Author Archives: Stubborn Mule

The oldest bank in the world

Yes I am back. I know it has been a while. What can I say? I have been quite busy!

One of the things taking up my time during the week was preparing for and then giving a talk for the Q-Group on operational risk capital modelling. It sounds arcane, I know, but there was one exciting part: I had the opportunity to try out the simulated laser pointer that you can create by pressing your finger on the screen of the iPad during a Keynote presentation.

Since regulators expect banks to use their capital models to quantify 1 in 1,000 year losses, I slipped a reference in my presentation to the Italian bank Monte dei Paschi di Siena which, having been founded in 1472, is a mere 539 years old. The somewhat oblique point was that no-one should take these models too seriously.

Monte dei Paschi

Monte dei Paschi di Siena

It was an ironic twist that evening that this was headline on the front page of the Wall Street Journal website:

Siena Headline (II)

It seems that Monte dei Paschi di Siena was one of a number of banks suffering as a result of the European sovereign debt crisis and it makes an interesting case study of the challenges of the business of banking.

Back in the original days of the global financial crisis, the banks that got into the most trouble were the ones with significant exposure to “toxic assets” (US mortgages, mortgage-backed securities and their ilk). Once people started to worry about these toxic assets, the problem was that no-one really knew how much exposure any given bank had to these assets and so no-one wanted to lend to anyone else. Since many banks (including Australian banks) rely on wholesale debt markets (i.e. they borrow money from big institutional investors around the world like pension funds), this became a problem for everyone.

Back then you might have thought that a regional bank like Monte dei Paschi di Siena would be fairly immune to what was going on, but it got off to a bad start in the crisis by acquiring another bank, Banca Antonveneta in 2007. In retrospect (and even at the time in the eyes of some analysts), it paid too much and over-extended itself at the wrong time. Within a couple of years, its capital buffers had become so thin that it was forced to turn to the Italian government for a capital injection and also cut its dividend payments right back in an attempt to rebuild. This was painful for Siena because, in a peculiarity of Italian banking, the majority shareholder of Monte dei Paschi di Siena is a charitable foundation, originally established in the 1990s for the express purpose of acquiring the bank when banks across the country were being privatised. This foundation makes donations to all sorts of public groups across the city of Siena and, with the dividend cut, the donations stopped too.

To make matters worse, the bank is a large holder of Italian government bonds, which have not been performing particularly well of late. With a capital base of €7.1 billion (figure as at April 2011), it held €32.5 billion (figure as at December 2010) in Italian government bonds and so any decline in value of Italian government bonds put pressure on the bank’s capital. In mid-2011, in the face of the European debt crisis, the bank decided it needed to further bolster its capital position. But the foundation did not want to lose its majority share-holding, so the foundation turned to JPMorgan and Goldman Sachs (aka the vampire squid) to borrow money to buy new shares issued by the bank. Unfortunately the loans were secured by shares and as the share price continued to fall, the foundation had to hand over more shares to its lenders. If things do not improve, the foundation is likely to be forced to sell more shares, ultimately losing its majority stake in the bank. The foundation, which once made around €250 million a year in donations to the city, is not looking likely to be able to contribute nearly as much to the public good in the future.

Will this venerable bank be the first to survive for 1,000 years? It has not failed yet, but the immediate future still looks rather shaky.

What will the Reserve Bank do this week?

It has been a while since I have had a Reserve Bank poll here on the Mule. The Bank will be sitting down on Tuesday to decide whether or not they should adjust monetary policy. Westpac chief economist, Bill Evans, was the first of the bank economists to start predicting that the next move in the cash rate would be down back in July. Since then, some other economists have come around to Bill’s perspective, particularly given the global financial chaos as European banks face a slow-motion bank run. Others are still expecting that the Reserve Bank’s bug-bear, inflation, will remain sufficiently threatening to ensure that the next move in rates is up. But perhaps it is too soon for the Bank to do anything at all.

What do you think? Get your vote in before the announcement is out at 2.30pm on Tuesday (Sydney time).


UPDATE: the results are in and Mule readers got it right: 93% of respondents thought there would be no change in cash rates, which was indeed the case. No-one predicted a rate rise.

