Monday, February 08, 2010

Problems with computer lock-in

In a piece on my personal blog, Sunday Essay - why it's hard to break out of the box, I said at the end:

If I was asked what was the biggest single impediment to change today I would say the computer.

The adoption of computers and IT more broadly has been one of the greatest causes of economic growth because it allowed existing things to be done more efficiently, new things to be done that could not be done before. Yet, as any IT professional knows, there is a considerable difference between simply computerising existing systems (this will certainly make them more efficient) and the design of completely new systems likely to yield the greatest benefit from the new technology.

I first came across the problem of computer lock-in a number of years ago when facilitating the development of a strategic plan for the Australian subsidiary of a global IT company.

Everybody at the workshop agreed that the company's IT and knowledge management systems no long properly reflected either company needs or the marketplace. Everybody also agreed that the sheer cost of changing the system meant that senior management would not agree. They just had to work around it.

You see, once entrenched, the computer protects what is at the expense of what might be.

In a comment, my old friend and now blogging colleague Winton Bates sought further clarification of just what I meant by computer lock-in. I started to respond by way of comment, and then decided that I should discuss the matter here because it is an important and interesting issue from both a management and economics perspective.

The discussion that follows does not address the claim that I made above that the computer has become the single greatest impediment to change today. My purpose is purely explanatory. 

Meaning of Computer Lock-in

By computer lock-in, I simple mean the way in which existing IT systems and approaches can actually impede change, reducing efficiency by locking in past approaches.   

This type of lock-in can occur in different ways.

To begin with, lock-in occurs when the cost of making the changes to systems exceeds the costs associated with system dysfunctionality. Lock-in can also occur where computer based standardisation across the organisation impedes organisational flexibility and response. Lock-in may occur or be intensified because of the interaction between systems, decision processes and budget structures. Finally, because systems affect the way we think, the term might also be applied to thought patterns created by or at least maintained by IT systems.

A Simple Amplification

To begin our discussion, cast your mind back into the past and consider computerisation of existing systems.

  The processing power of the computer allowed existing systems to be standardised and automated with consequent savings. This helped drive major gains in productivity, leading (among other things) to faster economic growth.

No system is perfect. Needs also change over time.

The computerisation of existing systems may have allowed substantial savings, but it also locked in systems as they stood at a point in time. Administrative and processing systems moved from people to capital intensive. Future changes to processes whether to remove existing weaknesses or to meet changing needs now faced a new cost, the cost of altering IT systems.

Fundamental process re-design had to take into account the write-off of existing investment, as well as new investment costs. This made incremental changes at the edges easier. Where fundamental change did occur, then those changes were locked in in the same way because of the capital and other costs of future change.

A Big Enterprise Example     

In the case I was referring to above, a large global IT company, we had a very large, integrated enterprise wide information system that had given the company significant advantage at the time it was introduced. As marketing, production and distribution needs changed over time, the system had been altered at the margin, patched.

At the point in time we are talking about, a growing gap had opened between business needs and system performance. This was recognised. However, the sheer costs involved (cash plus business disruption) in what would be an enterprise wide system replacement made action difficult.

The position was further complicated by the fact that the enterprise, then a household name in computing, had recently been acquired by another, much larger, organisation.

The two enterprise information systems were very different. Both organisations were wrestling as well with just how the two systems might be merged or, at least, interfaced.

Impact on Mergers and Acquisitions

This is actually an example of another lock-in effect, the way in which differing computer systems affect mergers and re-structuring. This one is quite important because system differences have become a significant reason for the failure of mergers to achieve the expected benefits.

To amplify, consider a professional services example, two law firms. Each has different IT systems covering accounts, time keeping and precedent management. Effective merger requires common systems to ensure integration. This comes at a cost, since one single system (new or existing) must be selected. Existing investment must be written off, new investment made, the cost of disruption accommodated.

The sheer size of these costs has been sufficient to prevent some mergers.

