OECD “GROWTH PROJECT” ENDORSES AUSTRALIAN ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE
June 25, 2000OECD Ministerial Meeting: The “New Economy”; WTO Trade Round; and Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises
June 27, 2000OPENING ADDRESS TO THE
OECD FORUM 2000: PARTNERSHIPS IN THE NEW ECONOMY
“SHAPING GLOBALISATION TO BENEFIT ALL”
PARIS
MONDAY, 26 JUNE 2000
10.15 AM
Introduction
Baroness Williams, Secretary-General Johnston and Minister Huwart, ladies
and gentlemen, welcome to the OECD’s Forum 2000.
It is an honour for me, as Australian Treasurer and the Chair of the
2000 OECD Ministerial Council Meeting, to help open this important dialogue
with representatives of non-government organisations, representatives
of employees, businesses and universities. You represent an important
part of what has come to be called “civil society”: the voluntary
groupings of private citizens who advance particular interests, independent
of government.
It has been pleasing over recent years to see the OECD successfully drawing
on these groups to help address policy challenges. Good examples are the
work on corporate governance, corporate responsibility, anti-bribery and
ethical behaviour in business and government; as well as electronic commerce,
and Internet issues concerning consumer protection and privacy.
Running through the policy issues on the Forum 2000 agenda is the challenge
of globalisation for policy-makers.
Advances in communication, information technology and transport have
created international markets in goods and services. Trade and investment
flows across national boundaries mean that countries can no longer quarantine
themselves from international developments. The developments that are
creating global markets and reducing the effectiveness of national boundaries
are, in my view, unstoppable and quite likely to accelerate. Our choice
is not whether to stop them, but how to manage them for the benefit of
our citizens.
As an Australian, I have lived at close quarters with significant opening
up of our economy in recent years. The internationalisation of our economy
has not just resulted from trade and investment, technology and communication,
but also migration, education, travel and skills transfer. We enjoy a
stable, fast-growing economy that has weathered the storms of the Asian
economic crisis while continuing to reduce unemployment. We are convinced
that an open economy delivers big net gains, but it requires the right
policies and institutions to deliver its full potential.
Economic development and the international framework
In the 20th century, the poorest quarter of the worlds population
became almost three times richer. The richest quarter became almost six
times richer. Notwithstanding this diversity of performance, economic
development lifted more people out of poverty than ever before and gave
them better health and education and better opportunities in life. Gains
of this magnitude are unprecedented in previous human history.
The great bulk of these economic gains were concentrated in the second
half of the 20th century. During that period, the multilateral
framework was centred on the institutions designed at Bretton Woods in
1944, the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank. These institutions
were quite successful in bringing stability and growth to the post-war
order.
The OECD itself, born in 1948 as the Organisation for European Economic
Cooperation, illustrates what can be achieved through well designed policies
and institutions. Through increasingly free trade and investment flows
and improved policies and institutions, those founding member economies
of the OECD that had been devastated by war, rapidly converged from the
1950s to the 1980s on the living standards and the growth rate of the
most advanced economies.
A clear majority of those who were poor as recently as 1970 have got
richer, in both absolute and relative terms: over the last 30 years, about
70 per cent of the population of developing countries have experienced
sufficiently fast growth in real per capita GDP to converge towards rich
countries levels. Poverty has worsened in some nations, particularly
in Africa. But there are major developing countries, particularly in Asia,
with large populations that have been growing quite strongly and lifting
millions out of poverty.
In East Asia alone, the number living in extreme poverty was halved in
only 10 years. The recent Asian crisis temporarily undid some of those
gains, but East Asia and South Asia are again the fastest growing emerging
markets. Hopefully that growth is now better founded on more robust institutions
and more transparent policies than before the crisis.
Notwithstanding the overall improvement, about 30 per cent of the poor
have became relatively poorer over the last 30 years – and a third of
them even poorer in absolute terms. This, of course, is a matter of deep
concern and reminds us there is still such a lot of work to be done.