Ring-fencing rogue traders

Kweku Adoboli managed to cost UBS over $2 billion with his rogue trading, and has now cost chief executive Oswald Grübel his job. While this time the buck stopped at the top, it is more than can be said for many previous rogue trading cases. Grübel was called out of retirement to take the helm of UBS as it faced the global financial crisis, so perhaps a return to retirement was an easier choice than it would have been for the chief executives of Société Générale, NAB*, Allied Irish and other past victims of rogue traders.

But what has surprised me about this latest rogue trading incident is reactions like this one from the Economist:

For UBS and its shareholders, the immediate questions should be why it was still vulnerable to this sort of alleged manipulation more than three years after Mr Kerviel’s [the Société Générale rogue trader] loss.

Of course banks are aware of the risk of rogue trading, but it does not mean that protecting themselves against this risk is a simple matter. Trading businesses are complex, with many interconnected computer systems, some old, some new, most dealing with transactions in real time. It is a case of asymmetric warfare: the bank has to defend itself against every possible attack, but the rogue trader only has to find a single point of weakness. The UBS loss may be another reminder for banks of just how much an insider can cost them, but I am confident that there will be another spectacular rogue trading case within the next five years.

Little wonder then that Sir John Vickers, in his report on UK banking, has recommended that banks should “ring-fence” their investment banking operations (including financial markets trading businesses) from their retail and commercial banking arms. The idea is that, while governments will always want to protect the financial system that is so central to their economy, tax-payers should not end up on the hook for losses arising from risky investment banking activity.

Banking regulators around the world have been intently pursuing ideas like this over the last couple of years and the Adoboli case will only add to their determination to impose some form of “recovery and resolution” framework on banks. Before this work is complete, I would not be too surprised if UBS have spun off their investment banking arm. It is becoming all a bit much for Swiss shareholders to cope with.

* UPDATE: My memory served me poorly: the CEO of NAB, Frank Cicutto, did in fact resign after their FX trading fraud.

Unblock Us

A few months ago, I complained that more and more online music sites have blocked access from Australia. Of course, the arcane licensing of intellectual property has also led to many other sites being blocked for Australians. Anyone living down under trying to access BBC TV via their iPlayer, or trying to stream US TV on Hulu will find themselves out of luck. The list of sites offering movies, TV shows and music online is a long one. The list of these available in Australia is a very short one.

However, I have now discovered a Canadian company offering one way out of these geographic shackles. For US$5 per month, Unblock Us will allow you to configure your computer or router so that, when you try to access a selection of media sites, your connection will pop out from a server outside Australia so as to ensure you will not be blocked from accessing the site.

But is it legal? That’s an excellent question, and one I do not know the answer to. Not being a lawyer, I will not even speculate. Where I am happy to speculate is on the question of the ethics of the site.

On Friday, a colleague said he was planning to watch a downloaded movie over the weekend. I asked him where he had downloaded it from. While he said he had bought it from the iTunes store, he did indicate that was not the only place he had downloaded movies from over the years. His philosophy was always to try obtaining movies legally first but if—and only if—all legal means failed, he would resort to shadier sources. To me, this seems like a fair approach, legal or not.

As I would be more than happy to pay the copyright holders for access to e-books, online music or videos, I find it extremely frustrating when this is impossible, simply because I am in Australia. In the absence of such legal means, loopholes like Unblock Us start to look very appealing.

There are a couple of other considerations before leaping in to using the service:

  • Privacy: since your internet requests would be initiated through Unblock Us, you would have to be comfortable with them knowing about the pattern of your internet usage, although they do note on their site ” will not actively monitor user activity for inappropriate behavior, nor do we maintain direct logs of any customer’s Internet activities”.
  • Performance: having the extra check for each internet request to see whether it should be bounced through Unblock Us could make your internet performance a little slower than going directly through your ISP. I do not know whether this would be significant.

I am certainly tempted.

Dissonance and Debt

Ever since Standard & Poor’s downgraded the US government from AAA to AA+ I have been drawn into debates about the risks posed by growing US government debt. Ever since reading the book Mistakes Were Made by Carol Tavris and Elliot Aronson I have been fascinated by cognitive dissonance and as my debt debates kept following the same pattern I became convinced the explanation for this pattern lay in cognitive dissonance. Coincidentally, I then read a post by Bill Mitchell discussing a paper by Adam Kessler analysing the views of mainstream economists in terms of cognitive dissonance.

