Chapter 2 Impact of the GFC on regional business
Introduction
2.1
It is difficult to generalise when discussing the impact of the GFC on
regional Australia. As noted in the previous chapter, the picture which has emerged
throughout the course of this inquiry is a mixed one. Some regions are worse
off than they were before the crisis, others the same or better.
2.2
Much of this has to do with the economic make-up of various regions.
Those which are heavily reliant on the mining industry, for example, have
suffered as world commodity prices and demand have declined. Yet, in
Queensland, a new coal mine is opening in the Surat Basin, creating more jobs[1]
while declining mineral prices have led to job losses in the
Mackay-Fitzroy-Central West region of Queensland.[2]
The tourism industry has found itself in similar circumstances. Decreasing
international tourist numbers have had a negative impact on cities such as
Cairns and the Gold Coast, while the tourism sector in Tasmania remains strong.
2.3
The differing nature of the crisis is reflected to some degree in the
presentation of the evidence in this report. Rather than itemising the impact
of the crisis on various regions around Australia, the next three chapters will
note the impact of the crisis on business, individuals and local governments in
regional Australia, in each case noting the assistance provided by the
Commonwealth Government.
2.4
This crisis is an economic one and therefore it is logical to begin with
its impact on business in regional Australia, because a constricting economy
affects people, which in turn, affects the government institutions that assist
them.
2.5
As noted, it is not possible for the Committee to present a complete
picture of the impacts of this crisis on the various industries noted in this
section, as the crisis continues and its full impact will not be known for some
time. The first section of this chapter will therefore detail the evidence the
Committee has received to date, noting the major sectors in regional Australia
that have felt the crisis’ effects and ways in which the Commonwealth
Government has responded. These sectors include:
n Resources;
n Manufacturing;
n Tourism;
n Retail;
n Construction;
n Primary industries;
and
n Banking and lending.
The chapter will conclude with a brief
discussion on operating businesses through economic downturns.
Resources sector
2.6
Australia’s resource sector is export oriented, with much of the exports
going to Asian markets such as China, Japan and the Republic of Korea. Gross
Domestic Product (GDP) in these countries has fallen since the onset of the GFC
and as a result, demand for Australian energy and minerals commodities has also
fallen.[3] Falling demand has led to
falling prices. In turn, falling commodity prices have raised the cost of
mining operations and impacted the ability of resource companies to access
financing for development projects.[4] Accessing credit will be
discussed later in this section; however, it should be noted that mining
companies have been unable to access credit or only at terms which ‘impose a
highly risky and onerous debt burden on them’.[5] The option of on-market
equity raising has been problematic due to the volatility of the share market.[6]
2.7
Exploration in the resources sector has also decreased since the
beginning of the GFC. Barring exploration for petroleum, which has increased,
mineral exploration expenditure fell by 3.1 per cent in the December 2008
quarter alone. Exploration budgets have been cut and exploration staff laid off
in order to conserve capital.[7]
2.8
All this has resulted in decreasing profits for resource companies with
a corresponding decrease in company share prices. In regional Australia, a
reduction in the demand and price of commodities has meant job losses. From
February 2009, employment in the mining industry fell by 5.2 per cent—the
equivalent of 8,600 people.[8] Combined with a decrease
of 7.9 per cent in the period between November 2009 and February 2009 (13,000
people), it is clear that job losses in the mining sector have been
significant.[9]
2.9
Evidence provided to the Committee by the Department of Resources,
Energy and Tourism (RET) indicates that Western Australia (WA), South Australia
(SA) and Queensland (QLD) have been hit particularly hard by job losses in the
resources sector.[10] This is consistent with
evidence gathered by the Committee at its public hearings. In Geraldton, the
Committee was advised that some of the mining companies ‘have either stopped or
reduced production, which has led to downturns and staff being put off’.[11]
In Broken Hill, around 50 positions have been lost at the CBH mine and 440 at
the Perilya mine, resulting in a 30 per cent decrease in employment across all
of Broken Hill.[12]
2.10
A 30 per cent decrease in employment in Broken Hill is substantial and
the flow-on effects even more so. In cities such as Broken Hill, mining
companies are often the major employer and driver of local industry. Job losses
at the local mine have a major impact on other businesses which may be
suppliers of mining products or services or depend on the economic activity
generated by mine employees for business. In Burnie, for example, Caterpillar,
an underground mining manufacturer, has been forced to reduce employment due to
a reduction in orders for mining equipment.[13] The whole Burnie region
has suffered as a result. Some redundant workers have found other work but at
lower pay, resulting in poorer living standards.[14]
Local businesses dependant on the Caterpillar supply chain have also
experienced a reduction in orders and profits leading to multiple job losses:
…there are a couple of other local companies that have
supported Caterpillar. There will be a loss of 20 to 25 per cent of the jobs in
one particular small engineering firm of 20 people. Lots of other companies
have gone back to four-day weeks. They are trying to hang on and keep their
skill base together as an alternative to making people permanently redundant.
