Cool Heads Needed in Economic Turmoil
The current international financial crisis is the worst in most people’s lifetimes. A global recession is in prospect.
New Zealand cannot escape the consequences. The duty of policy makers is not to make them worse and to respond with
policies to assist the country to emerge in better shape. Some things are clear about the current crisis.
First, it will pass. Defensive actions by governments and market adjustments will pave the way for recovery, probably
within a year or two. A repeat of the 1930s Great Depression is highly unlikely.
Second, market-based economic systems will not be abandoned. They involve risk and can be volatile, but their
wealth-creating abilities are unsurpassed.
Third, just as in the 1930s depression, the stagflation of the 1970s and the Asian economic crises of the 1990s, many
of the current problems are government-made. Governments and businesses need to learn from their mistakes.
The catalogue of follies that precipitated the sub-prime mortgage meltdown in the United States is long, and more
emerge by the week.
Prime exhibits include the easy money policies of the Federal Reserve after the dotcom crash, which helped fuel the
house price boom; the government sponsorship of Freddie Mac and Fannie Mac, the giant mortgage underwriters that failed;
the legislation and political pressure that encouraged banks to lend to unqualified borrowers in the name of ‘affordable
housing’; land supply restrictions; mark-to-market accounting rules; non-recourse lending regulations; and more.
There will be lengthy deliberations on all these issues. Everyone is saying there is a need for better regulation, but
this is vacuous in itself. The general case for less intervention and more reliance on investor prudence seems
overwhelming. Lightly regulated hedge funds and private equity firms have fared better than highly regulated banks.
Once the default avalanche was triggered, authorities in the United States, Europe and elsewhere had little option
other than to act to protect their financial systems, although the merits of the various rescue operations will be long
debated. A huge issue going forward will be the escalation of moral hazard – the expectation of government bailouts if
imprudent lenders get into difficulty.
Thanks to earlier reforms, New Zealand avoided many of these mistakes, although the Reserve Bank’s ‘go for growth’ bias
from 2003 with excessively loose monetary policy, encouraged by finance minister Michael Cullen’s unwise changes to the
Policy Targets Agreement, contributed to the house price bubble which is painfully deflating, and to high ongoing
current account deficits.
There are, nevertheless, clear and present dangers. Some years ago the government rejected an Australian offer to
extend to New Zealand depositors the same level of protection afforded its depositors in exchange for not imposing on
bank subsidiaries in New Zealand the huge costs of separation of New Zealand and Australian operations. This now appears
to be a doubtful call.
Given that decision and last week’s move by Australia to introduce a deposit guarantee scheme, there was probably
little option for New Zealand other than to follow suit, even though the Reserve Bank and Treasury had long advised
against such measures. However, the scheme being implemented looks clumsy and distorting: wide coverage of retail
institutions rather than a focus on protecting the core financial system; costs on major banks amounting to tens of
millions of dollars; preferential treatment of smaller institutions; the problematic issue of the absence of a guarantee
on wholesale foreign borrowing; massive taxpayer exposures; and moral hazard risks for the future.
Even more threatening is the possibility of an Iceland scenario: the problem of refinancing very large amounts of
external debt as loans fall due. Dr Cullen rightly used to worry about excessive balance of payments deficits, but they
have continued on his watch.
A major error has been to misdiagnose them as an insufficiency of domestic savings. Even if all countries had the same
savings rate, there would still be current account deficits and surpluses between them because rates of investment would
differ.
Instead, besides loose monetary policy, the main causes of the ongoing deficits have been years of excessive government
spending and costincreasing regulations that have depressed productivity growth, damaged New Zealand’s international
competitiveness and squeezed export and import-competing industries.
If external credit dries up, or only comes at a high cost, New Zealand would have to adjust by exporting more and
importing less. This would require a shift of resources from the non-traded to the traded goods sector. The nominal
exchange rate and real wages would fall. Anything that impedes this adjustment, such as more government spending and
public sector wage increases, would make it more painful.
Equally, proposals to defer provisional tax payments, re-arrange the SOE portfolio and pump up infrastructure spending
are irrelevant to the underlying problem and could worsen it. The economy was already in recession before the crisis
hit, and is in no shape to absorb the shock of more wrecking balls. Reckless political reactions such as we are seeing
daily could do great damage if cooler heads don’t prevail.
Roger Kerr (rkerr@nzbr.org.nz) is the executive director of the New Zealand Business Roundtable.
ENDS