No Increase in Excise Rate on Petrol
September 20, 2005IMF World Economic Outlook
September 22, 2005ADDRESS TO
THE LOWY INSTITUTE FOR INTERNATIONAL
POLICY
INTERNATIONAL DEMOGRAPHIC AND ECONOMIC
CHANGE, AND WHAT IT MEANS FOR AUSTRALIA
WEDNESDAY 21 SEPTEMBER 2005
Three years ago Australia’s first Intergenerational Report provided a
framework for thinking about the economic challenges Australia will face over
the next 40 years.
The Report looked at domestic demographic developments and how they might impact
on Australia over the long term. It highlighted the effects of declining fertility
rates over the last 40 years and how that, together with increased life expectancy,
will contribute to the ageing of our population. The Report detailed how an
ageing population will subdue economic growth but increase fiscal pressures.
Out of that report came a framework for thinking about the components of long-term
economic growth – known by shorthand as the 3 “Ps” – Population,
Participation and Productivity.
An increasing population (on consistent participation and productivity) will
build the size of an economy. A stable population with a declining participation
rate caused by population ageing will, other things being equal, slow the growth
of an economy. And, everything else being equal, an economy where productivity
is increasing will generate a larger economy.
Over the long term, a country’s economic prospects derive from the level
of its population, the engagement of the population in the workforce and the
level of their output. These factors will shape and influence Australia’s
future, but so too, will they shape the countries around us.
Today I want to talk about the long term, changes these factors will have on
our region and the globe and think about how we should respond.
Population and Economic Development
The United Nations in its population data base lists Australia as the 53rd
largest country, by population, in the world.
TABLE 1. Population by Selected Country1
Rank |
Country |
Population ‘000 |
1 |
China |
1,315,844 |
2 |
India |
1,103,371 |
3 |
United States |
298,213 |
4 |
Indonesia |
222,781 |
5 |
Brazil |
186,105 |
6 |
Pakistan |
157,935 |
7 |
Russia |
143,202 |
8 |
Bangladesh |
141,842 |
9 |
Nigeria |
131,530 |
10 |
Japan |
128,805 |
49 |
Ghana |
22,113 |
50 |
Romania |
21,711 |
51 |
Yemen |
20,975 |
52 |
Sri Lanka |
20,743 |
53 |
Australia |
20,155 |
54 |
Mozambique |
19,792 |
55 |
Syria |
19,043 |
56 |
Madagascar |
18,606 |
57 |
Cote d’Ivore |
18,154 |
58 |
Cameroon |
16,322 |
Australia’s share of global population is less than one third of 1%.
But Australia has a very high per capita GDP. This is due mainly to our high
productivity levels. As a result, although Australia is 53rd by population,
in 2004 it was the 13th largest economy in the world at US$ market
exchange rates. Our economic strength boosts our standing in global league ladders.
TABLE 2. Current GDP (2004, US$ billion, market exchange rates)2
Rank |
Country |
US$ billion |
Per cent of |
1 |
United States |
11733.5 |
28.9 |
2 |
Japan |
4668.4 |
11.5 |
3 |
Germany |
2706.7 |
6.7 |
4 |
United Kingdom |
2125.5 |
5.2 |
5 |
France |
2018.1 |
5.0 |
6 |
Italy |
1680.7 |
4.1 |
7 |
China |
1649.4 |
4.1 |
8 |
Canada |
995.8 |
2.4 |
9 |
Spain |
993.0 |
2.4 |
10 |
Korea |
681.5 |
1.7 |
11 |
Mexico |
676.5 |
1.7 |
12 |
India |
661.0 |
1.6 |
13 |
Australia |
617.6 |
1.5 |
14 |
Brazil |
599.7 |
1.5 |
15 |
Russia |
582.7 |
1.4 |
16 |
Netherlands |
578.0 |
1.4 |
17 |
Switzerland |
358.0 |
0.9 |
18 |
Belgium |
352.0 |
0.9 |
19 |
Sweden |
346.5 |
0.9 |
20 |
Taiwan |
305.2 |
0.8 |
The size of an economy at market exchange rates, however, can vary dramatically
as the exchange rate fluctuates, even if the underlying volume of goods and
services it produces is unchanged.