The outsourcing habits, particularly of larger businesses like Caterpillar…are
fairly catastrophic to other small to medium sized businesses in the region.[15]
2.11
In some instances, job losses in the resources sector can impact regions
far removed from the primary operation. In WA, job losses at the Iluka mineral
sands mine in the North West have had an effect as far south as Busselton. Many
of the retrenched Iluka workers were fly-in/fly-out and based in southern
cities such as Busselton. The loss of these jobs impacts the Busselton
community, as unemployed and underemployed workers are forced to relocate to
Perth or elsewhere for work, thereby reducing economic activity in Busselton.[16]
2.12
The Busselton example also highlights the sometimes transient nature of
employment in the resources sector. RET points out that resource job losses in
WA and SA were mitigated by increases in mining industry employment in Tasmania
and Queensland (the opening of a mine in the Surat Basin has already been noted
in this report) in the February 2009 quarter and the Department has advised
that mining and contractor companies are redeploying staff to other areas of
their operations.[17]
2.13
Reports of staff redeployments and growth in areas of the sector
(Queensland LNG for example) are encouraging. Certainly the resource industry,
while affected by the crisis, has appeared to weather it better to date than
other industries which are discussed in this chapter. RET attributes this to
the resilience, innovativeness and efficiency of the sector which has ‘taken
steps over the last 10 years to ensure it is well-positioned for the future’.[18]
2.14
Despite the relatively good health of Australia’s resource sector, the
Commonwealth Government has provided assistance to the sector. The assistance has
focused predominantly on employment and education programs for those who have
lost their jobs. Much of this activity occurs under the auspices of Job
Services Australia, which is the Commonwealth Government’s major employment
services program across Australia.[19] At its public hearing in
Canberra, the Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations
(DEEWR) advised the Committee that Job Services Australia is ‘there to assist
redundant workers’ and noted that ‘people who lose their jobs as a result of a
global economic recession…do get immediate access to a higher level of service
within Job Services Australia’.[20]
2.15
In regards to the mining sector, Job Services Australia providers
firstly attempt to help workers find other employment within the industry. If
other employment is not forthcoming, training designed to develop alternate
skill sets for employment in other sectors is provided.[21]
2.16
The Committee accepts and supports the general goals of this service but
did raise concern that in a town such as Broken Hill, when a mine closes and
many people lose their jobs, the ability of the community to absorb those
workers into other professions may be limited.[22] DEEWR noted the
Committee’s concern but pointed out that the Jobs Fund[23]
‘will create jobs in the local communities’.[24]
2.17
At the time of writing, the first round of Jobs Fund projects had just
been announced. Broken Hill did not receive a project in that round[25]
and therefore, it is likely that unemployed miners in Broken Hill have been
redeployed, moved to other mining areas for work—as noted by RET in its
evidence to the Committee—or assisted by Job Services Australia.
2.18
The redeployment of skills out of a region may assist in ensuring continued
employment but it does not necessarily benefit the region’s economy, as skilled
employees do not always return. The only other option for maintaining a
region’s skills base is diversifying its economy. Economic diversification is
key to ensuring that regions are better equipped to withstand economic
downturns and the Committee will discuss this issue in greater detail later in
the report.
2.19
The Committee was advised by DEEWR that in addition to the services
provided by Job Services Australia around the country, certain regions across
Australia hit particularly hard by the crisis have been identified as Local
Employment Priority Areas. In these areas, Local Employment Coordinators (LECs)
have been tasked with identifying employment opportunities for workers who have
lost their jobs; working with community stakeholders to maximise employment and
training opportunities resulting from the Government’s stimulus package; and
developing apprenticeship opportunities and promoting the skills needed for
future economic recovery.[26] There are twenty Local
Employment Priority Areas and several of these cover regions which have been
affected by job losses in the resources sector.
2.20
Direct government financial assistance to the resources sector is much
more limited. The sector has benefited from some of the recent government
stimulus, for example, The Australian Rail Track Corporation received $580
million from the Commonwealth as part of a larger package to upgrade the Hunter
rail system, thereby benefiting the coal industry. Commonwealth money has also
been provided to various pipeline projects; however, the mining sector ‘from
the Government’s perspective, is expected to pay for itself’.[27]
Manufacturing sector
2.21
The Australian manufacturing sector has been under stress for some time.
