Thursday, October 6, 2011

Sovereign credit downgrades are occurring -what did I predict ?

NZ Business Round Table Chairman Roger Kerr just sent me this:- 
"A spate of Sovereign credit downgrades is occurring, with Italy featuring prominently this week following New Zealand's downgrades the week before.
This week's chart shows how fundamentally different the situation is in one vital respect between New Zealand and Italy.
In contrast to Italy, and the OECD as a whole, New Zealand does not have a public debt problem (yet, but watch this space given our underlying fiscal deficit).
Whereas 11 countries in the chart have net public debt at or above 50 percent of GDP, New Zealand's ratio is only 4 percent of GDP according to OECD projections for 2011.
New Zealand has been downgraded for external debt reasons, but since the vast bulk of this debt is between private borrowers and lenders–who have every reason in 2011 to balance risk and return carefully and judiciously–this is a very different situation from that facing Italy and the ten other countries in the chart where government debt is clearly the problem."
I wrote:-

The New Zealand Burden of Debt- Public and Private

People fail to see the inevitable connection between private and public debt. Both private and government debt directly affect GNP and GDP when the burden or even fear of burden becomes too great. 

Private debt matters. In New Zealand it represents the dangerous "bubble" like elements in the economy, which tend to be corrected in recessions like we are having now. That in turn creates a larger strain on public finances who have been growing based on larger tax collection from the good times when spending went up because of fictional wealth based created from inflated property values built up from the import of cheap offshore private capital.  

Therefore the real risk of national insolvency will come from the same strain of macro economic debts which are both public and private- both  caused by the lack of fiscal regulatory prudence.(- fiduciary law- regulatory governance- asset to debt ratios - etc) 

NZ is straddled with so much debt we face deflation is asset values that will trigger panic among banks as their loans are from offshore payable yet securitised locally – and without a backstop which after the Ireland fiasco, not a chance they will get one. 

The higher the debt burden on our economy the less likely we will to grow particularly in light of very real red tape strangling new or existing business growth. Add to that -Waitangi and other- no mining- no oil- no selling assets to offshore owners.

I would also not be surprised to see borrowing that doesn’t appear on government balance sheets yet exists as private debt. I have no evidence of this- but given the games I have seen, nothing would surprise me. 

Government are under pressure to tighten spending and it seems like the right thing to do given they are borrowing $300-$400m every week to pay the bills.  But it results in bigger deficits because it sets in motion a vicious cycle. 

Private sector already under pressure is already trying to correct spending due to concerns over the property bubble collapse. So that causes a slow up. Then when the public sector tries to correct its debt it puts even more pressure on households and companies because of less government spending. 

How does the government counter this?  New taxes which have seen recently with GST and when taxes go up private sector cuts back- jobs are lost, and the government's deficit increases so it must cut even more or borrow more which eventually kills us. 

As I have written before, we are in for a shocking ride ahead. The USA/UK/Euro/Asian stimulus of Keynesian styled measures or their latest- printing fake money which they call “quantitative easing” wherever they got that crap name from who knows- but what they have done has not worked. 

We are at the end of that economic stimulus oxygen. It seems calm right now but it's going to be much worse very soon.

People fail to see the inevitable connection between private and public debt. Both private and government debt directly affect GNP and GDP when the burden or even fear of burden becomes too great.

So how accurate have I been since that prediction in April 14 2011 ?

Chart forDow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI)

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Forbes gives NZ business thumbs-up- Yeah Right



NICK KRAUSEhttp://www.stuff.co.nz/business/industries/5742209/Forbes-gives-NZ-business-thumbs-up


New Zealand has been ranked second in the world in a study of the best place to do business.
Placed third last year, New Zealand came behind Canada in a study by global media giant Forbes which ranks 134 countries across 11 metrics.
Forbes considered property rights, innovation, taxes, technology, corruption, freedom - personal, trade and monetary, red tape, investor protection and stock market performance.
''While the US is paralysed by fears of a double-dip recession and Europe struggles with sovereign debt issues, Canada's economy has held up better than most,'' Forbes said.
''Canada skirted the banking meltdown that plagued the US and Europe. Canadian banks emerged from the tumult among the strongest in the world thanks to their conservative lending practices.''
Canada was ranked fourth last year. Denmark dropped from the top spot in 2010 to number five this year as its relative monetary freedom declined as measured by the Heritage Foundation. Denmark's stock market also fell 14 per cent which was the worst performance of any of the top 10 countries. 
New Zealand secured top rankings in the metrics gauging red tape, investor protection, corruption, property rights and monetary freedom. It ranked relatively well, too, in terms of market performance, technology and tax burden as well.
Forbes used research and published reports from the Central Intelligence Agency, Freedom House, Heritage Foundation, Property Rights Alliance, Transparency International, the World Bank and World Economic Forum to compile the rankings.
Australia is ranked 11th. At the tail end are Angola, Burundi, Zimbabwe and Chad in 131st-134th spots.
What Forbes' senior editor Kurt Badenhausen said:
1. Canada ranked fourth last year. Scores very well with investor protection as well as red tape - how easy is it to start a business. Canada is the ninth largest economy in the world. They scored in the top 20 in 10 of the 11 metrics looked at. GDP growth was 3.1 per cent last year and this year is supposed to be 2.5 per cent in this environment is pretty good
2. New Zealand - ranked third last year. Is the smallest economy of the top 10 but has continued to hold up very well during this global recession
3. Hong Kong - incredibly vibrant community - one of the lowest tax burdens in the world
4. Ireland - their banks have certainly had their problems but they score very well when you look at investor protection
5. Denmark. They were number one last year but were hurt by bad stockmarket performance over the last 12 months
6. Singapore experienced tremendous growth - 14.5 per cent GDP growth last year also tremendous trade freedom. Their trade balance is 21 per cent
7. Sweden is the most innovative country if you look at patents per capita
8. Norway - in terms of trade freedom and property rights, among the best in the world
9. United Kingdom had some bank problems and riots in August; still one of the biggest financial centres in the world
10. United States - highest corporate taxes in world hold it back from being ranked higher
- BusinessDay.co.nz

comments
Christopher Wingate   #14   1:47pm
I have read these types of reports before- and can be treated as such rather like Moody's or S&P "AAA Ratings" or perhaps George Bush's endless hyperbole. I am a kiwi, went to Australia at 18 came back at 28 a millionaire ready to help surge my nation forward. During that time I dealt with more idiots in power than I have ever encountered ever before in any nation. Just read this blog I posted- nothing offensive- just a story about how rotten NZ really is. http://worldeconomy-wingate.blogspot.com/2010/08/billionaires-millionaires-why-invest-in.html

State of NZ Political Parties

I have been to NZ left and right political party meetings for some 33 years. And as each decade goes by I'm afraid it's getting worse.                                          

Today political party meetings are reminiscent of wild dogs poised to bite, of competing twisted angry egos, and of course, loud sucking and blowing sounds of nauseating waffle and brown nosing.

No wonder our nation is in trouble.