When we compare the size of economies in different countries, the process is
even more fraught since different countries have prices that can diverge dramatically
– especially if those prices are controlled in some countries and if exchange
rates are subject to administrative control.
Accordingly, when economists compare the volumes of goods and services produced
or consumed across countries they usually revert to comparisons using purchasing
power parity (PPP). (See Appendix for further detail on the use of PPP exchange
rates in GDP estimates).
TABLE 3. Current GDP (2004, US$ billion, PPP exchange rates)3
Rank |
Country |
US$ billion |
Per cent of |
1 |
United States |
11605.2 |
20.9 |
2 |
China |
7334.3 |
13.2 |
3 |
Japan |
3817.2 |
6.9 |
4 |
India |
3290.8 |
5.9 |
5 |
Germany |
2391.6 |
4.3 |
6 |
United Kingdom |
1736.4 |
3.1 |
7 |
France |
1724.6 |
3.1 |
8 |
Italy |
1620.5 |
2.9 |
9 |
Brazil |
1461.6 |
2.6 |
10 |
Russia |
1449.2 |
2.6 |
11 |
Canada |
1050.5 |
1.9 |
12 |
Korea |
1029.8 |
1.9 |
13 |
Mexico |
1005.0 |
1.8 |
14 |
Spain |
971.7 |
1.7 |
15 |
Indonesia |
801.4 |
1.4 |
16 |
Australia |
602.1 |
1.1 |
17 |
Taiwan |
589.5 |
1.1 |
18 |
Turkey |
529.6 |
1.0 |
19 |
Iran |
518.8 |
0.9 |
20 |
Thailand |
512.3 |
0.9 |
You can see again in this Table that Australia, although small in population,
has an economy which outperforms much more populous nations and is measured
as the 16th largest economy in the world. Our share of global GDP
is 4 or 5 times our share of population. Notice that on this table China is
the world’s 2nd largest economy with 13.2 per cent of world
GDP compared to the 7th largest with 4.1 per cent as shown in Table
2.
What helps make the United States the world’s superpower is that although
it has only the third largest population in the world, that population is extremely
productive. It is this productiveness (GDP per capita) which ‘supersizes’
the US economy to be far stronger than any other country.
Further, in contrast to other developed economies, the United States has high
spending on defence — around 4% of GDP. This makes its spending larger than
the rest of the G7 combined and, at US exchange rates, its defence spending
is greater than the next 20 countries of the world combined.
A strong economy with a strong military is also matched with a very strong
sense of mission and powerful ideas which are another, perhaps the most important,
reason for US influence in the world.
The rise of the US economy is, however, a comparatively recent phenomenon.
An OECD study (The World Economy by Angus Maddison) estimates that the
US share of world GDP increased from 1.8% in 1820, to 8.9% in 1870, to 19.1%
in 1913 and 27.3% in 1950. This rise was due to a combination of strong population
growth and rising productivity.
The next 50 years
As we look out over the next 50 years, what changes do we see to the global
power balance?
First of all, let us try to extrapolate population shifts. If the global population
was represented by 100 people4
in 2005, then 5 would be in the US, 11 in Europe, 20 in China, 17 in India,
14 in Africa and, alas, less than one third of a person in Australia.
If there were 100 people in the world today, then projecting forward to 2050
there would be 140 people — that is a 40% increase. But if we standardise back
to 100 again we would see the US proportion of global population is hardly going
to change. The proportion of the world’s population in Europe and China
will fall. And the proportion living in Africa will increase. The big population
shift in the next half century will be to Africa.
