The bulk of the cash splash goes to business, and is unlikely to trickle down into the pockets of consumers in the foreseeable future.
To the manifest relief of the coalition and its supporters, Scott Morrison’s approach to the coronavirus crisis has been cautiously endorsed by the voters.
They have not yet embraced him even his most enthusiastic spruikers use phrases like “so far he had hardly put a foot wrong,” a long way from the unstinting praise he craves. But it is a huge improvement from the shellacking he received after the serial stuff-ups during the bushfire disasters.
Then the feeling was that he had clearly lost control, he didn’t really know what was happening and he didn’t care. But this time ScoMo has grabbed the initiative; it would be nice to be seen as compassionate and empathetic, but these are optional extras. What matters is that he is seen to have taken charge.
So he can report progress; so far so good. And this means he can get on worth milking it for all it is worth, and then some. Last week we barely saw him off the television, one grave and portentous speech after another, assuring a bewildered public that whatever the situation actually is, he is on top of it, alert but not alarmed, ready for action.
Or if not immediate action, at least an announceathon. To set the scene, Tuesday opened with the announcement that there would shortly be more announcements. And true to his word, he returned on Wednesday to talk about the substantive issue – what his government was doing about the health of a nervous public.
It was not before time; the official response, especially on the key questions of who should be tested, and where, when and how it was to be done, had become confused and confusing — in some cases simply unworkable. So arrangements have been re-jigged and ramped up, and crucially there is to be a hefty PR campaign, a solution dear to our leader’s heart.
And then came the big one – Thursday was make or break, money day, shitloads of the stuff to be shoveled out in the hope of averting a recession. A recession is normally defined as two successive quarters of a fall in the GDP. Just about all the economists regard the current March quarter as a write off – it is to late to save it now. So it will all be up to June – no expense will be spared to push the figures across the edge into positive territory.
This, obviously, is the whole point of the exercise. and for Morrison it is of paramount importance – not just economically, but politically. Having denigrated and derided the way Kevin Rudd and Wayne Swan had managed to avoid one over the GFC, it would be the deepest of humiliations if one occurred on his own watch some thirty years later – an unprecedented full generation of economic growth for Australia, the only country to have ever achieved such a feat.
Actually, he might even get away with it – it appears that the public, clearly panicked by the pandemic, is prepared to be forgiving as the politicians switch policies and directions, break undertakings and promises, in the hope they might ride this one out too. The loss of the long-promised surplus has apparently been received with equanimity.
Explaining away a real recession, with activity going backwards and unemployment soaring, would be tougher, but there are already signs that Morrison is preparing to take out insurance – one of his many tergiversations has been to announce that contrary to his earlier reassurances, COVID-19 is actually a greater threat than was the GFC.
But then, he also says that unlike the GFC, the disruption will be temporary – the economy will snap back, barely touching the ground before rebounding to resume the search for the holy surplus. And this typifies the muddle surrounding Morrison’s Friday announcement, which even his claque in The Australian admitted was a farrago of mixed messages rather than an enunciation of the “clear plan” he was claiming.
He has now effectively followed two thirds of the Keynesian advice of the then Treasury head Ken Henry in 2008 : go hard, go early, go households. ScoMo has certainly gone hard; the scale of the current package far exceeds what Rudd envisaged, with the likelihood of more to come – “scaleable,” as Morrison calls it, meaning he has no real idea whether it will be adequate or not.
And, for reasons previously mentioned, it is certainly early. But he has squibbed on the households bit: the bulk of the cash splash goes to business, and is unlikely to trickle down into the pockets of consumers in the foreseeable future, if it ever does. The only households which will receive a direct handout will be recipients of welfare, who obviously need it, but in the current uncertain times may be reluctant to spend it in the way Morrison hopes.
The whole point of the Rudd stimulus was to instill confidence across the board, which is why the money followed the same path. But Morrison is instilling not confidence but confusion – off the cuff changes about travel restrictions, advice to cancel some, but not all, gatherings, daily announcements amounting to overload. It reeks of ad hockery, of reacting to a events instead of anticipating them.
A fine example was that when Peter Dutton succumbed to infection, Morrison assured the world that the medicos had told him there was no need for him to be tested, let alone quarantined, but that he was after all not going to the footy as promised because – well, because why? We weren’t told, which leads to the suspicion that there are other things we are not being told either.
And in the end Morrison resorted to the old standby: an appeal to Team Australia, patriotism – the dubious quality that Samuel Johnson described as the last refuge of a scoundrel.