Interface with Conventional Economics

In one way, the type of effects that I have dealt with to this point that link to the rise in capital intensity fall within the field of conventional economics, although the focus on physical capital may have made economists initially slow to recognise the rise of capital intensity intensity in the services sector.

Take my law firm example. At one level, this is no different from one box manufacturer taking over another. The box manufacturer faces similar choices in deciding when, if and how to rationalise its expanded production capacity.

  I will return later to the issue as to whether IT investment has different effects from other types of investment. For the moment, I simply note that expressed in conventional terms, the new computing and communications technologies shifted the production function to the right. However, now that the IT investment has taken place and in the absence of further technological change, my analysis suggests that returns on future investment will be more akin to moves along the production function rather than shifts in the function. This is part of the reason I have argued that future productivity gains from IT are likely to be lower.

Cost, Benefits and Standardisation    

Another example of lock-in arises where costs and benefits are not evenly distributed or perhaps even properly identified.

Consider, for example, a case where a particular unit has a need that is not being met by the existing information system. They have the need and will benefit from the change. However, the cost for any such change must come from another budget bucket, while the proposed change itself must meet standardised enterprise requirements, including the need for protection of the existing network.

Here we have an example where the lock-in effects lie in the need to maintain a degree of central control over systems once established. We can think of these effects along a number of dimensions. I accept that one can argue as to whether these should truly be classified as lock-in effects in the way I am using the term. However, I would argue that we need to consider the effects in combination.

  • communications: emails provided an enormous initial productivity boost, but the sheer volume of email traffic created storage demands, risk management issues and retention and access issues. This meant that after the initial gains, organisations then faced added costs in managing and maintaining its email systems. There are also continuing problems with the inappropriate substitution of emails for other forms of communication including the telephone, personal contact or simply a hand-written note. 
  • internet and intranet: the increased use of the internet and internal intranets for communication and to access information yielded substantial productivity gains. Like the email, these gains have peaked with the need for rules on use, greater filtering against inappropriate use and network protection adding to complexity and costs.
  • access and retention: the ever increasing volume of often useless data, along with storage on individual hard drives, has created real problems for access and retention. In extreme cases that I have seen, up to forty different versions of the same document can be found. Just knowing which is the latest version is a problem, let alone the pain of key word searches as the computer chugs away trawling through the mass of material.
  • protection: the need to protect networks means that all organisations have had to develop rules as to what can be attached to networks and by whom. While necessary, this has its own costs such as delay and support costs, as well as individual frustration.

Cost Shifting vs Cost Reduction

A very particular problem has arisen with IT systems that I call cost shifting.

We all know about things such as call centres that centralise client service. This is actually cost shifting because it reduces the paid time to required to service customers, while increasing the amount of time the customer has to spend accessing the service. Of course there are cases where the customer benefits, but anybody who has spent long times trying to get an answer will know what I mean.

What is less well recognised is that cost shifting is alive and well within organisations from the measurable to the not so easily measurable.

Consider, for example, the replacement of word processor operators by individual authors. This does offer productivity gains. However, for certain types of documents, a word processor operator is far more skilled and can produce a document quicker and at a higher standard than any individual author. The problem here is that the costs of the word processor operator are easily measured in budget terms, the opportunity and quality costs of author production less easy to measure.

Very similar issues arise in other areas such as the substitution of on-line HR kiosks for HR staff. This can be far more efficient. However, it can also result in highly paid managers spending time on tasks that could be done more quickly by a lower paid HR person.

All this is in fact testable. However, and this is the connection to computer lock-in, once the on-line system has been set up, it can be very difficult and expensive to introduce an alternative.

Computer Lock-in and Innovation

All successful organisations depend upon a combination of people who do their ordinary job as well as possible with innovators who bring about change.

There is always a balance issue here. Too many of the first and the organisation will struggle to really improve. Too many of the second, and the organisation may become unstable, unable to deliver efficiently. 

The problem with the computer is that it in facilitating standardisation and control it has switched the balance between the two.   

Conclusion

Returning now to my point as to whether IT investment has different types of effects to other investments, I would argue that it does because it is just so pervasive.

