Tuesday 14 February 2017

A danger for Australia's economy

The ABC today report that the level of Australian household debt has reached 187% of disposable income. This is, they say, the highest in the world.

The problem is that this means that many households are close to not being able to afford to pay their debts (and interest) and buy the goods and services they need. If there was a rise in interest rates, or rise in unemployment this would see more and more households 'running out of money'.

The effect this will have on Australia is that Consumer spending would fall, leading to a lower level of Aggregate Demand (AD). This would put downward pressure on economic growth and could push Australia into its first recession since 1981.

Admittedly this is the 'disaster' scenario. There are other factors that simultaneously affect the economy. However it provides a constraint on the Reserve Banks ability to raise interest rates and should warn the government that further budget cuts and tax rises could combine to cause the recession everyone seeks to avoid.

Debt is a fact of life. It makes sense to borrow to buy a house. There is, however, a limit to the amount of debt a household can take on - the amount they can repay. If banks think households have reached their ability to pay then new loans will start to dry up and consumer spending will fall, leading to that fall in AD we feared. In that situation monetary policy becomes less effective, because lowering interest rates won't help much.

This is an important piece of background to Australia's current economic situation.

OECD data suggests Australia has high household debt, but not the highest


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