Federal Treasurer Joe Hockey says raising Australia’s debt ceiling from $300 billion to $500 billion will stave off a United States-style debt crisis. After the government announced it would introduce legislation to raise the debt ceiling, the Labor opposition offered a compromise of a rise to $400 billion. Hockey says that’s inadequate, and matters are coming to a head as the government introduces legislation to Parliament today.
So what are the consequences of raising the debt ceiling in Australia and what should it be raised to? Crikey asks the economists — who think much of the debate on this issue is a beat-up …
Economics professor Steve Keen, University of Western Sydney:
We should be raising the debt ceiling. It’s sensible for the government to borrow money to finance part of expenditure, particularly if that involves infrastructure and development, which we’ve let wane badly in the last 20 years.
Putting a number on what we should raise the debt ceiling to is a bit like saying how many cards should there be in a playing deck. The government can issue as much money as it likes. The fact we have a numerical debt ceiling rather than one related to GDP is silly. There’s no real point where a government that issues its own currency has a debt ceiling, but if we have one it should be related to GDP rather than an absolute number, and it should be at least five times what it currently is.
It’s insane to worry about the government debt. The level of government debt is less than Australian credit card debt. There’s been a total beat-up of the debate in the last three years.
Michael Knox, chief economist and director of strategy at Morgans:
Australia should raise its debt ceiling. We have around about four years before we get back to balancing the budget, so we need to borrow more money and we also need to finance the existing stock of debt which we have.
The amount by which the debt ceiling is raised shouldn’t be an issue. You’ve got the side of politics that wants to increase the debt ceiling and say they want to move towards a balanced budget in four years. Unless the other side wants to move towards a balanced budget earlier, there’s no rational reason not to increase the debt ceiling.
I can understand why this might happen in the US context, but I can’t understand why it is happening in the Australian context. The side of politics in the US that tried to limit the debt ceiling has done it in order to reduce government spending. In Australia you’ve got the side of politics that usually wants to increase spending trying to limit the increase of the debt ceiling. It’s inherently contradictory.
Dr Frank Gelber, chief economist at BIS Shrapnel:
This is a non-issue. We need to raise the debt ceiling. Now it’s in the political arena. The question is by how much. Do you raise it by $200 billion, or do you raise it by a little less so you have to discuss it again sooner?
I don’t have an opinion on how much the debt ceiling should be raised by, but we’re going to need the $500 billion eventually. The debt ceiling will be raised, 100 [billion] gives them years to raise it again if they need. The question is whether you have to justify every incremental raise. In practical terms I don’t think it’s going to make a big difference to our credit rating.
Crikey is committed to hosting lively discussions. Help us keep the conversation useful, interesting and welcoming. We aim to publish comments quickly in the interest of promoting robust conversation, but we’re a small team and we deploy filters to protect against legal risk. Occasionally your comment may be held up while we review, but we’re working as fast as we can to keep the conversation rolling.
The Crikey comment section is members-only content. Please subscribe to leave a comment.
The Crikey comment section is members-only content. Please login to leave a comment.