The nearest equivalent that I can think of is the invention of the production line. Its impact on industrial efficiency was huge, yet it also had costs. The production line is still with us, but has now been part replaced by far more varied production systems in themselves based on computers.

I wonder whether the same thing will happen now with computer based systems themselves. Certainly I feel the current computer lock-in is past its use-by date.                    

Sunday, February 07, 2010

Australian wholesale bank guarantee to be withdrawn from 31 March 10

A bit over twelve months ago, on 19 January to be precise 2009, I was fulminating over Access Economics dire predictions on the Australian economy. On 5 February I wrote Are all the Australian economic forecasts wrong? I followed this on 23 February with A very odd recession.

My problem at the time lay in the fact that I was struggling to match the economic data with the dire predictions, something that had been worrying me for a little while. I was right, of course.

As the economy turned, Australia was one of the first if not the first major economy to start raising interest rates, full-stopping a sharp shift in economic perceptions. Now the Government has announced the withdrawal of its Guarantee Scheme for Large Deposits and Wholesale Funding to come into effect on 31 March 2010.

Simply put, the Government feels that Australia's banks can now borrow internationally without that support. This would have been inconceivable last February.

The guarantee has been a sweet little income earner. The Government was not required to make any payments, so the $A1.1 million collected from the banks to this point for the guarantee is straight profit. This is expected to rise to $A5.5 million over the life of existing guarantees. This represents a small but useful offset against the total cost of the various stimulus packages.

When I wrote  A very odd recession last February I had no idea just how odd a downturn this was going to be. At this point, it is as though the Global Financial Crisis did not exist so far as Australia is concerned.

It would pay Australia not to forget, of course. But for the moment, everybody is enjoying business as usual.

Wednesday, February 03, 2010

Surprising surprise at the RBA's decision to keep interest rates on hold

One of the most interesting things about the Reserve Bank's decision to leave Australian official interest rates on hold lay in the way it wrong-footed so many commentators as well as market participants. Pretty much everybody, me included, thought a rise was likely. In fact, so likely that the Australian on-line bookmaker Centrebet had apparently refused to take bets on this month's move for the first time since it started covering Reserve Bank decisions because it said the odds were so skewed towards a rise.

Thinking about it, I'm surprised that we were all so surprised. Here Michael Pascoe had a reflective piece in the Sydney Morning Herald that is worth reading. 

By its nature, the RBA operates with a longer term perspective than most commentators or market operators. It has too because of the time lags and uncertainty inevitably attached monetary policy.

The decision by leading Australian banks to raise interest rates by more than the last official rise increased the economic impact of the rate shift. Little has changed in economic terms since the last rise. So a rate hold isn't all that surprising.

I suspect that there may be another issue as well.

The Reserve Bank has been quite clever in managing expectations, something that's important in policy where expectations can be more important than actions. It's dramatic decision to first increase official rates had global impact on economic confidence. Australian opinion certainly swung towards greater confidence in the economic outlook.

Keeping interest rates on hold this time has the useful effect of making market participants a little more cautious when it comes to pre-judging Bank decisions. 

Tuesday, February 02, 2010

Problems with the definition of governance

Towards the end of my introductory post Problems with the concept of governance I said:

I have a particular personal problem with the way that the concept is now used because I find that in some of my professional roles, project management is an example, it actually interferes with effective service delivery. This leads to great personal frustration.

One of the reasons why governance has become such a difficult concept is that there is, in fact, no agreement on the just what the word means. People use it in many different ways. You can see this if you look at some of the definitions of governance on the Web. You can also see why I say that governance has become conflated in some ways to management, in fact a very different concept.  