For those as yet unfamiliar with the concept of cognitive dissonance, it refers to the discomfort people feel when faced with conflicting information. The brain tends to react to cognitive dissonance by quickly eliminating the conflict and restoring consonance.

One of many examples of cognitive dissonance in Mistakes Were Made arises when people with prejudices are presented with evidence that contradicts their prejudices. Tavris and Aronson quote Gordon Allport, who wrote The Nature of Prejudice over fifty years ago. Allport illustrated a typical pattern of dissonance-blocking in the following dialogue:

Mr. X: The trouble with Jews is that they only take care of their own group.

Mr. Y: But the record of the Community Chest campaign shows that they give more generously, in proportion to their numbers, to the general charities of the community, than do non-Jews.

Mr X: That shows that they are always trying to buy favor and intrude into Christian affairs. They think of nothing but money; that is why there are so many Jewish bankers.

Mr Y: But a recent study shows that the percentage of Jews in the banking business is negligible, far smaller than the percentage of non-Jews.

Mr X: That’s just it: they don’t go in for respectable businesses; they are only in the movie business or run night clubs.

Time and time again Mr X. shakes off contradictions to his prejudice with a non-sequitur, responding with a completely unrelated argument in support of his prejudices. My conversations about US debt have been eerily similar:

Me: This Standard & Poor’s downgrade is a bit silly. The US has got past the farce of the debt-ceiling and, unless they choose to default next time they run up against that ceiling, their debt is much safer than euro sovereign debt from the likes of Greece and Ireland.

Mr. Z:  But they’ve just kicked the can down the road. Unless they do something about their deficits and cut all their entitlement spending, they are basically bankrupt.

Me: But the US government is effectively the monopoly issuer of US dollars and all their debt is denominated in US dollars: they cannot run out. So, they never have to default, unless their crazy politicians choose to.

Mr Z: Oh, sure, they can fire up the printing presses and simply print money, but that will always be inflationary.

Me: What about Japan? They ran deficits and their government debt has been growing for years and that hasn’t led to inflation. In fact, they could do with a bit of inflation, but have been unable to generate it. Government deficits will only be inflationary if the government is spending at the same time as the private sector and is overheating aggregate demand.

Mr Z: But Japan has been a basket-case for years, no-one would want the US to end up like Japan!

See the similarity? Almost every time I try to make the point that countries which control their own fiat free-floating currencies and only borrow in that currency (such as the US, UK, Australia, Canada and Japan) can never be forced to default on their debt, the conversation quickly veers away to inflation, Japan and anything but the central point. That’s cognitive dissonance for you.

 

Currencies punching above their weight

I recently enjoyed lunch with a group of former colleagues. At one point, the conversation turned to the Australian dollar, a natural enough topic for a bunch of finance types. Someone observed that the Aussie is the 5th most actively traded currency in the world, which is impressive since Australia is certainly not the 5th largest economy in the world (that honour currently goes to France).

Thinking about Australian dollar punching above its weight led me to wonder which country had the most actively traded currency relative to the size of its economy. A quick vote around the lunch table came up with four candidates: the Australian dollar, the New Zealand dollar (which is much beloved by hedge funds), the Swiss franc and the Norwegian krone. The most popular choice among these was the Australian dollar. I was wavering between the New Zealand dollar and the Norwegian krone, but none of us knew the answer. That meant only one thing: a Stubborn Mule post would ensue to settle the bet.

Starting with turnover in the chart below, it is no surprise that the US dollar is by far the most actively traded currency. Not only is the United States the largest economy in the world, but an enormous amount of international trade is conducted in US dollars, and sellers and buyers have to transact in the currency markets to convert US dollars to and from their local currency.

Currency Turnover League Table

Top 10 Currencies by Turnover (2010)

There are a number of reasons the Australian dollar is traded as much as it is. Our higher interest rates attract many into the carry trade (borrowing in low interest rate currencies, investing in higher interest rate currencies and hoping that the currency you are buying does not collapse). As a very commodity-driven country, many international investors see investing in Australia as a proxy for investing in commodities and, more particularly, jumping onto the China growth band-wagon. For many investors, simply buying the Australian dollar is cheaper and easier than investing in our stock-market.

But back to our bet. Only one of the assembled diners picked the Swiss franc, but it turns out to be at the top of the league table. With a GDP in 2010 of US$500 billion, there was average of $253 billion traded in Swiss francs every day in April 2010!