Between 2002 and 2008, the high value of the Australian dollar ‘led to a severe
deterioration in the competitiveness of Australian manufacturing’.[28]
The sector has also been undergoing a period of mechanisation—leading to a
reduction in the workforce and has faced pressure from overseas competition.[29]
The GFC, then, is being viewed by some manufacturers as the final blow in a
‘perfect storm’ of challenges facing Australian manufacturing.[30]
2.22
In regional Australia, those areas reliant upon manufacturing for the
generation of employment and other economic activity have been particularly
impacted by the GFC. Larger manufacturing centres such as Geelong and the
northern Adelaide region have received much attention due to job losses in the
automobile and textile industries; however, other cites such as Wodonga have also
suffered.[31] Furthermore, in much
smaller towns, a reduction of staff at a local manufacturing business can have
an exponentially larger impact when that business is the major employer in the
region.[32]
2.23
The Committee gathered evidence around the country regarding job losses in
the manufacturing sector. Geelong, in particular, served as a valuable case
study for the Committee about the impact of the GFC on manufacturing in
regional Australia. When the Committee visited Geelong in April 2009, 1000 jobs
had already been lost as a result of the GFC.[33] Like the resources
sector, a downturn and subsequent job losses at major manufacturers affects the
entire supply chain and so, in Geelong, the impact of the GFC on companies such
as Ford, Shell, Godfreys and Alcoa can have a substantial multiplier effect,
impacting supply companies in Geelong and the region.[34]
2.24
The Commonwealth Government provides assistance to the manufacturing
sector in two ways. It provides support for small and medium sized manufacturers
through programs such as Enterprise Connect and AusIndustry’s Small Business
Advisory Program. There has also been support provided to those who have lost
their jobs in the sector through the work of Local Employment Coordinators and Job
Services Australia.
2.25
Specifically, the Government has responded to the needs of Australian manufacturers
on a sectoral basis, establishing various programs and structural adjustment
funds targeted at facilitating innovation in Australia’s manufacturing sector.[35]
2.26
In the medium to long-term, entities such as the Pulp and Paper Industry
Group and the Steel Industry Innovation Council are examining ways in which
their industries can grow.[36] These bodies are
important and are expected to assist manufacturers in Australia to adapt to the
challenges they face. To date, the Government has announced six Industry
Innovation Councils:
n Automotive (19
December 2008);
n Built Environment (2
September 2008);
n Future Manufacturing
(10 October 2008);
n Information
Technology (5 May 2009);
n Textile, Clothing and
Footwear (12 May 2009) and
n Steel (30 July 2009).[37]
2.27
The Committee was interested, however, to explore how governments can
provide rapid responses and financial assistance to manufacturers during sharp
downturns. The Department of Innovation, Industry, Science and Research advised
that immediate assistance can come in the form of structural adjustment funds. Funds
have previously been set up in response to Mitsubishi and Electrolux plant
closures and the Auspine mills in Tasmania.[38]
2.28
The Geelong Investment and Innovation Fund was also cited and discussed
at the Committee’s hearing in Geelong. The Fund was established following a
decision by Ford Australia to restructure its Geelong manufacturing operations.
The fund is a $24 million package with the Commonwealth Government contributing
$15 million, the Victorian Government $6 million and Ford Australia $3 million.[39]
It is designed to support new investment in the region which is expected to
lead to sustainable job opportunities,[40] in the neighbourhood of
one job created for every $30,000 to $40,000 spent.[41]
The Geelong Manufacturing Council has noted the ‘significant and positive
impact’ the fund has had on the Geelong region.[42]
2.29
Despite anecdotal evidence provided to the Committee about the positive
impact the Geelong Investment and Innovation Fund has had on the Geelong
region, it is too early to tell the extent of the impact. While its long-term
effects may be positive, the use of structural adjustment funds as a response
mechanism to a rapidly declining economic environment should be tested. The
Australian National Audit Office has examined the administration of previous
structural adjustment funds but it is not clear if they are an effective tool
to be employed during economic downturns such as this. Therefore, the GFC presents
an opportunity for the Government to evaluate the potential use of structural
adjustment funds in response to economic downturns such as the GFC.
Recommendation 1
|
2.30
|
The Committee recommends that the Government evaluate and
report on the potential use of structural adjustment funds as a response to
economic downturns such as the global financial crisis.
|
2.31
The Committee is also concerned that structural adjustment funds are not
sufficiently flexible in nature to account for the challenges facing small
business during times such as these. The manufacturing sector in Australia has
been changing over time as overseas competition has increased and jobs have
been lost to improved methods of production. As a result, smaller manufacturers
in regional Australia have replaced larger manufacturing companies. It is those
smaller manufacturers, and other small businesses, which have driven economic
and employment growth in regions such as Geelong.[43]
2.32
Structural adjustment funds are targeted in nature and are intended to
assist in cases where large scale job losses will create massive problems in
communities. They may not, however, assist smaller businesses in regional
Australia that are otherwise successful but have suffered a short, sharp shock
because of the GFC and the nature of the industry they operate in.[44]
2.33
The Committee, therefore, encourages the Government, in examining the potential
use of structural adjustment funds in response to economic downturns such as the
GFC, to consider their flexibility and ability to assist small enterprises in
addition to larger companies.