  • administration: the persons (or committees or departments etc.) who make up a body for the purpose of administering something; "he claims that the ...
  • government: the act of governing; exercising authority; "regulations for the governing of state prisons"; "he had considerable experience of government"
    wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
  • In grammar and theoretical linguistics, government refers to the relationship between a word and its dependents. ...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Governance_(linguistics)
  • Governance relates to decisions that define expectations, grant power, or verify performance. It consists either of a separate process or of a specific part of management or leadership processes. Sometimes people set up a government to administer these processes and systems.
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Governance
  • The process, or the power, of governing; government or administration; The specific system by which a political system is ruled; The group of people who make up an administrative body; The state of being governed; Accountability for consistent, cohesive policies, processes and decision rights
    en.wiktionary.org/wiki/governance
  • The combination of processes and structures implemented by the board to inform, direct, manage, and monitor the activities of the organization ...
    www.theiia.org/guidance/standards-and-guidance/ippf/standards/full-standards/
  • Measures put in place in order to ensure smooth functioning and control of a company. Such measures reinforce the importance of transparency of information.
    www.alstom.com/_looks/alstomV2/frontofficeScripts/index.php
  • Means in which the leading authority, often the board of directors in foundations, guides and monitors the values and goals of its organization through policy and procedures.
    www.pfc.ca/cms_en/page1112.cfm
  • In the context of SOA, governance defines the model to ensure optimal reuse of services and enforcement of corporate policies (eg, business design, technical design, and application security).
    www.skywaysoftware.com/resources/terminology/
  • issues related to the involvement of stakeholders - scientists, industry, consumers and public authorities - in the process of innovation policy design, implementation and evaluation
    www.et.teiath.gr/tempus/glossary.asp
  • Governance describes dynamic distribution of power, learning and benefits among firms in a value chain Governance refers to the inter-firm relationships and institutional mechanisms through which non-market co-ordination of activities in the chain is achieved. ...
    www.naarm.ernet.in/NAIP/Consortia%20concepts.doc
  • governance Governance is exercising authority to provide direction and to undertake, coordinate, and regulate activities in support of achieving this direction and desired outcomes. Source: Glossary – Framework for the Management of Information in the Government of Canada
    www.tbs-sct.gc.ca/cioscripts/gloss/gloss-alpha_e.asp
  • is the process of overseeing a work activity at a level higher than direct managerial control. Governance processes provide executives and staff with clarity on stakeholders expectations. ...
    www.marketright.co.nz/Site/definitions.aspx
  • shorthand term for political, social, economic and administrative institutions and policies that affect the supply of public services. ...
    194.242.113.59/index.php

If you look at all these definitions, governance is used to refer to both structures and processes. It can be used in a top level sense, or can be cascaded down through the organisation. It can be used in terms of provision of a framework in which decisions are made or the process of making decisions. Or it might include the lot.

From a purely professional viewpoint in the delivery of services to clients or if acting as a manger, if the word governance is used in any of the documentation, then you must clarify just what the word means in that context.      

Sunday, January 31, 2010

Problems with the concept of governance

I have been bogged down by a combination of professional pressures with an almost obsessive interest on the Australian Government's My School web site. The main posts here are:

If you look at what I have written, you will see that my main focus beyond understanding the site is on the likely dynamic effects of the changes. There is actually some very muddy thinking here at official levels, similar in some ways to the things that I talked about in my last post, Why Jenny Maklin's standards approach to child welfare is likely to fail.

Turning to other matters, on 12 January Paul Barratt had an interesting post, ASC Board: changes ill-advised. The core of the post deals with the suitability of the new appointments to the Board of the Australian Submarine Corporation.

As a former head of the Australian Defence Department, Paul has a certain expertise in Defence matters. In terms of my own experience with complex technical projects, a board without a core of people with relevant technical expertise does strike me as risky.

In announcing the appointments, Australian Finance Minister Lindsay Tanner stated: 

... the appointees bring a range of skills and experience in legal and financial matters to the board, and will enhance the board’s high level of expertise and standards of governance.

The emphasis on governance that now surrounds so many official appointments, statements and processes is actually highly problematic in an organisational sense. Simply put, governance has become confused, conflated, with management, a very different concept.

I was trying to work out the other day when the word came into popular vogue. As best I can remember, it really emerged as a very popular concept  after the US Sarbanes–Oxley Act of 2002. I am sure that it was around before then, but that was the time that I first noticed it becoming a popular service area among a range of professional services disciplines.

