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Gittins and the National Accounts

Ross Gittins is again in wowser mode, talking down the Q2 national accounts and the growth outlook.  Like many economists, he takes the view that because consumption accounts for 60% of GDP:

where consumption goes, the economy follows.

If anything, the relationship is the other way around.  The standard approach to modelling consumption is to include national income as an explanatory variable, implying causality runs from income to consumption.  What people consume out of is in fact expected income.  To say that consumption accounts for 60% of GDP is just an artefact of classifying GDP on an expenditure basis.  We could equally define it on an income or production basis, with no reference to consumption at all. 

The view that consumption drives the economy leads many analysts astray, not least in grossly exaggerating the wealth effects from changes in house prices.  As we have argued previously, the fact that consumption and national saving have remained remarkably steady as shares of GDP in recent years makes a nonsense of claims that the Australian economy depends on house price driven consumption spending.

posted on 10 September 2005 by skirchner in Economics

(2) Comments | Permalink | Main


Comments

To his credit, Gittins is arguing FOR cuts to marginal tax rates today:

No-bulldust case for cutting top tax rate
http://www.smh.com.au/news/ross-gittins/nobulldust-case-for-cutting-top-tax-rate/2005/09/11/1126377202192.html

I pretty much agree with everything Ross has to say today, esp. aligning the corporate, personal and capital gains tax rates, eliminating negative gearing, work-related deductions etc.

But then, kust 12 days ago he was arguing AGAINST cutting the top rate:

All this crying poor is a bit rich
http://www.smh.com.au/news/ross-gittins/all-this-crying-poor-is-a-bit-rich/2005/08/30/1125302563872.html

Which leaves me completely confused as to where he stands on the issue.

Posted by .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)  on  09/12  at  02:00 PM


David, see latest post.

Posted by skirchner  on  09/12  at  03:07 PM



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