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Fiscal Adjustment, The Real Exchange Rate and Australia's External Imbalance
Author(s) -
Alesina Alberto,
Gruen David W. R.,
Jones Matthew T.
Publication year - 1991
Publication title -
australian economic review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.308
H-Index - 29
eISSN - 1467-8462
pISSN - 0004-9018
DOI - 10.1111/j.1467-8462.1991.tb00396.x
Subject(s) - current account , economics , consolidation (business) , fiscal adjustment , depreciation (economics) , monetary economics , exchange rate , fiscal policy , government spending , investment (military) , macroeconomics , international economics , finance , capital formation , market economy , welfare , financial capital , politics , law , political science , human capital
This article examines issues of relevance to Australia's external imbalance. We investigate the sharp fiscal consolidation over the past five years and examine why it did not reduce the current account deficit. We show that a disproportionate part of the fiscal consolidation was achieved by cutting public investment spending, and we discuss some of the negative consequences of such cuts. We compare the macroeconomic behaviour of six OECD countries which have recently increased net government savings. It has been a common experience that an increase in net government saving has not been associated with a reduction in the current account deficit. For Australia, we establish that the link between fiscal consolidation and a smaller current account deficit was severed by a private sector investment surge. This leads us to examine the behaviour of the relative price critical to the allocation of this investment between the traded and non‐traded sectors ‐ the real exchange rate. Over the medium term, we argue that a substantial real depreciation is necessary as part of the adjustment required to stabilise the ratio of net external liabilities to GDP.

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