I have a particular personal problem with the way that the concept is now used because I find that in some of my professional roles, project management is an example, it actually interferes with effective service delivery. This leads to great personal frustration.

I must try to spell this out at some point.

      

   

Friday, January 22, 2010

Why Jenny Maklin's standards approach to child welfare is likely to fail

My heart sank as I read newspaper reports about the latest Federal Government moves on national child welfare standards, more precisely  on those living in care. To quote Minister Jenny Macklin:

We need national standards of care so children who cannot live with their families can grow up in a safe, secure environment. National standards will provide a benchmark for the care of these children no matter where in Australia they live.

Before going on, you can find the Minister's press release here, the standards consultation document here, the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare report here.

Why did my heart sink? To my mind, it is yet another policy move doomed to almost certain failure, another example of the weaknesses in Australian public administration that I started to address in a series of post last year. I have not pursued this series as actively as I had intended in part because of time, in part because I became depressed. Now I need to return to the issue.

My argument in the series was a simple one. Current Australian approaches to public administration do not and cannot work. To establish this I had to demonstrate a pattern of systemic failure, to establish the reasons for that failure, and then to suggest alternative approaches. In the first instance, I adopted a case study approach.

In considering the latest Federal moves, I think that we need to begin by recognising two things.

The first is that kids are placed in care because they are experiencing personal problems. These may be behavioural or, more likely, the family circumstances threaten the child in some way. The first and key judgment to be made as to the success or otherwise of the placement is whether or not the kid is in fact better off, more broadly whether the totality of kids in care are better off. The question of how much better off is a further question to be asked once the first is answered.

The second is that all child welfare systems throughout Australia have been experiencing problems. I have written especially on the NSW system. There the loads and expectations placed upon the system by things such as mandatory reporting brought it to the point of collapse. So there is a problem.

The idea that national standards of themselves might bring benefits can be a very slippery one, in part because there is a lot of confusion over the meaning of the word standard.

Of itself, a standard has nothing to do with good or bad. The focus is on fitness for purpose. A standard is designed to achieve uniformity, to ensure that the product or process does a specified set of things or meets a specified set of criteria. So in child welfare terms, a national standard for children in care means specifying a set of things that the child welfare process must deliver for those children in care.

A standard is fixed. It says nothing about the value of alternative standards, nor does it deal with cases that may exceed the standard in some way. It just is, freezing certain things at a point. Here standards often impose costs because they preclude alternatives. The usual justification for a standard is that the benefits from standardisation exceed those costs. This often is, but may not be true.

Compliance costs are one of the of the standard standards' costs. This is especially true for process standards, including the attempt to create management standards. Whole systems have to be set up to enforce the standard. In management standards, this includes process material along with compliance measurement. One of the reasons that the fashion for management standards peaked in the 1990s is that the compliance costs proved to be high, the actual benefits lower than expected. 

Against this background, the success or otherwise of a national child welfare standard rests on the assumptions that setting a specified set of things that the child welfare systems across the country must deliver to children in care will deliver a better set of results taking compliance costs into account than an alternative process. This is, in fact, quite uncertain.

Problems begin with the definition of the standard itself, the purpose of the current discussion paper.

Take, as an example, the inclusion in the discussion paper of the need to recognise Aboriginal cultural values. This is very much current public service think.

Those who read this blog will know that I write a lot on Aboriginal issues and policy, including the need to focus on Aboriginal history and the Aborigines as varied peoples. I make this point only because I fear that I am about to get into serious trouble.

Aboriginal children are many times more likely to end up in care than non-Aboriginal kids, reflecting social dislocation within the Aboriginal community. It is, I think, current policy in all jurisdictions that Aboriginal kids are better off placed with Aboriginal families for cultural reasons. This policy has already led to some tragedies and has bound the hands of child welfare workers, forcing them into what they know are second best solutions.

To my mind, the sole issue is whether or not kids at risk would be better off in care. The question of Aboriginal cultural issues is one thing to be considered in the context of this primary aim.    