Recommendation 2
|
2.34
|
The Committee recommends that the Government, in examining
the use of structural adjustment funds, consider the flexibility and ability of
structural adjustment funds to assist small enterprises in addition to larger
companies.
|
Tourism sector
2.35
The tourism industry has certainly felt the impact of the GFC, declining
at a worse rate than the rest of the economy.[45] Data presented to the
Committee in August 2009 indicated that there was ‘real deterioration’ in the
domestic tourism market—the ‘backbone of the Australian tourism industry’.[46]
International visitor numbers were also down nearly two per cent in the first
half of 2009.[47] This has resulted in a
marked lack of profitability for the industry as individuals have delayed
holidays and business travel has been reduced.[48]
2.36
It should be noted, however, that the Australian tourism sector is
faring comparatively well when considered against the performance of countries
such as Japan and New Zealand. Around the world, travel is down eight per cent
for 2009, while the travel market in Australia has only declined by 1.7 per
cent in the same period.[49]
2.37
The decline in tourism activity has been particularly felt by regional
areas which have a greater reliance on tourism for employment.[50]
Throughout its public hearings, the Committee canvassed witnesses about the
impact of the GFC on tourism and tourism employment in their region. The
reports it received were mixed.
2.38
On the Gold Coast, tourism contributes approximately $4.2 billion
annually to its economy and generates over 19,000 full-time jobs.[51]
In that region, August 2009 figures indicated that international visitation was
down by 7.8 per cent or 65,000 visitors and domestic overnight visitation was
down 12.8 per cent or 470,000 visitors.[52] This has resulted in
declining operator confidence, cuts to operator marketing and a ‘virtual drying
up of tourism investment and development’ on the Gold Coast.[53]
Conversely, international visitor expenditure and day-trip expenditure has
increased while overnight visit expenditure has decreased.[54]
2.39
In the Northern Territory, domestic and international visitation numbers
declined in the 2007/2008 period, as did visitor expenditure, which decreased
by 12.4 per cent in the same period.[55] As elsewhere, the
greatest impact of the GFC on NT tourism has been declining employment
prospects in the tourism and retail related industries—felt most acutely in
regional towns.[56]
2.40
Western Australia, outside of Perth, has experienced a decline in
tourism activity.[57] This evidence was
supplied to the Committee in July 2009, indicating that the situation had
worsened in South West WA since the Committee’s public hearings there in April.
When in Busselton WA, the Committee was advised that:
…things are very good at the moment. We are talking about the
immediate vicinity of Busselton and not the whole Busselton shire. Most
businesses benefit in this whole Capes to Capes region either directly or
indirectly from tourism…The accommodation providers that are providing for the
top end [clientele] are suffering a bit. The mid-range are not. Our biggest
market in this region for tourism is Perth based metropolitan. We are also
getting more and more overseas visitors. We are actually going the opposite way
to the Australian trend…people in the hospitality industry, in general, are
having the best year that they have had for many years.[58]
2.41
In Victoria, and particularly in Tasmania, discussions surrounding the
tourism sector had a generally positive tone. The Grampians area of Victoria
has noted a decline in international and interstate tourism numbers, but the
region has been buoyed by an increase in intrastate visitors:[59]
We believe that the opportunities for us, even in tough
times, are reasonably good. That is mainly because our biggest market is the
domestic market…We are already finding that we have seen a tendency for our
domestic volume to increase because everyone is staying at home and not
travelling overseas so much. From that point of view, we see there are some
positive signs.[60]
2.42
Tasmania, it would appear, has fared better than most. When the
Committee visited Launceston in April 2009, it was advised that ‘tourism in
Tasmania and in Launceston in particular is going extremely well at the
moment’.[61] In Tasmania, like
Victoria and perhaps even WA, domestic tourism has carried the industry during
this period:
A very small proportion of our ongoing tourism business is
internationally based or comes from international visitation. Figures released
in the last two weeks show an increase of 12 per cent in visitation but, more
importantly, an increase of 19 per cent in per visitor spend. To put that into
practical language, instead of people from Sydney and Melbourne, which are our
main drawing areas, going overseas, they are taking a holiday to an island.[62]
2.43
The Committee often received conflicting reports during the course of
this inquiry and particularly relating to tourism. Part of this has to do with
the rapidly changing and available data, as figures or evidence relayed in the
first half of 2009 did not always match data released in the latter part of the
year. It also reflects the difference between national data and region specific
data. There are always challenges when interpreting data, however, the story
which emerged from the written and oral evidence was varied enough to warrant
follow-up discussion.