I have never made a close study of the Swiss franc, so I would be very interested in hearing any theories people may have as to why it is so heavily traded.

Next in the list is New Zealand, so my instincts were right there (let’s not mention the fact that I also tipped the Norwegian krone which came in a disappointing 11th place). Interestingly, third and fourth place, the Hong Kong and Singapore dollar respectively, did not even make it into our short list. And it turns out that the Australian dollar ranks 5th not only in terms of outright turnover, but also in turnover relative to economy size.

Currency Turnover/GDP League Table

Top 10 Currencies by Daily Turnover relative to Annual GDP (2010)

If you are interested in exploring the league table further, the table below has all of the data.

CurrencyDaily Turnover (US$)Annual GDP (US$)Turnover/GDP (%)
Swiss franc253500.350.6
New Zealand dollar63128.449.1
Hong Kong dollar94215.443.6
Singapore dollar56181.930.8
Australian dollar302101329.8
US dollar33781444023.4
Pound sterling513268019.1
Swedish krona8747918.2
Japanese yen755491115.4
Canadian dollar210150014
Norwegian krone53451.811.7
Hungarian forint17155.910.9
South African rand29276.810.5
Euro1555181408.6
Danish krone233406.8
Korean won60929.16.5
Polish zloty32527.96.1
Malaysian ringgit11221.65
New Taiwan dollar19391.44.9
Mexican peso5010884.6
Philipine peso7166.94.2
Turkish new lira297304
Chilean peso7169.54.1
Czech koruna8216.43.7
Indian rupee3812073.1
Israeli new shekel6202.13
Thai baht8273.32.9
Russian Rouble3616772.1
Brazilian real2715731.7
Colombian peso4240.81.7
Indonesian rupiah6511.81.2
Chinese renminbi3443270.8
Saudi Riyal2469.40.4
Other currencies 190NANA

 

Data sources
Currency turnover: Bank for International Settlements (BIS)
GDP: CIA World Fact Book (official exchange rates)

Bedside book pile

Bedside booksJust as topics for blog posts are piling up, so are the books on my bedside table. I have always read more than one book at a time, but things are getting out of hand at the moment, and that doesn’t even take into account the books I have on the Kindle.

In an effort to prioritise my reading and clear a few from this precarious pile, I thought I would take a look at some of the books here on the blog.

Mistakes Were Made (But Not by Me) by Carol Tavris, which was the subject of my last post, is a fascinating examination of cognitive dissonance. I was only about a quarter of the way through the book when I was inspired to write that post and now that I have nearly finished, it has not disappointed. Topics as diverse as suppressed memory syndrome, what makes relationships succeed or fail, international conflict, racism, bullying and false convictions are all examined through the lens of cognitive dissonance. It only ended up at the bottom of the pile when I stacked the books for the photo, so it should come straight out and be the first one I finish.

I started reading Javascript: the Definitive Guide by David Flanagan quite a while ago when I was playing around with the charting tool Protovis. At the time I had some ideas for doing more than a few blog posts, but I’m a bit too busy to take them any further at the moment. Much as I would like to improve my facility with Javascript, I think this book should be retired back to the bookshelf for now.

A friend was working in Japan back in 1995 and was unlucky enough to be caught in the sarin attack on the Tokyo subway. I had spoken to him about it a few times when I came across the book Underground: The Tokyo Gas Attack and the Japanese Psyche by Haruki Murakami. Best known for his fiction, Murakami turned to non-fiction for the first time with this series of interviews with survivors of the attack. It makes for grim reading and so, as each chapter focuses on the story of a single interviewee, I have taken to reading a chapter or two at a time, turning to lighter subjects in between. This one can stay on the table.

Playfair’s Commercial and Political Atlas and Statistical Breviary by William Playfair is the oldest book here. Written in 1801, I regularly dip into this one for the pictures not the words. Regular visitors to the Stubborn Mule will know I am a chart enthusiast and William Playfair is one of the greatest pioneers in the field of visual representation of quantitative information. He is credited with inventing some of the most fundamental tools in the charters toolbox: line charts, bar charts and even pie charts. For a couple of years now I have meant to write a post about Playfair and this book can also stay on the table, at least until that post gets written.