Similar issues arise with so called CALD kids, culturally and linguistically diverse, another example of modern public service speak.

Problems become more intense when we look at the detail of the areas to be addressed by the proposed standards. They simply mix together too many things. They can also conflict. I am not saying that we should not have them - who could argue with regular medical checks? - just that they lack clarity and balance considering the primary aim.

Generalised standards areas then have to be translated into measurable standards. This is usually done via some form of statistical measure. Another set of problems arise.

To begin with, the standards are system wide standards. I have no problem with system standards. However, they generally do not recognise variance within the system, the extent to which the system actually fails individual children. Here a system may meet broad standards yet in fact be failing individual children worse than another, apparently better performing, system. In theory you can set up measures to accommodate this, but the process is reasonably complicated.

Then, too, the measurement of standards performance at national level is strongly influenced by the availability of statistical data. The relationship between the data and the actual on-ground position can be quite uncertain. This is complicated by a further variable, the nature of linkages and relationships between elements within the system.

Consider this as a simple example. One jurisdiction may in fact take a higher proportion of children into care than another jurisdiction. Its stats will show this and may well, depending on the way standards are measured and defined, count as a negative. However, that jurisdiction may also show better performance for children in care than other jurisdictions because the proportion of children with very serious problems is less.

Assuming that all these problems can be overcome, at least two further problems arise.

The first links to the question of compliance costs, including jurisdictional responses to problems as they arise.

The collection and presentation of data to meet national reporting requirements has its own costs. These costs link to the initial definition phase and then to the reporting and compliance stage and are not insignificant. Unfortunately, the data so collected is rarely useful from an operational viewpoint. It is simply too generalised.

The standards and data reporting requirements also twist agency responses to problems as they arise. They impose a need to respond to shortfalls as measured by the standards or indicators involved. These may but need not be linked to key delivery challenges as they stand at the time.

The final problem is simply one of resources. There is no point in setting either standards or targets if the resources are then not available to ensure delivery. Even if the target or standard is in fact achievable, and that is often not the case, it will fail if resources cannot be found. We have seen this happen many times; it is a major reason for policy failure.

While I think that the approach is systemically flawed, I would be more confident if Minister Macklin and her Department had a better record of service delivery. I dealt with one aspect of this in Jenny Macklin and problems in NT indigenous housing.

So what do I expect to happen in all this?

I really hope that I am wrong, but my feeling is that a lot of time and resources are going to be devoted to the standard setting exercise and then to reporting and responding without a single tangible gain where it matters most, improved care for Australian kids.       

Monday, January 18, 2010

The importance of crowding out

Economists generally use the term crowding out to describe the way in which Government spending can reduce private sector activity. However, the term can also be used more broadly to describe the way in which any form of Government support can reduce - crowd out - other activity.

In Australia, the provision of Government guarantees favoured the bigger banks. This support may have been necessary, but the end result was a big bank dominance of the Australian financial system at a level not seen since the 1950s or 1960s. In China, Michael Pettis suggests that one effect of Chinese Government stimulus support was to enhance the position of the  SOE (State Owned Enterprise) sector at the expense of small and medium business.

I am phrasing all this in broad terms because crowding out is actually a very useful concept in describing the way in which Government activities that favour one sector or activity can affect other immediately related sectors.

Friday, January 15, 2010

Australian December 09 employment statistics and their implications

The release yesterday by the Australian Bureau of Statistics of unemployment data for December attracted a fair bit of global attention with the seasonally adjusted unemployment rate down slightEmployment December 09ly from 5.6% to 5.5%. Mind you, this is still up 0.9% from a year before, but that's still not bad.

These statistics bounce round all the time, so its the trend that's really important. Here the first graph from the ABS shows trend and seasonally adjusted monthly employment data since December 08. You can see how the decline in total employment reversed itself over the second half of 2009.

The seUnemployment Decembe 09cond graph shows the movement in the unemployment rate. You can see how the rise in unemployment slowed and then started to decline.