TABLE 4. Share of Global Populations5
2005 Share |
2050 Share |
2050 (2005 plus projected growth rate of population) |
|
World |
100.0 |
100.0 |
140.4 |
US |
4.6 |
4.4 |
6.1 |
Europe |
11.3 |
7.2 |
10.1 |
China |
20.4 |
15.3 |
21.5 |
India |
17.1 |
17.5 |
24.6 |
Africa |
14.0 |
21.3 |
30.0 |
ASEAN |
9.1 |
8.3 |
12.4 |
Japan |
2.1 |
1.2 |
1.8 |
S. Korea |
0.8 |
0.5 |
0.7 |
Other |
20.3 |
23.9 |
32.7 |
Australia |
0.3 |
0.3 |
0.4 |
It may surprise many that China’s share of the world population is going
to decline, but it is a consequence of declining fertility rates. Fifty years
ago, China had an estimated fertility rate of roughly 6. Today it is around
1.7 – the same as Australia. While China has a much lower aged dependency
ratio than Australia today, it will be much the same as Australia’s by
2050, and higher than the United States’ ratio in that year. In the decades
leading to the middle of this century, China’s population will age, and
age very fast. Between now and then, the economic rise of China will be based
on productivity growth, not on population.
China’s economy has been emerging from lost decades of economic underperformance.
It has been opening its markets, reforming its economy, and moving its people
into more productive work due to rapid industrialisation. Together, these changes
are generating huge rates of economic growth. Because this is occurring in the
world’s most populous nation, this growth is spurring global commodity
markets. In fact, China now provides the single greatest source of world economic
growth.
As India continues its decade-long emergence from the dead hand of socialism
and further opens itself to international markets, much the same has started
to occur, although it is not as advanced yet as China.
Table 3 above presented the most authoritative estimates of present day GDP
in PPP terms. It shows that while the US is still the world’s largest
economy, the gap between it and China and India is far smaller than estimates
using market exchange rates.
Projections using PPP rates and drawing on OECD, IMF and UN data suggest that
the share of global GDP accounted for by China and India will increase very
rapidly over the period to 2050. While such projections are fraught with difficulty,
plausible assumptions can generate projections of China’s share of global
GDP rising from around 13% now to over 20% in 2050, while India’s rises
from close to 6% to over 12% (See appendix for detail on these assumptions).
In contrast, the shares of the US and Europe, both currently over 20%, could
fall to 14% and 10% respectively.6
TABLE 5. Share of Global GDP PPP7
Share of World GDP (%) |
2004 |
2050 |
China |
13.2 |
20.3 |
India |
5.9 |
12.3 |
US |
20.9 |
14.3 |
Europe |
21.0 |
10.0 |
Australia |
1.1 |
0.7 |
Will this happen? We cannot be too sure about the size of economies half a
century away. But we can be sure that on current trends, China and India will
become increasingly important parts of the global economy.
We should not be surprised by this. In PPP terms, China’s economy is
already nearly twice the size of Japan’s economy, three times the size
of Germany’s, and more than four times as large as the British economy.
But bear in mind that while China’s economic size may rapidly approach
that of the US, it will remain dramatically smaller than the US in financial
and capital market terms.
What this does suggest for the world of 2050 is that China and India are likely
to be completing their re-emergence as major powers. I say re-emergence because
until around 1700, China and India were nearly as rich as Europe in per capita
income terms. According to one estimate, in 1700 they accounted for close to
half of global economic activity. Indeed, some might see the past 300 years
as an historical aberration – a period where the industrial revolution
transformed Europe and the West through an extraordinary productivity surge,
leaving much of the East behind. As the industrial revolution shifts to China
and India, their share in the global economy may be returning to historical
levels.
If Western countries account for a smaller share of the world’s population
and economy in 2050, it does not necessarily follow that their influence over
global events will decline. Military power, technological leadership, the shape
and focus of global institutions, the robustness of alliances, social cohesion,
human skills, cultural influence, and financial weight also need to be taken
into account.
