Funding Earthquakes and other ProjectsKeith Rankin
In popular sentiment, economies and economics are all about money. This is not so. Economies are about the flows of
goods and services, and the allocation of the resources that are required to produce the goods and services that people
want.
There is a branch of economics called monetary economics which is somewhat esoteric, and which is commonly touched on in
the penultimate week of a stage one Economic Principles course. Money is important in economics in the same way that
lubricating oil is important in a motor vehicle; necessary, but not central to our understanding of motorised transport.
Most importantly, monetary economics is not a zero-sum game. It is possible for there to be more money in place B
without there being less money in place A.
The New Zealand economy and much of the rest of the world are in a contractionary phase of the economic cycle, and have
been since 2008.
Essentially economies have two phases: expansionary and contractionary. Most of the world's economies were expanding
from 2002 to 2007, meaning that economic growth rates were high enough to bring about reductions in unemployment.
Excessive expansion, such as New Zealand had around 2004, may require offsetting contractionary policies from the
Government and the Reserve Bank. Such policies aim to reduce total spending.
In a contractionary phase, on the other hand, unemployment is either rising, or it is high and not yet falling.
Expansionary policies, to raise aggregate spending, are appropriate.
How policymakers manage construction and reconstruction projects depends critically on which phase the economy is in. In
an expansion, the reconstruction of Christchurch might have required less spending in Auckland so that resources could
be redeployed to Christchurch.
In a contraction, however, there are likely to be plenty of potential construction workers and other resources already
in Christchurch. Creating more unemployment in Auckland by cancelling or postponing Auckland projects, or by further
reducing the spending of Auckland's poor, is not a solution to Christchurch's problems.
Economic crises commonly stem from financial crises. In a pre-crisis expansion economy, the rich spend relatively
freely, as rising asset prices give them the impression of a large buffer of savings. The poor also spend relatively
freely, as their incomes and their access to credit are both rising.
After a financial crisis, this all changes. The rich can keep spending, but choose to cut back. The poor, facing
unemployment, reduced wage growth and less access to credit, must cut back on their spending. The economy moves into an
impasse that can be characterised as: those who can spend more will not, and those who will spend more can not.
This situation represents a stalemate that can lead to a protracted contractionary phase that only increased
government-initiated spending (eg on construction or reconstruction) or exports can get an economy out of. New Zealand
exported its way out of trouble from 1998 to 2002 through a low exchange rate. In a global crisis such an export-led
solution is called "beggar-thy-neighbour" or "currency wars", and appears unlikely as a general solution for New Zealand
this time.
The accepted 'Keynesian' solution is that recovery must be ignited by sufficient government-initiated spending to
reignite the "animal spirits" of capitalist entrepreneurship. Once that task is achieved, a renewed expansion becomes
self-sustaining. The government moves into fiscal surplus, and the increased debt incurred by government is serviced and
eventually repaid. If government-initiated spending is insufficient to reignite those animal spirits, then the
government joins the poor in a pile of debt, and the economy continues to contract.
Important historical examples are New Zealand and the United States in the late 1930s. New Zealand's state housing
programme was initiated in 1936, following on as it did from a currency devaluation in 1933 and increased British
consumer spending. That programme reignited those animal spirits. Economic growth in 1937 was well above 10 percent.
In the American New Deal, the stimulus arising from Federal Government-initiated construction spending proved
insufficient to pull that economy out of its contractionary phase. Attempts to balance the US Federal Budget in 1937 and
1938 only brought the Great Depression back. It was only the military requirements of World War 2 that obliged
sufficient Federal Government spending. War spending reignited animal spirits in the United States after 1940. Further,
it was the reconstruction of Europe and Japan after WW2 – effectively gifts from the United States – that perpetuated
the American expansion, creating in the process new markets for American goods.
In 2011, Christchurch needs newly constructed resources. Most of all, it needs people (including Aucklanders) and
government to buy goods and services from Christchurch-based businesses. Christchurch will be made stronger neither by
reducing the spending of Aucklanders, nor by reducing government spending on Auckland projects. It's not about spending
less money in Auckland so that more money can be spent in Christchurch. It's about using new spending opportunities in
both Christchurch and Auckland to reignite the whole country's economy.
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Keith Rankin teaches economics at Auckland's Unitec Institute of Technology