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Thursday, December 20, 2012

Facing Austerity. Head-on.

Assuming this isn't outdated by the Mayan calendar, 2013 will be the year of austerity. It's already here, but its impact will be more apparent in the coming year as it dampens the extent of a full recovery as governments continue on with an unbalanced check book. This process is inevitable and in some cases necessary to break out of an economic slump with some sort of fiscal sanity. The problem is not just in the US where this coined term of  a 'fiscal cliff' is actually what has been planned; its just the extent and distribution of the scale-back that's up for debate. As expected, the developed world is set for a stalled recovery with room for only modest improvement that will still lie below full  potential, especially given the new Fed thresholds on employment and inflation. Emerging countries will continue to face some struggles, but they will be busy stimulating during this time.

Some form of the fiscal cliff is inevitable. The fiscal framework of our nation is designed with limits to be  amended as we go to ensure that we are somewhat responsible to continue running the country on a balanced footing. This is why Congress has the power of the purse, but constant partisanship never gets us to that ideal point of leadership. In this case, we see extreme political strategy that surprisingly hasn't seen the kind of backlash that Europe has. The fact of the matter is that each proposal includes spending cuts that target many entitlements that we have grown accustom to but are clearly unsustainable. Our complex tax code deprives us of key revenue while the spending outlook will continue to dig us deeper into deficit. Whatever is agreed upon will still decrease our potential to accelerate economic growth.

We must address the political strategy, because this will determine whether or not we will ever get it right. The White House has cleverly used this 'balance' myth by shying away from real reform and spending cuts. If you really dig into the budget, many of those line items are highly sensitive because so many people rely on entitlements especially during these times. No one is willing to take bold action, and would rather gradually scale down the effects of costly programs that truly have a demographic mishap such as social security and medicare. When Republicans pressure spending cuts and reform, the White House has blamed lack of revenue as the reason for imbalance and then automatically factor in tax hikes and cuts on the middle class to show the 'only' way to balance the books. This type of thinking is a far step-back from reality.

Governments Ready?

Elsewhere in the developed world, governments have realized the problem and are cutting their forecasts. Canada, which relies on a US comeback in order to fully push on with full potential, has pushed its expectations back by one year to around 2015 when the country should return to surplus. The country also decreased its revenue projections over five years, and will essentially rely on decreased government spending in order to balance the books. In the UK, the Autumn Statement called for a decrease in welfare entitlement spending which caused quite a stir among its dependents. The ECB decreased its growth forecasts for the eurozone, and Germany is set to feel a pinch with declining industrial production. Lastly, Australia's Finance Minister Swan admitted during an unscheduled press conference on Thursday that the country is unlikely to achieve a budget surplus this year, breaking the major platform in the Labor Party's election pledge. Meanwhile, Australia's Prime Minister Gillard is on vacation; once again shying away from addressing fundamental issues.

Greece is a special case. Yes, we all know this. But it has essentially become the hallmark of austerity, and could set precedent on how its done (whether the country is proceeding in the right or wrong direction is a separate discussion). The fact is that Prime Minister Samaras is quick to work on structural reforms and grow the economy as part of the strict terms of its long awaited aid tranche of short term rescue loans. Closing in on its  sixth year of recession and +20% unemployment, Greece's real problem is demographic. Greek youth are fleeing the country, choosing school over work, or are busy protesting austerity in the streets of Athens. The country is one of the worst in the world for setting up a businesses given the impending legal costs, and the businesses that do come to fruition are short lived. Most of the people are employed by the government; and working for a broke employer disrupts the dependent system to begin with. Austerity at its finest. Or maybe just pure socialism.

Central Banks Prepared?

Central banks are ahead of the game, but it still won't provide a full cover-up of the underlying fiscal set-back. The Fed removed its 2015 guidance and agreed on additional asset purchases which suggests that the US economy is still under performing. The RBA cut rates and hinted at a mining peak which should help prepare for some fiscal tightening down the road for Australia to eventually reach a budget surplus.

The bottom line is that fiscal tightening is ahead, and this will force us to struggle along the recovery stage, performing below our full potential. Banks may have access to easy capital thanks to the easing mechanisms of central banks, but that money will remain stashed on the balance sheet until the political storm passes. Businesses will not invest unless there is some certainty on corporate taxes and the consumer's ability to be productive. We will all be a bit shaken with a change in the status-quo.

Check out: Rising stars of the fiscal cliff - Maya MacGuineas of Fix the Debt

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