit breaker to do that - something that can stimulate growth and push the employment rate up rather than down," he says.

At present the unemployment rate is 5.2 per cent and expected to drift higher this year, while the RBA estimates it needs to fall to around 4.5 per cent to fire wage growth.

"The underlying weakness with the economy is household income growth. That's been a feature for several years and it's finally caught up with households and they've decided to cut back their spending," Mr Bassanese says.

Where wage growth will come from is the big question. Australia has had nearly three decades of recession-free growth driven by a mining boom and a property boom.

"We don't have a replacement for either of those at the moment," he says.

While economists don't believe Australia's enviable record is in danger, the grinding pace of growth is causing some to question whether more levers should be pulled to kick the economy up a gear in 2020.

Next month the Reserve Bank is expected to deliver another interest rate cut, taking the cash rate to an unprecedented low of 0.5 per cent, with another cut mooted for May to 0.25 per cent. After that, RBA governor Philip Lowe has said quantitative easing could be an option to buy up bonds and push interest rates down.

But economists are concerned monetary policy alone cannot fire economic growth, with many calling for fiscal stimulus from the Federal Government, urging tax cuts be brought forward along with infrastructure projects.

Like his peers, Mr Bassanese is hopeful that - despite a laser focus on delivering a surplus - the Government may come to the party. One possibility is that weakness in the economy, combined with additional spending on the bushfire crisis, could undermine predictions for a slim surplus this year, leaving the door open for a spending boost.

"If they can't deliver a surplus, they may turn a negative into a positive by undertaking more fiscal stimulus," he says.

Another possible boost to the economy in 2020 may come from a significant fall in the Australian dollar as global growth recovers and US-China tensions ease.

"I'm calling the Aussie dollar to fall to 62 cents next year," Mr Bassanese says.

Others have pegged it around 65-70. A low dollar would be good news for exporters, along with the country's tourism sector and retailers located in tourism hot spots.

Winners and losers

With more of the same trends continuing in 2020 - low wages growth, low inflation, and unemployment drifting higher - business conditions will remain fairly stable.

Retailing and businesses that rely on discretionary spending - restaurants and cinemas - will continue to feel the pinch.

"The housing construction area is going through a downturn now which is likely to last through much of 2020." Mr Bassanese says.

On the flip side, commercial and infrastructure construction looks set to remain strong and mining investment is beginning to pick up, which will benefit businesses servicing the mining industry.

International Tourism could also be a bright spot in 2020, although the Australian Tourism Council has flagged concerns about how global media coverage of the bushfire crisis could impact the country's image overseas.



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