But demography and economic growth will powerfully influence the strength of
nations; they will place new pressures on global institutions; and they may
lead to new sources of tension, conflict and insecurity.
A small population, but strong economy like Australia must ask how will it
secure its interests in a shifting strategic landscape — not only today, but
for the next generation of Australians.
Securing Australia’s Interests
Throughout Australia’s history, we have sought to shape regional and
global developments:-
- This has been true in all the wars Australia has fought, including the war
on terrorism we are prosecuting now;
- Coming out of the World Wars, Australia was actively engaged in the Versailles
Peace Conference; the Bretton Woods Conference establishing the IMF and World
Bank; and the San Francisco Conference which founded the United Nations 60
years ago;
- Progressively since the Second World War, Australian governments have engaged
our region – through the Colombo Plan, APEC, our financial assistance
to countries riven by the 1997 Asian financial crisis, and our response to
the Boxing Day tsunami.
The question for us, taking into account the shifting demographics and economics,
is how do we best place ourselves to look after our future?
(i) First, we should understand that medium and smaller players benefit from
rules-based systems.
As a medium-size, increasingly outward-oriented economy, Australia benefits
enormously from an open, rules-based multilateral trading system.
Agreed rules and dispute resolution mechanisms provide a fair and transparent
basis for resolving commercial disputes between countries. If these disputes
were resolved by sheer power or force it would not be in anybody’s interest
but especially not in the interest of the smaller players.
Trade liberalisation can and should be pursued at all levels – bilaterally,
regionally and globally. But bilateral trade agreements can never replace the
benefits of an open, rules-based trading system embodied in the WTO.
The United Nations was conceived as an international forum to lay down rules
and arbitrate between countries on a fair and equal basis. On occasions it has
done this. But its structure means it is deeply flawed. Australia should continue
to support United Nations reform and other multilateral organisations which
attempt to administer an international rules-based system. But being mindful
of their limitations we should not place all of our future in the hands of these
institutions.
(ii) Second, Australia benefits from strong alliances which reflect our values
and enhance our interests.
The US alliance has underpinned Australia’s security since the Second
World War. It will continue to be the cornerstone of the defence of Australia
against any would-be threat from a great power.
The US alliance gives Australia access to leading edge US technologies and
intelligence; it fosters close working partnerships between US and Australian
military forces; and it provides an opportunity for Australia to influence US
thinking on key regional and global issues.
The US alliance is founded in common interest but especially common values.
This is what gives it strength. Two countries that share language, an immigration
experience, democratic political systems, and a similar rule of law are predisposed
to be the kind of friends and allies that we are. But it is not inevitable.
I have spoken recently about threats to this relationship. One cannot be careless
about important friendships.
(iii) Third, Australia will continue to deepen and broaden our engagement with
the Asian region.
While Australia’s economic and security interests are global in dimension,
they find their sharpest expression in our own region.
The economic rise of China – and, in coming years, of India – will
be the dominant narrative of the world economy in the years ahead. And it is
working in our favour.
China is a growing market for our minerals and energy. Its increasingly efficient
production is putting downward price pressure on mass-manufactures and restraining
global inflation. The terms of trade have moved our way.
But as China rises it will become more than a market and a producer. It is
already a huge source of world capital and it is likely to want to move into
foreign direct equity investment. As China extends its commercial influence
through the region, this will shift power balances.
It is important that all the countries of the region feel secure about these
developments. Australia has a role to play in encouraging the integration of
the region into the world economy and assisting that by sharing the lessons
we have learned from our own experience.
Our security interests are tied up with Asia. This is an abiding strategic
reality for Australia. Whether it be financial collapse, terror, avian flu or
tsunami we have a very strong interest in cooperation and assistance in our
region.
(iv) The fourth policy orientation I would like to raise is the need to anticipate
and respond flexibly to emerging threats to international security and prosperity.