One very interesting statistic is the stability in the participation rate, the proportion of the working age population actually in the workforce. This was the same in December 08 and 09, around 65.2%. Often in times of economic downturn the participation rate falls, thus reducing the apparent rise in the unemployment rate.

The next graph shows total hours worked, all people. The period December 1999 to December 2001 covers the bottom point in the last major economic downturn. This is followed by a steady rise, and then a fall with the latest downturn. Total hours worked

The 1990-1991 downturn coincided with a period of economic restructuring. This was the period of downsizing, restructuring and process re-engineering, a trend that continued into the nineties.  This fed into and accelerated the downturn.

This downturn followed a period of significant and growing labour shortages. Many firms tried to preserve staff, reducing working hours rather than total employment. This provided something of a cushion, but was also a wise decision in most cases given the bounce-backFemale Hours worked in the Australian economy.

Men and women, however, had different experiences. 

The next graph shows female hours worked. While the overall pattern is broadly similar, the downturns are less pronounced, while the percentage increase in hours worked over the period from December 1999 is somewhat higher.

By implication, the shifts in male hours worked must have been greater.

The next graph also from ABS shows this quite clearly. The decline in maleMale hours worked hours worked in both the 1990-91 and present downturn is far more pronounced.

One sad-side effect of the earlier downturn was that many men who lost their jobs were effectively forced into first long term unemployment and then, in many cases, premature retirement. The effect this time appears less pronounced.

A second side-effect of the last major recession was a very significant increase in long term unemployment  among young people. I do not have statistics at present to justify this assertion, my views are based on personal observation, but I believe it to be true. This accelerated a trend towards long term generational unemployment, something that was quite new in Australia. 

The effects here of the current downturn are likely to be less pronounced.

Thursday, January 07, 2010

Australia retail sales and trade performance, November 2009

Slowly getting back into it after the break. I hope that those celebrating Christmas had a happy time. May 2010 be a good year for allRetail turnover Australia of us.

This morning the Australian Bureau of Statistics released released Australian retail sales figures for November 2009, up 1.4% in seasonally adjusted terms over the previous month, a very substantial increase.    

The graph shows both trend and seasonally adjusted numbers since November 2007.

You can see the impact of the Australian Government's stimulus package in the seasonally adjusted estimates. The trend estimates flatten these out. What global financial crisis you might ask.

The ABS also released the trade figures for November.Balance on goods and services November 09

My key concern here is the trend. You can see from the attached graph the way in which balance of trade on goods and services went positive when Australia needed it and then declined.

I have been monitoring this trend because I think that Australia's trade performance sets a key constraint on growth.

I was thinking over Christmas about global economic trends. My key concern remains my perception that the economic imbalances that triggered the global economic down turn remain and that, consequently, the recovery is still fragile.

This is before factoring in the effects of climate change.

In saying this, I do not want to get drawn into a debate on climate change. Here, and at the very least, we can say that actions by Governments to address climate change will have economic effects. Further, for planning purposes we at least need to consider what might happen in economic terms if the scientific projections are in any way correct.     

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

Christmas Greetings

I leave tomorrow for Mt Hotham for the Christmas break and will resume posting on my return.

It's been a funny mixed-up year, beginning with economic crash and ending with Copenhagen.

The series I began and still plan to finish on problems in modern public administration was side-tracked by a felt need on my part to try to get a better understanding of climate change issues. I had left this one aside, but then found that parts of the debate were going down the familiar tracks that I was writing about here. So I spent some time writing a series of posts on my personal blog just trying to tease things out for my own understanding.

There is nothing especially profound in the posts, simply a personal exploration to aid understanding.

My economics writing has diminished, simply because I had less to say that was original. I think that my main contribution in the second half of last year and first part of this year lay in the fact that I was writing from a different perspective to most commentators, driven by an apparent gap between the commentary and the statistics.

Hopefully over the Christmas break I will have a chance to review and re-group.

To those to whom it is relevant, may you have a happy and safe Christmas and may we all have a safe and successful new year.

I look forward to talking to you again in a little while.