2.44
The Committee raised this issue with the Tourism and Transport Forum
during its public hearing in Sydney and was advised that Tasmania, South
Australia and Victoria were performing well in the domestic tourism market and
that the strength of the industry in different regions was ‘determined largely
by how dependent [a region is] on domestic versus international tourism’.[63]
2.45
The Tourism and Transport Forum also argued that ‘most people are
mistaking volume for yield’.[64] The tourism industry,
the Committee was advised, has been dramatically cutting profit margins and
prices which has resulted in good volume but poor yield. Once discounting has
occurred, the only other place to cut costs is in labour and that is why
employment numbers are down in the tourism industry.[65]
2.46
Employment numbers are down in those regions reliant on international
tourism. Far North Queensland and the Northern Territory in particular are
heavily reliant on international tourism and in Far North Queensland, August
2009 employment figures indicated that the rate of unemployment there was the
highest in the country at nearly 10 per cent.[66]
2.47
Differentiating between domestic and international tourism helps account
for some of the mixed messages received by the Committee. As RET points out,
often tourism is referred to as ‘almost an amorphous single entity’ but in fact
it is a sector with a range of components. In addition to leisure tourism,
there are business events, major events and study tourism as well.[67]
As a result, ‘some parts of the industry can be performing quite strongly and
well while other parts are having particularly difficult times’.[68]
2.48
The Committee heard that this is why the Government has responded to the
crisis with a suite of measures which apply to a range of industries and a
range of sector sub-sets. In regards to the tourism sector, it has been a ‘net
beneficiary’ of the Government’s cash stimulus and the Committee has been
advised that the ‘injections of fiscal stimulus into the economy have been
flowing through some tourism establishments’.[69] The Government’s second
stimulus package targeting infrastructure spending is also expected to have
‘some benefit for tourism’.[70]
2.49
Likewise, the Regional and Local Community Infrastructure Program is
funding projects ‘targeted primarily at improved tourism infrastructure’[71]
and the Jobs Fund has supplied money for tourism related projects.
2.50
More specifically, tourism businesses have access to the TQUAL Grants
funding program administered by AusIndustry. TQUAL Grants support initiatives
that:
n develop innovative
product, services or systems within the tourism industry;
n contribute directly
to long-term economic development in the host region; and
n develop or support
high quality visitor services and experiences.[72]
2.51
The TQUAL Grants program opened in early 2009 and RET reports that over
four hundred applications were received:
It was massively oversubscribed for the amount that is
available There was $8.5 million available for two years. We had 491 bids. The
total, if all bids were to be considered, would be many hundreds of millions of
dollars. And of course it is a highly competitive process. But it shows the
need, the interest and the enthusiasm in regional and rural Australia for
having some support to help them develop further the tourism product and
service in the areas.[73]
2.52
The Committee notes the strong demand for the TQUAL Grants program and
recommends that the Government consider increasing the quantum of funding for
the Program, while ensuring that regional tourism businesses receive a
proportionate share of the grant funding provided the applications adhere to
the program guidelines.
Recommendation 3
|
2.53
|
The Committee recommends that the Government increase the
quantum of funding for the TQUAL Grants program, while ensuring that regional
tourism businesses receive a proportionate share of the grant funding,
provided the applications adhere to the program guidelines.
|
2.54
Tourism businesses also have access to other government programs
administered by various departments. For example, small and medium sized
tourism businesses have been among the major beneficiaries of the Export Market
Development Grants Scheme, administered by Austrade.[74]
RET advised the Committee that it has recently secured agreement that regional
tourism organisations can bid for these grants. This will help those
organisations to market offshore.[75]
2.55
Like each of the industries discussed in this chapter, employees in the
tourism sector who have lost their jobs as a result of this downturn have
access to support through Job Services Australia and the services of Local
Employment Coordinators assigned to regions reliant on tourism—particularly Far
North Queensland.
2.56
The tourism industry comprises a broad range of businesses and
employees, and as such, government assistance for the sector has been equally
broad. While the tourism sector has received assistance through a variety of
programs, the Committee is concerned that the funding is not being directed in
a manner which will ensure a particular outcome. Certainly, the money is
supporting jobs and assisting business through a tough period but looking
forward, it is important that there is coordination in the strategic planning,
as there are ‘so many diverse players within tourism, all of whom need to act
together cooperatively to create the one experience for the tourist’.[76]
2.57
The Tourism and Transport Forum has suggested that destination planning
is the appropriate approach. For example:
You might say, ‘We’re going to build up the Gold Coast and
the hinterland of South-East Queensland as a nature based destination
attracting markets from the Middle East and India.’ That would be quite a
legitimate strategy to pursue. How do you actually implement that? That comes
down to things like planning in Surfers Paradise to make sure that three- or
four-bedroom apartments are being built.[77]
2.58
Destination planning requires a high level of cooperation between
federal, state and local governments, various industries and across government
portfolios,[78] but it may avoid
scenarios whereby a grant for the private sector in a particular tourism
destination ‘is not totally inconsistent with the branding, marketing and
future direction’[79] of that destination.
