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Economic and Political Overview: Publication and event series on the national agenda for 2010
Economic and Political Overview: Publication and event series on the national agenda for 2010
Posted : Wednesday, February 17, 2010
Media release
issued: Tuesday, 16 February 2010
The still tenuous global economic recovery, Australia's relative
economic resilience, and the key issues for the upcoming federal
and state elections are the focus of the Economic and Political Overview (EPO) 2010
report and conference series taking place this month. Feature
articles in the report also examine the lessons learnt from the
Global Financial Crisis and highlight the value of sound economic
governance.
CEDA's EPO conference series commences in Tasmania on the 17th
February. Over the next month Treasurers and the Premiers of each
state will address CEDA audiences across Australia about the year
ahead.
2010 will be a politically charged year with a federal election
and three state elections in Tasmania, South Australia and
Victoria.
"This will be the most comprehensive state-by-state pulse
reading of the gradual recovery and the substantial policy
challenges ahead ," said David Byers, Chief Executive of CEDA.
"In Australia and globally, the past year has been marked by a
considerable expansion in the direct involvement of government in
the economy. Stimulus spending with seemingly limited cost benefit
scrutiny has been the order of the day. Through 2010, a disciplined
reeling-in of expansionary policy settings will become the new
order."
"Among the many challenges to be grappled with this year, the
Australian Government faces difficult choices on climate change
policy in the aftermath of the failure that was the Copenhagen
Climate Change Summit. Its commitment to reform will also be tested
in its response to the 'Henry Australian Taxation Review' and much
needed decisions on health reform and governance at COAG."
"The challenge for the Rudd Government will be to pull back from
its pattern of direct intervention to an approach that facilitates
efficient market-based structures and individual consumer choice,"
he said.
CEDA's EPO series also sees the publication of CEDA's first
report for the year, the Economic and Political Overview 2010,
featuring four significant papers:
- Economic overview: Respected NAB economists,
Alan Oster and Ben Westmore provide a detailed analysis of the
state of play across the international and national economies.
- Political overview: Professor Kenneth
Wiltshire reviews the Rudd government's performance, and the
Opposition turmoil in 2009, and the key policy issues for the 2010
elections.
- The crash of 2008 and the challenges ahead:
Peter Jonson, prominent company director and founder and editor of
Henrythornton.com, examines macro-economic performance, central
banking and the global financial crisis (GFC).
- The next ten years: Why it is sound economic governance
- not ideology that counts: CEDA Research and Policy
Director, Dr Michael Porter mounts the case for a return to the
path of rigorous policy reform.
Alan Oster and Ben Westmore, analyse the
economic downturn and gradual recovery. Their outlook for 2010 is
for the continuation of a 'moderate and disparate' upturn in
activity over the next few years, with global GDP forecast to grow
by 3.2 per cent in 2010 rising to 3.5 per cent in 2011. Weak labour
markets and limited scope for any further stimulatory government
policy will constrain growth compared to previous economic
recoveries. For Australia, they expect GDP growth to rise to 2.75
per cent in 2010 with fragile consumer and business confidence, and
household and business deleveraging impeding recovery.
The authors caution that the challenge globally will be
winding back stimulus spending once recovery is well
entrenched.
Professor Kenneth Wiltshire reviews the Rudd
government's performance along with the Opposition leadership
turmoil in 2009. In this election year, Wiltshire interprets the
polls and identifies the key 2010 political and policy issues. In
his view, the significant looming political events for the year
include climate change, reviews on tax and superannuation, border
protection, Chinese trade relations, federal spending and the
necessity of likely cutbacks. Although another term of Rudd
Government is likely, Wiltshire highlights the closeness of the
margin. He predicts marginal seats in Queensland and New South
Wales will play a major role in determining the election
outcome.
Peter Jonson, prominent company director and
founder and editor of Henrythornton.com, traces the root causes of
the global financial crisis, the warning signals we failed to heed
and critiques the policy response to the crisis. He believes the
biggest threat to the world economy is instability caused by policy
swings and advocates the 'Goldilocks' solution to the withdrawal of
stimulus spending. Bold tax reform, wise investing and
entrepreneurial flair will be required in Australia. His outlook is
that of a guarded optimist - Wall Street and Main Street having
been given the kind of scare that should encourage responsible
behaviour over the next decade or two.
Dr Michael Porter mounts the case for a return
to the path of rigorous policy reform that has been effectively
endorsed by both sides of politics over the previous 30 years and
enabled Australia to successfully withstand recent external
economic shocks. In a rebuttal of the Prime Minister's diagnosis of
the 'failings' of the 'neo-liberal economic orthodoxy', Porter
describes labels such as 'neo-liberal',' left', 'right', and
'conservative' as concealing rather than revealing substance.
The author argues that it is sound economic governance that
counts. The key contribution from government lies in the provision
of strong and credible institutions, transparent rule of law and
the facilitation of efficient market-based structures and choice.
He argues for sectoral extension of that model of accountability
and efficiency - reviewing reform needs in telecommunications,
broadband, emissions trading, water, health and hospitals and
tertiary education. In countries suffering post the GFC, lessons
can be learned from the Australian experience regarding what makes
for sustained prosperity and the capacity to ride out crises.
In CEDA's 50th year, CEDA Research Fellow, Professor Ian
Marsh looks at the history of the Economic and Political
Overview publication. He delivers an insightful analysis of three
eventful decades in a commemorative essay titled CEDA at
fifty - the EPO at thirty.
Economic and Political Overview report launch and event
series
The publication is being released in Tasmania on Wednesday, 17th
of February at the first event in our
2010 national EPO series.
EPO conferences are taking place around the nation. For more
information on the event nearest you, click on the links below:
-
Hobart, 17 February 2010, 9.45pm to 2.00pm
-
Sydney, 18 February 2010, 8.30am to 2.00pm
-
Melbourne, 26 February 2010, 8.30am to 2.30pm
-
Brisbane, 26 February 2010, 9.00am to 2.00pm
-
Darwin, 26 February 2010, 12.00pm to 2.00pm
-
Adelaide, 2 March 2010, 12.00pm to 2.00pm
-
Perth, 4 March 2010, 9.30am to 2.00pm
For more information
To read the full EPO publication, click on the link below.
Economic and Political Overview
To arrange an interview with EPO publication authors and event
series speakers please contact:
Jessica Ferrari
Communications Adviser
Phone: 03 9652 8440
Mobile: 0404 076 297
Email: jessica.ferrari@ceda.com.au
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