Morrison is not seen as a scoundrel, but he is still a fair way to political redemption. Morrison obviously sees himself as a great leader, omniscient and omnipotent; but he has succeeded only in making himself omnipresent. To get to the next stage he will have to channel the tsunami of announcements into a message which is rational, convincing and trustworthy.
Unfortunately these are not the traits we associate with the master marketeer.
Mungo MacCallam is a political commentator and former senior correspondent in the Canberra Press Gallery.
Mungo MacCallum is a veteran political journalist and commentator. His books include Run Johnny Run, Poll Dancing, and Punch and Judy.
mungomccallum@staging-johnmenadue.kinsta.cloud
Comments
13 responses to “MUNGO MACCALLUM.-Morrison’s announceathon.”
It said that when Gore Vidal was Christopher Hitchens’ mentor (before they fell out over the invasion of Iraq), Vidal in his east coast world weary tone advised Hitchens “My boy, as you go through life there are two things you should always remember: never miss the opportunity of going on television or having sex”.
Morrison is certainly an adherent of the first of these two principles. In respect of the other, this is something about which I would prefer not to dwell.
A great analysis Mung0,
I am not an economic “knowall” although I did do Economics 101 in first year university , decades ago.
From what I am observing; the “herd mentality” on the Stock Exchanges, the absolutely idiotic behavior of people “cleaning up” the supermarket shelves,the “acting after the event” of the politicians and the various so called medical “experts” going ballistic with what we should/should not be doing. I think we are in dangerously uncharted territory . Possibly millions will lose jobs and income as companies and small businesses go “belly up”. I really don’t think the Government “gets it”. We are in for a roller coaster ride on a par with the 30’s Great Depression, if we are not careful.Prepare for it, It will be “dog eat dog”, we already have examples in the Supermarket aisles.
Basically, his article is about the intellectual desert that is twenty first century Australia.
Dumbed down, de-cultured, bubble-like, manipulable.
I assure you, the common man regards the future economic and medical disaster of a pandemic with eyes wide open. I tested the kind offer of woolworths to open at 7am for the benefit of the pensioners etc. They had to open early to prevent the doors being broken down. I ended up with a four pack of toilet rolls and counted myself lucky.
Tomorrow will be the same. After the drought, bushfires, collapse of our super funds and now this. No footie.
It was left to Bowtell and Swan to upbraid Morrison on the Trump-like health response. The Opposition was too busy going #MeToo.
If not even a global pandemic can release the Opposition from witness protection, you can pretty much put away the glasses on the 2022 election.
Don’t forget the reserve bank’s awesome attack against the virus Mungo. Cutting the headline rate from 0.5% to 0.25%. The virus will be quivering in its proverbial boots!
We have well and truely entered the Era of “Fake News, Fake Money and Fake Politicians”. This Coronavirus has given Morrison the Trump Card over the Federal Opposition, the ability to shut the Parliament down and by doing so he will avoid any in depth scrutiny of his stimulus package that will, just like the Sports Rort be a huge handout to his preferred recipients. One could say a second miracle has been bestowed upon the Morrison Ministry.
What is more important than life?
The government is dithering, and taking baby steps.
The only way to slow the virus is social distancing.
This means shut the schools, ban gatherings, and all those activities designed to limit contact.
Go hard, go early, go now is even more imperative than it was yesterday. And don’t apologise.
Otherwise it is abject failure by a “leader” who is ultimately guilty of killing his citizens.
sorry, Mike, but I think Mungo is referring to the last recession in Australia 1991
I am irresistibly put in mind of Shakespeare. Morrison struts and frets his hour upon the stage, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing. And then is heard no more.
It can’t come soon enough.
As its name suggests, the GFC was a financial crisis, and we expect these every decade or three. But this is a real crisis, and none of us alive has lived through one like it. So I don’t believe Morrison will suffer if there’s no surplus, or a recession – even though I’d like him to. Also I don’t think a stimulus is what we want. We don’t want to give money to people to spend at the local cafe or on scarce goods – we should give the money to the staff and workers laid off from cafes or other struggling businesses like airlines and tourist businesses. The role for Government at this time should be safety net.
…as the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists says: get your medical advice from doctors, not politicans.
I don’t think the Rudd stimulus was 30 years ago but I’ll put that down to a typo and let it through to the keeper. Everything you say is, in my view, correct. I think that the great salesman sees this as the start of the re-election campaign and will work it for all it’s worth. There is no way he will agree to a bipartisan “crisis cabinet” as that would indicate weakness. He will talk up bipartisanship but won’t touch it with a barge pole. There will be plenty of speeches, meetings and announcements all in lieu of actual policy or achievement