Vital Signs is a weekly economic wrap from UNSW economics professor and Harvard PhD Richard Holden (@profholden). Vital Signs aims to contextualise weekly economic events and cut through the noise of the data impacting global economies.
This week: The RBA leaves rates on hold, while consumers stand on the sidelines, and ratings agency S&P isn’t convinced of the government’s ability to reduce the budget deficit.
Votes from the Australian federal election continue to be counted, and uncertainty remains on whether the Liberal-National Coalition will be able to form government. But that wasn’t the the only event of note this week.
The most predictable (non)-event was the Reserve Bank’s decision to leave the cash rate on hold at 1.75%. This was widely anticipated by markets –in no small part because previous announcements by the RBA basically said they were going to wait for next quarter’s inflation figures before deciding to move.
Those figures are out before August’s RBA board meeting. And if they show distressingly low inflation – or deflation, as last quarter’s did – then expect a 25 basis point cut. Bond markets are certainly expecting that.
Adding weight to the possibility of a rate cut, Australian building approvals fell heavily in May, the ABS reported. Total approvals were down 5.2% on a seasonally-adjusted basis. This was driven by a huge fall in high-density approvals: they were down 10.3%
Piling on, the ABS reported weak retail sales for May, with growth at 0.2%, leading the annual rate to be only 3.4%.
So, as we’ve consistently seen, consumers and investors are on the sidelines. With all the political and economic uncertainty, and falling real national disposal incomes, it’s no wonder.
But the big news was ratings agency Standard & Poor’s placing Australia on negative credit watch on Thursday.
Australia is one of a small number of countries that enjoy a AAA rating. That lowers borrowing costs for banks – and hence businesses and consumers.
S&P said, however, that there was:
“a one-in-three chance that we could lower the rating within the next two years if we believe that parliament is unlikely to legislate savings or revenue measures sufficient for the general government sector budget deficit to narrow materially and to be in a balanced position by the early 2020s.”
S&P wasn’t alone. Rival ratings agencies Fitch, and Moody’s Investor Service, also expressed concern about the impact of political uncertainty or the composition of the new parliament on Australia’s fiscal position.
Australia is currently one of 12 countries that enjoy a AAA rating. Such ratings are not the only thing that affect the ability to borrow at low rates. The United States, for instance, has a AA+ rating, but US Treasury Bonds are viewed as the safest government security globally.
Australia isn’t the US. We’re not about to become Greece, either.
The following chart shows the 2015 net-debt-to-GDP ratios for 8 of the 12 AAA-rated countries that the IMF holds data for.
Australia was at 17.9% in 2015, and we are currently adding around 3% per annum to that figure. At that rate, it would take just two years for us to get to the median debt level of the other AAA countries (Canada, who have been breaking even budget wise recently). Yet even in around 10 years we would not be the most indebted in the AAA club. That’s assuming Germany does not run constant surpluses – it just balanced its budget for the first time in 40 years.
That suggests Australia has quite a lot of time to fix our budgetary issues. But S&P (and others) are suggesting not. Perhaps because they have a media cycle to manage themselves. Perhaps it’s because they want to nudge us in the right direction.
Or perhaps it’s because they think that if we go from zero net debt to 30-odd percent, despite the warnings, then our political system is broken – incapable of making hard change.
That’s pure speculation on my part. But if true, it’s an interesting thesis.
Perhaps it’s not the level of debt per se that matters, or even the trend. It’s what the level and trend tell you about gridlock and the inability to affect change.
Richard Holden is an ARC Future Fellow.
Richard Holden, Professor of Economics, UNSW Australia
This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.



Asian Currencies Steady as Rupee Hits Record Low Amid Fed Rate Cut Bets
Oil Prices Rise as Ukraine Targets Russian Energy Infrastructure
Japan’s Nikkei Drops as Markets Await Key U.S. Inflation Data
U.S. Black Friday Online Spending Surges to $8.6 Billion, Boosted by Mobile Shoppers
Spain’s Industrial Output Records Steady Growth in October Amid Revised September Figures
Gold Prices Steady as Markets Await Key U.S. Data and Expected Fed Rate Cut
European Oil & Gas Stocks Face 2026 With Cautious Outlook Amid Valuation Pressure
Germany’s Economic Recovery Slows as Trade Tensions and Rising Costs Weigh on Growth
European Stocks Rise as Markets Await Key U.S. Inflation Data
Asian Currencies Edge Higher as Markets Look to Fed Rate Cut; Rupee Steadies Near Record Lows
Dollar Slides to Five-Week Low as Asian Stocks Struggle and Markets Bet on Fed Rate Cut
Asian Markets Stabilize as Wall Street Rebounds and Rate Concerns Ease
Gold Prices Edge Higher as Markets Await Key U.S. PCE Inflation Data
Asian Markets Mixed as Fed Rate Cut Bets Grow and Japan’s Nikkei Leads Gains
European Luxury Market Set for a Strong Rebound in 2026, UBS Says