2.59
The Committee has been advised that RET is ‘very mindful of trying to
work across the whole raft of government programs’[80]
and there is precedence for this type of cooperation. The National Landscapes
Program:
…provides a framework for regional and cross-jurisdictional
collaboration to ensure that the visitor experience promised by the destination
brand is delivered to the target market.[81]
The TQUAL Grants process will encourage
cooperation between state and federal governments as state tourism
organisations have been asked to assess applications as part of the process.[82]
The Committee is also aware that coordination between government and the
private sector has been a primary consideration when developing the National
Long-Term Tourism Strategy.[83]
2.60
Given the current levels of cooperation between federal, state and local
governments and the current levels of stimulus being provided by governments, now
would be an ideal time to encourage greater coordinated planning in the tourism
sector.
2.61
The Tourism and Transport Forum has suggested that coordinated planning
should come in the form of prioritisation:
If you do a little bit all over the place you do not raise
the quality of a destination, which means you get no extra people going there
and they are certainly spending no more for a better experience. If you
concentrate that effort in one destination, you change the nature of the
destination, you get more people in and they spend more. That is not to say
that you should ignore everywhere else, but we have, I think, 80 tourism
regions for which we have separate marketing campaigns. We can identify 20 that
account for 90 per cent of tourism expenditure. Not all regions are the same.
If you started focusing on those 20, first of all you would be getting a lot
more bang for your buck. [84]
2.62
Denying funding to projects in areas which are not considered a priority
will result in some regions missing out on funding that creates jobs and boosts
local economies. It may also deny some regions the opportunity to grow and
develop as tourist destinations. However, regions which already have a strong
focus on tourism could benefit from a coordinated planning approach.
2.63
The Committee is aware that state, territory and the Commonwealth
Government tourism ministers have been working towards a ‘more coordinated
relationship…across government’.[85] The Committee supports
greater coordination between the tourism departments of state, territory and
the Commonwealth Government and believes that the Development of the National
Long-Term Tourism Strategy provides an opportunity to consider how states and
regions can further improve their cooperation on identifying key tourism
markets and setting priorities for marketing those locations.
Recommendation 4
|
2.64
|
The Committee recommends that the National Long-Term Tourism
Strategy should consider how states and regions can further improve their
cooperation on identifying key tourism markets and setting priorities for
marketing those locations.
|
2.65
Strategic cooperation, it has been suggested, may also lessen the impact
of the GFC on the regional tourism industry through the introduction of a joint
industry and government marketing campaign to be used where there is matching
funding provided by industry or state tourism bodies:
…a joint industry/government tactical marketing fund of up to
$40 million per year over two years communicating Australian tourism’s price
competitiveness to international visitors is an appropriate response to market
conditions...It would be used for ‘tactical’ campaigns marketing competitive
tourism packages, such as airline and hotel discounts. In the short-term, this
would be more effective than general destination promotion, driving bookings and
expenditure and supporting jobs. A $40 million fund would generate $80 million
in matched co-operative marketing.[86]
2.66
Central to this recommendation is the notion that, at present, targeted
marketing campaigns are more effective than general destination promotion. This
point was echoed by Gold Coast Tourism which is concerned about the kind of
marketing activities undertaken by Tourism Australia:
Woolworths do not promote the history of tomatoes or the sun
in which they grow. They promote tomatoes, the kilo price and where you go and
buy them…we are calling for less esoteric and aspirational marketing, getting
down to things which people can relate to, where they can see value for money,
see what the price is and see how they get there.[87]
2.67
The Committee supports the use of a more strategic approach to tourism
marketing, especially during times of acute economic stress in the industry. Tourism
Australia should, therefore, consider a strategic approach to its campaigns to
ensure priority is given to markets affected by the GFC and those that will
deliver the best return for the taxpayer’s marketing dollar.
Retail sector
2.68
The retail sector, like tourism, accounts for a wide range of businesses
and therefore, the impact of the GFC on the retail sector has varied. The
retail sector has also been affected to varying degrees depending on the region
in question.
2.69
Those regions which have suffered downturns as a result of poor
conditions in sectors such as mining, manufacturing or tourism have experienced
corresponding downturns in their retail sectors. Job losses in Broken Hill’s
mining sector, for example, account for the evidence received by the Committee
there suggesting that ‘retail has been hit heavily, especially in the
discretionary spending’.[88]
2.70
Businesses which rely on discretionary spending have felt the effects more
than others in the retail sector. A witness in Busselton noted:
Not surprisingly it depends almost entirely on how
discretionary the spending is. Food and beverage sales are having their best
year yet. Some of our hotels, pubs and supermarkets are doing well, but our
discretionary spending shops are really struggling now and beginning to lay off
staff. It is quite a mixed picture.[89]
Indeed, when discretionary spending is
separated from total sales figures, the indication is that discretionary
spending has been weak since March 2008.[90]
2.71
The retail sector has also experienced periods of highs and lows during
the 2008/09 financial year. Initial, sharp declines in retail sales during the
latter half of 2008 were followed by increases in retail spending during the
Christmas 2008 period—largely due to the Government’s pre-Christmas stimulus
package.[91] Recent figures suggest
that the impact of the stimulus package has begun to wash through the economy
and customers are now retreating from stores.[92]
2.72
It is also interesting, and somewhat perplexing to note that in
September 2009, retail spending was in a decline, while business confidence was
at a six-year high, with particular improvement showing in the retail sector
amongst others.[93] Each new survey and
index reveals a different and changing picture, which has been one of the
challenges inherent in this inquiry. It is safe to surmise, however, that the
GFC has negatively impacted the retail sector, particularly those businesses
relying on discretionary spending.