Those countries where poverty is worsening have been unable to participate
in globalisation. They face many obvious social, health and political
challenges. And their economic institutions are weak. Their share of global
trade has actually halved over the last 20 years. They are isolated from
global trade opportunities and in some cases isolated by protectionist
policies pursued in more developed countries.
I view this indicator of falling trade shares for the poorest countries
as not a sign they are exploited by globalisation, but rather an indicator
they are missing out on the great opportunities that can be created, with
the right policies and institutions, from increasing trade and investment
flows.
Many of the problems attributed to international trade rules or international
institutions (such as apparently intractable poverty in the poorest countries,
persistently high unemployment and resultant social exclusion among the
low skilled in higher-income countries, or public concerns about food
safety) are in fact failures of national polices and institutions. Failures
of national policy can only be corrected at home.
I want to return shortly to what we in the OECD can do to help the poorest
non-member countries. But first, I would like to touch briefly on the
contribution good national policies can bring to harness the benefits
of globalisation.
Building “new economies”
In an increasingly integrated world economy with vast cross-border capital
flows, poor national policies are penalised and good policies rewarded.
Global developments are likely to leverage the penalties or the rewards.
In the first report on the OECD Growth Project to this MCM which discusses
the idea of a “new economy”, the OECD identifies Australia as
one of only six OECD economies (together with the United States, Denmark,
Ireland, the Netherlands and Norway) to have raised its trend real per
capita growth rate in the 1990s. The OECD notes that all six also achieved
improved labour market outcomes and most lifted growth rates in total
factor productivity.
In contrast to the performance of these six, the OECD area as a whole
grew more slowly in the 1990s, and the economies which slowed the most
(including some large European economies) experienced higher unemployment
and lower labour force participation rates. Their measured labour productivity
growth was high, but this seemed to have been achieved largely by shedding
the low-skilled into unemployment.
It may surprise those who still think of Australia as an “old economy”
of mining and agriculture that we share many of the characteristics of
a so-called “new economy”, where productive use of information
and communications technology has helped lift productivity growth to around
US rates, and sustained real GDP growth at rates of over 4 per cent a
year for the last 12 quarters.
In OECD comparisons, Australia rates third in the number of secure Internet
servers per million inhabitants, and has amongst the highest percentages
of the total population with Internet access.
But I believe the key issue is not producing lots of computers. This
is not a question of manufacturing technology but of using technology
in manufacturing, or agriculture or mining or financial services. And
the key to finding productive uses for any technology is intense competition
and continuous structural reform to keep an economy open and receptive
to innovation in a sustainable macroeconomic environment. In this way,
new technologies permeate the entire “old economy”. In Australia,
we see information technology contributing to productivity gains in manufacturing,
agriculture and other sectors, not just in the information and communications
technology sector itself.
With fiscal and monetary probity and comprehensive structural reforms,
countries can lift their economic performance, create jobs and produce
social dividends.
In this way, national economic reform can become a key contributor to
social cohesion and progress. There is no better path to social inclusion
and individual advancement than expanding employment opportunities in
a flexible, dynamic and growing economy.
The Australian Government has implemented wide-ranging macroeconomic
reforms and a continuing program of structural reforms. We have undertaken
substantial regulatory reform and rejuvenated competition. We have eliminated
budget deficits and reduced government net debt to just over 8 per cent
of GDP.
These reforms have lowered unemployment to around the lowest levels in
a decade; raised the sustainable, non-inflationary growth potential to
around 3 to 4 per cent; and kept inflation at about 2 per cent. We are
now implementing thorough-going reforms of personal, indirect and business
taxes.
Five years ago, the Australian Government spent nearly as much on servicing
public net debt as it did on schools and hospitals. Now, spending on debt
service has been cut by about half, while public spending on schools and
hospitals has doubled. Taxes can be spent on the future, not the past.
Yet even with a strongly growing economy, governments have an important
role in sharing of the benefits of economic growth so that people are
not left behind.
A competitive, market-based economy and a compassionate society are mutually
reinforcing. Each needs the other to work best and to prove sustainable
into the new millennium, when ageing societies will pose new challenges
for economic and social policies.
