Here's the key passage from
Tim Colebatch's column today, again attacking the idea that Australia is in trouble because of too much debt:
Since 1998, our bond yields have usually ranged between 5 and 6 per
cent. But in recent days, the Office of Financial Management issued a
new 10-year bond at a yield of just 3.15 per cent, a five-year bond at
2.65 per cent, and a three-year bond at just 2.52 per cent. Yields have
fallen by half in a year.
Why? Because global investors have flocked in to buy
Australian government debt. Their concern is not that we have too much
debt, but too little. IMF figures show that of the 34 advanced
economies, Australia has the third smallest ratio of gross debt to GDP:
including state and municipal debt, it's just 24 per cent of GDP. By
comparison, Germany has a debt-to-GDP ratio of 79 per cent, the United
States 110 per cent, and Japan 241 per cent.
The Coalition and its allies are like a broken record
warning that Australia is swimming in debt and putting itself in danger.
That is simply untrue. Ask yourself: if Labor's borrowing has put us in
danger, why is Australia one of only eight countries rated AAA by all
three global ratings agencies? Sure, ratings agencies make mistakes, as
we all do, but are they that incompetent?
He really is Labor's best friend - he has a dispassionate way of writing that I always find pretty convincing.
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