2.73
The primary action undertaken by the Government in support of the retail
sector has been the distribution of bonus payments to households across
Australia as part of the Government’s economic stimulus plan. To date, it would
appear that these payments ‘have done something to hold up retail demand’;[94]
however, the retail trade remains weak.[95]
Construction sector
2.74
Perhaps more than any other sector of the economy discussed in this
section, the construction industry can be ‘notably affected by the economic
cycle’[96] and particularly the
economic conditions created by the GFC. The lack of available credit resulting
from the crisis has impacted on heavily geared sectors such as commercial and
medium-density property construction,[97] and the declining output
from the nation’s mines, factories, office blocks and shopping centres means
that the ‘incentive to construct additional capacity is weak’.[98]
2.75
Lower capacity utilisation rates are also coinciding with a decline in
business investment, resulting in a decrease in construction activity to expand
productive capacity. A direct result of this decreasing activity is
unemployment and it has been forecast that employment in the construction sector
‘may decline by 8.2 per cent over the next three years’.[99]
At the end of August 2009, the sector had registered its 17th
consecutive month of declining employment.[100]
2.76
There are some positive figures that have come out of this sector to
date. Housing construction activity is low but has remained resilient. In the
July/August 2009 period, the Housing Industry Association Performance of
Construction Index rose 2.9 points, indicating an improvement in house building
and a stabilisation in the decline of apartment construction.[101]
It is expected that population demands and low interest rates will result in
‘an improvement in the number of housing starts’.[102]
2.77
Engineering construction has slowed but there is indication that certain
projects in the mining, oil and gas and ports and energy sectors, coupled with
government spending will assist in maintaining a strong project agenda, albeit
at lower levels than previous years.[103] Commercial construction
is generally down but the Commonwealth Government’s Education Revolution
spending program is driving building in the health and community services
sector of commercial construction.[104]
2.78
This Australia-wide snapshot is consistent with the evidence received by
the Committee in regional Australia. Commercial construction in regional
Australia has slowed. In Townsville, Myer intended to spend $150 million on a
new store but that plan has been shelved for two years, as has a mall project
worth about $200 million and a cruise ship terminal development.[105]
In WA, very little commercial construction activity was occurring in Geraldton
in April 2009;[106] however, the Oakajee
deep water port project is expected to generate ‘numerous jobs in construction’
in the area.[107]
2.79
Residential construction drives the economy of many regions in
Australia. Those visited by the Committee, particularly South West WA and the
Gold Coast have suffered from serious downturns in their property development
sectors. In Busselton, the Committee was advised that:
The impact on the residential construction industry [has
been] immediate. I think people forget how important that is as an industry in
rapid growth areas. For instance, I would estimate that in the greater Bunbury
area residential construction has gone down by about 70 per cent, which has
probably caused the loss of about 1,500 jobs from bricklayers, plasterers,
tilers and so on.[108]
2.80
On the Gold Coast, commercial and residential construction has dropped
significantly as a result of the crisis. Indeed, the Gold Coast felt the
effects of the crisis earlier than most parts of Australia, impacting severely
on all of its economy and particularly its construction sector, which virtually
ceased:
…at the beginning of 2007…the secondary financial market that
had built on the Gold Coast collapsed. That was funding early stage development
projects which were underpinning the construction sector…What we saw in
January, February and March 2007 was no money in the city because the financial
sector, the providers of funds to developers and the construction sector, dried
up…and a significant cash shortage [ensued] around March, April, May. This
created an immediate outflow of employment…The rest of Australia started to
move into it around September, October, but we were there nearly nine months
earlier.[109]
2.81
Housing construction on the Gold Coast has slowed but the ‘dwelling
sector is probably the most robust because there is still a demand for that
type of housing generated in part by incentives for first home buyers’.[110]
Construction on community infrastructure has, as a result of government
stimulus, also helped maintain construction activity in the regions.[111]
2.82
In much the same way that the Government’s cash payments to households
helped the retail sector through the first part of 2009, government support
provided through the Nation Building Economic Stimulus Plan has assisted the
construction sector and filled the gap left by the private sector when it
exited the market.