Australias social safety nets are well-targeted to provide adequate
benefits to those in real need. But we want to make further improvements.
Like other OECD members, we are trying to reduce work disincentives from
the interaction of the tax and benefit systems, and focussing on assisting
long term benefit recipients back into employment.
Governments do not have all the answers to these problems. Centralised
solutions are not always appropriate; nor can governments alone implement
solutions.
So in Australia, we have sought to develop a social coalition to tap
the insights of charitable organisations and churches, voluntary groups,
businesses, communities, families, individuals and all levels of government.
We are applying the principle of mutual obligation, whereby those who
benefit from government support have an obligation to give something back
to the community in return.
We have worked to ensure accessible, better quality, relevant education
and training to allow better employment opportunities.
A key element of Australian education and training policy has been to
ensure that the sector is accessible in rural and regional areas and for
disadvantaged groups – a task that can be made easier by the use of the
Internet. Similarly other essential areas of community support such as
health, welfare, and family and community services have all been upgraded,
with a view to improving the delivery of these services to remote locations.
Building better national institutions
Robust domestic economic institutions are necessary to maximise the benefits
from trade and investment and withstand the rigours of globalisation.
Markets only work efficiently and stably with a robust rule of law, an
independent judiciary, good insolvency regimes, sound financial institutions,
good prudential supervision, sustainable fiscal and monetary policies,
good corporate governance and low corruption.
Experience has shown this in three ways.
First, the Asian crisis showed that when the storms of economic crisis
hit, institutions matter. They count in preserving confidence.
Second, the formerly centrally-planned economies have shown that building
sound market institutions takes time, and that without them instability
and poor growth will persist.
Third, the persistent difficulties of the very poorest countries show
that neither domestic markets nor participation in international markets
can develop very far without building better economic institutions.
It is one of the strengths of the OECD that it has been particularly
active in drawing out the best of its members’ institutional designs and
supervisory practices, such as in its analysis of corporate governance
and regulatory reform, and its achievements in improved anti-corruption
and anti money-laundering measures.
In the task of building good institutions and regulatory practices, enhancing
transparency, and in the conduct of fiscal and monetary policies, newly
developed international standards and codes can be of considerable help.
Key work is being done in the IMF, the World Bank, the OECD, the Financial
Stability Forum, the G-20 and APEC.
Interestingly, some key codes such as those on accounting, auditing,
and corporate governance have been as much or more the products of robust
civil society, as of governments. This reflects the reality that laws
can only achieve so much at the frontiers of rapidly emerging issues,
good conduct is often a matter of community standards, of business ethics,
and of peer standards in key professions within civil society, such as
accountants, auditors, and company directors.
The OECD can play a valuable role in encouraging the implementation of
international standards and codes among its own members, and indeed more
broadly, and to assist those who want to move towards best practice.
We should strive to maintain the momentum of these reforms internationally,
through this period of strong growth. We should be reinforcing the architecture
of our national institutions and supervisory practices now, to meet the
challenges of tomorrow.
Building better international institutions
In a similar vein, we need to persist in continuously reforming international
institutions to cope with global developments in which private capital
flows are larger and official capital flows less important than in the
past.
We should seek to ensure each of the major international institutions
is focused on the objectives it is best able to implement. If we can achieve
that, the operations of the institutions will be mutually supporting.
One can see this principle usefully applied in the recent debate about
sharpening the respective roles of the IMF and the World Bank.
The same approach would serve us well in considering the roles of the
other international institutions. For example, the Australian Government
believes the WTO ought to focus on trade liberalisation supported by effective
rules, the ILO on labour standards, and the relevant UN agencies on specific
environmental and human rights issues. To try to achieve every objective
in every institution is likely to lead to poorer performance in all institutions
at all objectives.
Trade, agriculture, debt and extreme poverty
A significant part of the problem of disengagement of the extremely poor
from the benefits of globalisation is attributable to selective protectionism
in developed economies.