At this point it is starting to seem as though I only read non-fiction. That is not quite true and there are two novels here: American Pastoral by Philip Roth, which I have started and Anathem by Neal Stephenson which I have not. Given how long it took me to get through Stephenson’s Baroque Cycle, I should really finish American Pastoral before I embark upon Anathem.

Given how long this post is already, there are clearly too many books to list here (and likewise too many to finish any time soon), but for the benefit of those readers who enjoy my posts about money and debt, I should point out that Monetary Economics by Wynne Godley and Marc Lavoie is there too. There is plenty of future blog material in that book, I have no doubt.

 

 

Cognitive dissonance

Blue GoldfishLet’s say you think of yourself as a good person (bear with me for a moment if you don’t). Now you do something nasty to somebody. This leaves you with two contradictory thoughts in your mind: “I am good” and “I am nasty”. In George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four, “doublethink” is quite routine, but in practice conflicting thoughts are a source of discomfort. This discomfort is known as “cognitive dissonance”.

Even if you don’t think you are a good person, you are not immune from cognitive dissonance. It can arise in all kinds of situations: perhaps you hear a reasonable argument against one of your firmly-held beliefs, perhaps a decision you take turns out badly, perhaps someone you consider a friend lets you down or someone you dislike does something to help you.

Whatever the cause, our brains tend to work hard to “resolve” the dissonance and explain away the contradiction (that person really deserved the nasty thing you did). This tendency is the source of a wide range of irrational behaviour, many of which are explored in the book I am reading at the moment: Mistakes Were Made (But Not By Me) by Carol Tavris and Elliot Aronson. The title itself gives just one example, the fact that we tend to explain away our mistakes: there were, of course, mitigating circumstances and were really all the fault of others.

One interesting theory in the book relates to prejudice. Stereotypes, particularly racial or religious ones, are often considered a contributing cause of prejudice. The authors suggest that the causality in fact runs the other way. People have a strong tendency to form groups and then feel not only a bond with others in the group but an antipathy to those outside the group. Obvious examples are nation, race, religion or football team, but group identification can be made in all kinds of ways. The book relates an experiment in which subjects were asked to estimate the number of dots shown on a flash card. After a preliminary round, each person was told whether they were an “under-estimator” or an “over-estimator”. As further tests were conducted, the results were announced to the group and in no time at all, under-estimators were cheering the successes of other under-estimators and boo-ing the successes of over-estimators, and vice versa. While under and over-estimators would never go to war, it is sobering to see how rapidly people can divide themselves into the in-crowd and the out-crowd. With this in mind, Tavris and Aronson argue that prejudice comes first, the result of disliking those outside your own group, and the stereotype comes later to explain this dislike:

By understanding prejudice as our self-justifying servant, we can better see why some prejudices are so hard to eradicate: They allow people to justify and defend their most important social identities‚ their race, their religion, their sexuality‚ while reducing the dissonance between, “I am a good person”‚ and “I really don’t like those people”.

So perhaps prejudice causes stereotyping not the other way around.

Like so many cognitive biases, the tendency to resolve cognitive dissonance is something you can take advantage of. Although Benjamin Franklin was around well before cognitive dissonance was given a name, he clearly understood the phenomenon. He relates the following story in his autobiography:

Having heard that he had in his library a certain very scarce and curious book, I wrote a note to him, expressing my desire of perusing that book, and requesting he would do me the favour of lending it to me for a few days. He sent it immediately, and I return’d it in about a week with another note, expressing strongly my sense of the favour. When we next met in the House, he spoke to me (which he had never done before), and with great civility; and he ever after manifested a readiness to serve me on all occasions, so that we became great friends, and our friendship continued to his death. This is another instance of the truth of an old maxim I had learned, which says, “He that has once done you a kindness will be more ready to do you another than he who you yourself have obliged.”

I am keen to try this trick myself, so if you don’t like me and want to keep it that way, think twice about doing me any favours.

Cognitive dissonance is a fascinating phenomenon, but simply studying does not make you immune from its grasp. Still, Tavris and Aronson suggest that there are ways to try to inoculate yourself:

We need a few trusted naysayers in our lives, critics who are willing to puncture our protective bubble of self-justifications and yank us back to reality if we veer too far off. This is especially important for people in positions of power.

