AMP Capital’s senior economist Diana Mousina has been impressed by the power of governments, through spending, to keep an economy ticking over.
“The past year has shown the control that governments really have,” Mousina said. “They have an ability to turn industries on and off. It’s not something that people thought much about beforehand, but what the coronavirus pandemic has put into focus is the control that government has.”
“Next time people go to the polls they will better understand just how much power a government holds. Just how rapidly they can turn on the fiscal tap. This year has taught us that when there’s a big crisis, the government will step in.”
With that comes other challenges, Mousina said.
“There’s a moral hazard involved when voters think governments will always step in, particularly if the next economic crisis is nowhere near as severe as the COVID-19 pandemic. And of course, there’s a large fiscal repair that needs to be addressed in coming years,” she said.
“But during this crisis, governments have bailed out companies. That might have happened during the Second World War or the Great Depression, but not since then,” she said.
Oliver said he’s been taken with how resilient the Australian economy has been. “It bounced back much faster than I thought it would. It’s bumpy and confusing and messy, but it’s heading in the right direction.”
He attributes that, in large part, to government spending measures such as JobKeeper, a wage subsidy, and JobSeeker, an income support payment for the unemployed. The recent Federal Budget continued the trend.
“While there is a tendency to get lost in the details of the Budget, and each spending measure, the key takeaway from it is that it is actually pumping significantly more stimulus into the economy.”
“The total direct fiscal support for the economy this calendar year as a share of GDP is now just above 10 per cent, which is well above that in other comparable countries including the US,” he said.
We have access now to mobility data – how people are moving around cities. We have access to credit and debit card information. It will all become part of what we look at.”
– Diana Mousina, senior economist, AMP Capital
Mousina agreed, saying economies in the Asia-Pacific region have bounced better than initially anticipated. “There’s no doubt that consumers have responded to the cash handouts and wage subsidy schemes. And the consumer sector has been stronger across most developed economies.”
This has meant some retailers have performed much better than you would expect in an economic recession. “Normally in a downturn, retailers sell fewer discretionary goods – things like furniture and electronic goods. But this time around the money allocated to the family holiday went on some of those goods,” Oliver said. “That was a surprise.”
Mousina said the response from business was more muted. “Business confidence and conditions are still low. There were big falls globally in manufacturing and industrial production, though in those sectors there has been a rebound,” she said. “It’s been tricky to read because often the headline number and even the data didn’t tell the full picture.”
Economists rely on data to create forecasts. Statistical bureaus are the prime source, though much of that information is old news by the time it’s released. The coronavirus pandemic has forced providers to develop a swathe of real time data.
“We have been bombarded with information,” Oliver said. “Economists have suddenly got access to high frequency data. It’s good but it can also add to the uncertainty around an economy. Social media has helped facilitate this information.”