I have spoken earlier of the advantages of multilateral institutions and their
drawbacks.
In recent years, flexible, issue-focused coalitions and other groupings have
come to the fore. Australia has been engaged in a number of these, including
coalition operations in Afghanistan and Iraq and the Proliferation Security
Initiative – a broad coalition of countries working to stop illegal flows
of WMD materials and technology.
These initiatives are not confined to security questions.
In July this year, Australia – along with the US, Japan, China, India
and South Korea – announced the establishment of a partnership to meet the challenges
of climate change, energy security and air pollution. This partnership –
the Asia-Pacific Partnership on Clean Development and Climate – brings
together countries which account for 45 per cent of the world’s population
and close to half the world’s energy consumption and greenhouse gas emissions.
Next year, Australia will hold the Chair of the Group of 20 Meeting of Finance
Ministers and Central Bank Governors. Australia was very much involved in establishing
this group in 1999 in the aftermath of the Asian financial crisis. It brings
together the G7 and ‘systemically significant’ industrialised and
emerging market economies, including China, Brazil, India, Indonesia and South
Africa. The G-20 has emerged as an influential forum driving debate on global
economic developments and governance.
In the coming years, flexible groupings may be required to meet other challenges
to international security and prosperity. Where established international mechanisms
cannot do the job or cannot do them with the required range of consensus –
Australia should be ready to engage with like-minded countries.
The orientations for international policy I’ve discussed here –
support for rules-based systems; maintaining strong alliances; deepening our
engagement in Asia; and participating in flexible, task-oriented groupings –
provide a broad framework for securing Australia’s interests in the world.
The emphasis that each of these orientations receives will differ over time
– and from issue to issue. While some might say a stronger emphasis on
one will necessarily detract from the others – I believe this is simplistic
and mistaken.
Australia’s strong alliance with the US, for example, is not inconsistent
with our engagement with Asia. Our pursuit of bilateral and regional free trade
agreements does not dilute our support for an open, multilateral trading system.
Our participation in the G-20 does not detract from the importance we attach
to the Bretton Woods institutions, the IMF and World Bank. In fact, the G-20
has emerged as a focal point for discussions on how these institutions can be
reformed – and how they can better represent the emerging economic powers
of our own region.
Conclusion
The world economy is rebalancing and we have an opportunity to benefit from
that. The re-balancing may raise security concerns on the part of some in our
region but none that cannot be handled within a strong regional framework of
cooperation and strong existing alliances.
Australia does not seek to rival the great powers. It would help our economic
and strategic position to have a faster growing population. We are small in
population but very much stronger in economic terms. We must be at the forefront
of economic growth if we want to stay there.
We have lessons to share that can assist our neighbours and the region. We
have never turned away from the world and it would be a strategic mistake to
do so. Whilst understanding our limitations we should maximise our strengths.
One of our strengths is our sophisticated economy. Another is our level of social
cohesion. We are not divided by any great social or cultural cleavage. We should
be careful to maintain that.
We bring a distinctive perspective – but a sophisticated and useful one
– to initiatives on trade, energy, the response to terror, WMD proliferation
and the international financial architecture.
We should work to assist real progress in these areas as a good global contributor
but one that is conscious of our own strategic interest, an interest which happily
coincides with those of our neighbours and the region.
APPENDIX – PURCHASING POWER
PARITY AND MARKET EXCHANGE RATE COMPARISONS OF GDP
In order to compare the current or future size of individual economies, their
respective GDPs need to be expressed in a common currency. This can be done
using either purchasing power parity-based (PPP) or market exchange rates.
These alternative methodologies often result in markedly different GDP estimates,
in particular for developing economies. These differences stem from the fact
that PPP-estimates of GDP take into account divergent price levels across economies.
Developing economies with low (non-traded good) prices, for example, will have
PPP-derived exchange rates that are higher than their market exchange rates.