That is advice I try to heed here on this blog. Whether I am arguing about property prices, government debt and deficits, climate change or any other topic, I welcome comments that argue against my position. I do not want to live in a bubble.

Looking beyond the financial crisis

The IMF has been busy of late, what with their attempts to stave off European sovereign defaults and shenanigans of its erstwhile managing director, Dominic Strauss-Kahn. I have been busy too (for rather different reasons I hasten to add) and so it has taken me a while to get to looking at the IMF’s most recent World Economic Outlook (WEO) report, which was released back in April.

The WEO is prepared twice a year and, whatever one’s views of the merits of the economic ideas of the IMF and their role on the world stage, the report provides a rich source of data and includes both historical data and five-year forecasts.

I was interested to compare the effect of the global financial crisis on the most challenged euro nations, the so-called “PIIGS”, Portugal, Ireland, Italy, Greece and Spain, to a few other countries. To account for differences in population and currencies, I chose Gross Domestic Product per capita expressed in US dollars as the measure for this comparison*. Even so, care needs to be taken in interpreting the results. Exchange rates do introduce a fair degree of volatility as is evident in the chart below: the trajectory of US GDP per capita is quite steady, although the downward dip over recent years is clearly evident, while the paths for every other country wiggle up and down with the vagaries of currency markets. Nevertheless, it is striking to see the IMF projecting that Australia will dramatically outpace the other countries in this group, thanks to the combination of a resources boom and escaping relatively unscathed from the financial crisis of the last few years. I should point out that, while taking the gold medal in this group, Australia is not the overall winner in the IMF 2016 forecast stakes. That honor goes to the small nation of Luxembourg, and Qatar is not far behind.

GDP per capita (II)

History and IMF forecasts of GDP per capita (in US$)

An alternative approach that seeks to eliminate exchange rate effects is to work in local currencies and make these comparable by scaling to a common base at some point in the past. Somewhat arbitrarily, I have chosen to base this comparison on 1996, which gives a 20 year span including the forecasts out to 2016. This time I have used inflation adjusted figures**. Interestingly, this approach sees Ireland coming out on top, which reflects the strength of their economic boom over the period immediately up to the start of the crisis.

Real GDP per capita Indices

History and IMF forecasts of GDP per capita (local currency index)

This chart shows even more clearly how unaffected Australia was by the financial crisis compared to other countries. Once again, these results should be treated with caution. Any comparison like this will be very dependent on the year chosen to base the indices. If only I had chosen the year 2000, Australia would be in the lead again!

* This is the IMF series NGDPDPC.
** This is the IMF series NGDPRPC, rebased to 100 in 1996.

Why deficits are bad

There have been many posts here on the blog arguing that government debt and deficits should not be feared, at least not in countries with their own free-floating currency and without foreign currency public debt*. In doing so, I have never discussed the reasons people may have for holding a contrary view. But I have now come across a rather disturbing theory on the news site Alter.net.

It may be that there are some who would like to see an end to government deficits because they adhere to the Chicago school of economics and scoff that Keynes was thoroughly discredited by the stagflation of the 1970s. There may be others who challenge supporters of government spending with a simple question: if too much debt was the cause of the financial crisis, how could more debt be the answer? (Of course, regular readers of the blog will know the answer to this one: the debt build-up before the crisis was private sector debt and for the private sector to reduce debt by saving again, the government must run a deficit**). Still others may think that deficits cause recessions (rather than recessions causing deficits).

But the theory offered by Alter.net is simpler still. Perhaps people think national debt is bad because it actually means a bad economy. Literally. They just do not understand the meaning of the words.

The evidence offered goes back to a US presidential debate from 1992. In the debate, an audience member asks the candidates the following question:

How has the national debt personally affected each of your lives. And if it hasn’t, how can you honestly find a cure for the economic problems of the common people if you have no experience in what’s ailing them?

If you watch the resulting exchange here, it quickly becomes clear that, in the questioner’s mind, “national debt” is in fact synonymous with “recession”. National debt doesn’t cause unemployment, it is unemployment!

Of course that clip is almost 20 years old and it is America, not Australia. But it still worries me. Could it be that part of the reason that it is so hard to have a rational debate about debt and deficits is that some (or even many) of the voting public do not understand what the debate is about? I hope not!

* So the eurozone is a different matter altogether!

** Either that or run a current account surplus…which is still something we have not achieved in Australia.