The Gold Coast Bulletin

JOSH: IT’S TIME TO BORROW A TRILLION

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OK. Treasurer Josh Frydenberg has got his tax cuts through the Senate and the first lot are already on their way to taxpayers and he is on track to deliver our first Budget surplus since Peter Costello.

What does he do next? Here’s a really revolution­ary idea: Set about issuing around $600 billion of 30-year Commonweal­th bonds.

They would sell like the proverbial hot cakes.

Don’t mess around with trying to force-feed borderline infrastruc­ture projects.

And even worse, promote dodgy so-called “public-private partnershi­ps” to finance them.

They’re just a recipe for smart investment bankers to rip off both taxpayers and users of the infrastruc­ture to enrich both themselves and the lucky, greedy, investors.

There’s plenty of infrastruc­ture being built by state government­s and especially in NSW and Victoria.

And it is fundamenta­lly the responsibi­lity of state government­s to both select and to prioritise such projects. And then stand responsibi­lity for them.

I would make one big exception: It is up to Canberra to embark on building the infrastruc­ture to deliver water from the north to feed into the Murray-Darling system and instantly solve all the issues about both the overall supply of, and the allocation­s of, that water.

What was a literal pipedream 30 and even more 50 years ago is now realistic, necessary and fundamenta­lly appropriat­e. And one of the – very, very – rare things that could actually sensibly run on a mix of renewables and (real) gas power generation.

That’s a whole-ofgovernme­nt issue: What could elevate Frydenberg to the – currently, twomember – pantheon of great treasurers, alongside Costello and Paul Keating, is the conversion of the entire corpus of federal debt to 30-year terms.

If it supposedly makes sense to borrow tens of billions of dollars at this time of not just record low – but irrational­ly hyper-low – interest rates to pour into infrastruc­ture, it makes even greater sense to

But even at that higher rate it would instantly save money.

Last year public debt interest added $17 billion. Paying even 2.1 per cent on outstandin­g debt would cost just $12 billion a year.

Yes there would be an “upfront” capital cost if you bought all the existing bonds back at one hit, as most of them are trading at well above their issue price thanks to the dramatic drop in yields.

But then you wouldn’t even have to do that, if you just let them run off to maturity over the next few years.

Although that would mean you would then be “over-funding” the government’s borrowing needs.

That though, leads to an even more revolution­ary thought, that could elevate Frydenberg even above his pantheon peer group.

Forget about borrowing $600 billion and paying off the existing debt; borrow, say, $1 trillion, pay off the $600 billion of existing debt – and give the other $400 billion to the Future Fund to invest.

That would almost certainly more than pay for itself.

Over the past 10 years the FF has consistent­ly earned 10 per cent-plus every year; over the past three years it earned 9.6 per cent each and over the past year 9.7 per cent.

Yes, these figures are crude and broadbrush, but say the FF could maintain earnings of 8-10 per cent a year.

The $1 trillion would cost the government $20 billion a year in interest, while just the $400 billion would generate $32 billion to $40 billion of income for the FF – which is the government!

Surely you can’t do this? Well in fact the government is already doing it.

The FF has $150 billion invested. It’s as if the some $150 billion of the $600 million of government debt was borrowed and given to the FF to invest.

It makes a lot more sense than borrowing billions for dodgy infrastruc­ture. It makes a lot, lot more sense than borrowings billions for dodgy infrastruc­ture and enriching clever investment bankers and greedy investors.

Two final points. This would actually be a process of putting a Budget in surplus to very effective work; instead of simply and slowly using the surpluses to pay off the existing debt, borrow at 2 per cent to earn 10 per cent.

Secondly, this is in effect exactly what all the big countries are doing with their combinatio­ns of big budget deficits, near-zero interest rates – and indeed, negative in some cases like Germany and Japan, and central bank money printing QE exercises.

We are – trillion dollar – mugs not to join the game.

WHAT COULD ELEVATE FRYDENBERG (PICTURED) TO THE PANTHEON OF GREAT TREASURERS, ALONGSIDE COSTELLO AND PAUL KEATING, IS THE CONVERSION OF THE ENTIRE CORPUS OF FEDERAL DEBT TO 30YEAR TERMS.

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