As the poorest economies enter the world of international trade, some
of their earliest export opportunities are likely to be in agricultural
products and simple manufactures like textiles, clothing and footwear.
But developed countries impose high tariffs on exactly these products,
and compound the damage with heavy use of trade distorting production
and export subsidies. So poor countries cant get market access to the
richest consumer markets in the world.
An OECD study to be released at this Ministerial meeting shows that the
cost of agricultural support and protection in the OECD area increased
again last year, for the third year in a row, to about USD360 billion.
Support levels in 1999 have again approached the record levels of the
mid-1980s.
Australia, with the second-lowest agricultural protection level in the
OECD after New Zealand, was one of only two OECD members not to increase
overall levels of support and protection in 1999.
To put these figures into perspective: farm protection in the OECD area
is about seven times as high as its members total Official Development
Assistance, and almost 13 times as high as the net present value of estimated
total debt forgiveness to the heavily indebted poor countries under the
enhanced HIPC initiative.
A similar situation applies to textiles and clothing, where a number
of developed countries have negotiated the WTO Agreement on Textiles and
Clothing to enable them to regulate the trade in these products. Quota
arrangements established under the auspices of that agreement will be
in force until 1 January 2005. Australia has chosen not to use the provisions
of this agreement and has fully implemented its Uruguay Round commitment
to tariff reductions on textiles and clothing on 1 January 2000.
We should remember that we do not lower trade barriers as charity. Lowering
trade barriers and allocating resources efficiently benefits the countries
which do it.
But is also helps the poorer countries with market access. This is another
reason why a new WTO round should go ahead. The extremely poor can achieve
little by trade liberalisation among themselves. The WTO is the poor countries
best chance for improving market access for their exports.
This was recognised at the meeting of APEC Ministers Responsible for
Trade hosted by Australia in May. This diverse group of developed and
developing economies reaffirmed strong commitment to the launch of a new
round of multilateral trade negotiations in the WTO at the earliest opportunity
and called for renewed efforts to build the necessary global consensus.
Food safety and biotechnology
Food safety has become a highly controversial subject over recent years
due to a number of high profile food safety scares from “old technologies”
and the advent of new and novel foods, including those produced using
biotechnology.
When it comes to food safety, all countries share a common objective
– we want to protect our consumers and ensure their access to good, safe
nutritious and affordable food.
We need to ensure that food regulators maintain and strengthen public
confidence in national and international food safety policy and regulatory
frameworks built on the foundation of scientific, factual and internationally
acceptable evidence. Those frameworks must operate transparently, objectively,
accountably and without political interference.
Australia believes the same principles that guide international regulatory
best practice in trade and protection of human health and plant and animal
life apply equally well to the regulatory challenges posed by biotechnology.
Biotechnology offers the prospect for greater food production to help
feed the additional 3 billion people projected by the mid 21st
century, with less reliance on pesticides and the undesirable fertiliser
and feed practices that have already caused health and environmental concerns.
But governments, working with scientists, industry and public interest
groups, must do better in explaining this new technology to the public.
We must listen to public concerns about biotechnology and food safety
and respond effectively to those concerns.
Sustainable development
The OECD is doing valuable work on sustainable development, and a progress
report will be released at this Ministerial. We see that the concept of
sustainable development is becoming more significant for resources such
as fisheries, tropical forests and fresh water, all of which are coming
under heavy pressure. The final outcomes will be a major report for the
2001 Ministerial.
Conclusion
I know I speak for all of my OECD ministerial colleagues when I assure
you we are keen to incorporate the insights from the Forum 2000 dialogue
into the OECDs work.
I have asked to be kept informed of the Forum 2000 discussions as I chair
the Ministerial Council Meeting over the next two days.
Your views have the capacity to improve the performance of all member
governments in delivering the benefits of globalisation to all, both within
OECD members communities and in the broader global community.
May I wish you well in your work. I hope that Forum 2000 will be merely
the first in a series of working arrangements that will enrich the OECDs
work, improve its relevance, increase the influence of the OECDs findings,
and enrich the lives of all our citizens.