When expressed in PPP — as opposed to market exchange rate — terms, their
GDP levels will also be higher.
The 1993 United Nations System of National Accounts recommends using PPP exchange
rates when comparing the volume of goods and services produced or consumed in
economies (i.e. the size of economies). Market exchange rates are volatile and
can be affected by short term factors that do not necessarily relate to a country’s
long term productive capacity.
PPP-based GDP estimates are also typically used when making long-run economic
projections. As developing economy productivity rates converge toward advanced
economy levels, many economists would expect their market exchange rates to
converge toward their PPP-rates, although in practice the data are mixed.
While PPP measures are conceptually superior to market exchange rates for estimating
the size of economies, uncertainty over the calculation of PPP exchange rates
means caution should be exercised when considering fine differences between
variables, such as rankings between similar sized countries.
China’s economic size
When expressed in PPP terms, China’s economy accounts for around 13 per
cent of the world’s GDP. In market exchange rate terms, China’s
share is only 4 per cent. The wide divergence of these results underlines the
need for caution when interpreting GDP data.
Long-run economic projections should also be interpreted carefully. They are
based on a wide range of assumptions — about demographic trends, productivity
rates, policy settings, institutional quality and social stability. These projections
should not be seen as forecasts. At best, they provide an insight into possible
future scenarios.
A range of long-run projections based on plausible assumptions suggest that
China’s economy will surpass the US’s in GDP terms (when measured
by PPP exchange rates) at some point over the coming 30 years. The assumptions
underpinning Treasury’s PPP-based projections referred to in the speech
are set out below. Long-run projections of China’s economic size based
on (adjusted) market exchange rates point to a less dramatic transition.
A recent Goldman Sachs study (‘Dreaming with BRICs: The Path to 2050’
– Goldman Sachs, Global Economics Paper No: 99, 2003) estimates that China
could overtake Germany in the next four years, Japan by 2015 and the US by 2039.
It is important to note that this study factors in a gradual appreciation of
China’s real exchange rate over time. The assumptions underlying the Goldman
Sachs projections are set out below.
Assumptions underlying country size estimates
Treasury estimates of the relative size of key economies in 2050, using PPP
exchange rates, are based on:
- population projections from the UN population prospects database
- GDP per capita estimates using:
- IMF and Treasury forecasts to 2007;
- OECD and World Bank medium term projections to 2015;
- Treasury estimates of potential growth from 2015 to 2050; and
- The assumption that China will converge at a constant rate to 70 per
cent of OECD GDP per capita by 2050.
Projections contained in Goldman Sachs paper are drawn from a basic GDP model
incorporating labour, capital and total factor productivity.
- Labour force and population data are drawn from the US Census Bureau projections.
- The capital stock grows according to recent historical investment rates
and World Bank assumptions about depreciation.
- Total factor productivity is based on a long run estimate for the US with
assumptions about the speed of convergence of less developed countries –
as low income countries get closer in income to developed countries, their
rate of total factor productivity growth slows.
The GDP estimates produced by this model are then
converted to a constant currency using market exchange rates based on a model
of the real exchange rate, where higher productivity growth leads to an appreciation
of the real exchange rate. This real appreciation is assumed to occur through
the nominal exchange rate, and not through differences in price inflation.
1 Source: UN Population
Database (2004 Revision) for 2005.
2 Source: IMF WEO database,
April 2005
3 Source: IMF WEO database,
April 2005
4 This thought experiment
was suggested by the former US Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage at
a recent Australia – American Leadership Dialogue. The numbers used here
are mine and taken from the UN Population Database.
5 Source: Treasury calculations
based on UN Population Division projections. Due to rounding, individual country
and region figures will not add up exactly to the world figure.
6 When GDP figures are
measured by market exchange rates, China and India’s estimated share in
the global economy is smaller.
7 Source: IMF data and
Treasury Estimates 2005