2.83
There are four components of the Nation Building Economic Stimulus Plan
that directly affect the construction sector:
n Education;
n Community
infrastructure;
n Road and rail; and
n Housing.
2.84
The Building the Education Revolution program is expected to provide
builders and associated tradespeople with work constructing and rebuilding
primary and secondary school infrastructure throughout Australia. The
construction of other community infrastructure, such as community halls and
recreation centres, has commenced with funding provided directly to local
governments around Australia through the Regional and Local Community
Infrastructure Program. The Government has also increased and brought forward
funding for roads, rail and community housing in response to the crisis.
2.85
Much of the initial evidence taken by this Committee was done so in the
early part of 2009. At that point, it was still unclear to some in the regions
how some parts of this stimulus package would affect them. In a submission
received by the Committee in early April, businesses in the Central Murray
region of Australia noted that ‘a number of components of the stimulus packages
(Community Infrastructure Program and Building Education Revolution) have not
yet had any impact and are unlikely to for another 3 to 12 months.’[112]
2.86
By mid year, evidence is suggesting that these stimuli have assisted in
slowing the decline in the construction sector and of equal importance,
evidence provided to this Committee suggests that the Nation Building Economic
Stimulus Plan is having a positive effect on employment in the construction
industry:
If these capital works programs continue to operate over a
number of years, they will greatly assist the City of Mandurah to maintain its
infrastructure provision role, which in turn will maintain employment in the
construction sectors. This in turn will have a positive flow-on effect to other
industry sectors;[113] and
The $21,000 first home buyers grant "has saved a lot of
people from being out of work".[114]
Primary industries
2.87
The Committee received evidence from three primary industry sectors,
which will be discussed in this section:
n Agriculture;
n Forestry; and
n Fisheries.
Agriculture
2.88
The GFC has occurred at a time
when resilience in parts of regional Australia is ‘at an all-time low’ as a
result of prolonged drought.[115] The drought has
significantly reduced yields and farm incomes and as a result, ‘the effect of
the drought has, to date, been a more significant factor than the global
financial crisis’.[116]
2.89
Nevertheless, the GFC has had short and long term impacts on the sector.
Commodity prices, particularly of discretionary items such as wool and dairy,
decreased immediately at the onset of the GFC and are expected to be volatile
for some time.[117] The departure from the
market of non-bank lenders has led to credit access problems for some farmers,
particularly in Tasmania.[118] Buyers have also been
troubled by limited access to credit, thereby creating uncertainty in the
international trading environment and lowering farmers’ returns.[119]
2.90
Conversely, the GFC did depreciate the Australian dollar (against the
American) thereby providing support for commodity export earnings and lower
interest rates have provided some relief to farmers.[120]
As the GFC continues, the agricultural sector is expected to be impacted by
increased protectionist measures as countries support buy domestic campaigns.
The initial retreat in discretionary commodity prices is being borne out by
decreased demand for premium products in the market and a move towards cheaper
staples. The National Farmers Federation is also concerned that rural land
values may decrease.[121]
Forestry
2.91
Much of Australia’s forestry products are exported to countries such as
Japan, the Republic of Korea and China. Downturns in those economies as a
result of the GFC led to an immediate decrease in demand for forestry products.
In the export woodchip market, for example:
…it was immediate from Japan. We had boats told they were not
coming. There were boats that were scheduled to come in and take woodchip off
the docks, and they said these boats would not be coming. It was that
immediate.[122]
2.92
Domestic sales have also decreased with reduced demand for solid wood
products as wholesalers reduce their inventory.[123]
In Victoria, falling international demand for woodchips coincided with falling
investor demand for managed investment schemes used to fund forest plantations,
resulting in the collapse of companies such as Great Southern at a considerable
loss to investors.[124]
2.93
Investors have lost money and employees have lost jobs as a result of
the downturn in the forestry sector. In April 2009, mills in Tasmania shut down
for ten days to avoid unnecessary redundancies. Despite this, timber mills have
downsized in North East Tasmania with several hundred jobs lost.[125]
Fisheries
2.94
The Committee received very little evidence regarding the impact of the
GFC on the fisheries sector. Only in Geraldton was the Committee able to
discuss the fisheries sector, and in that instance it related directly to the
lobster industry. Lobster is a discretionary product, so it is little surprise
that the lobster fishery has experienced a contraction in demand. Many of the
Geraldton Fisherman’s Coop’s markets were in the United States, Japan and
Western Europe, all of which have been severely impacted by the downturn.[126]
As a result, people in Geraldton ‘cannot remember…a situation this bad in the
marketplace’.[127]
2.95
What has been described as a ‘short-term squeeze’[128]
is coinciding with longer-term structural adjustment that is taking place in
the industry. In much the same way that the manufacturing sector has undergone
adjustment over time, the lobster fishery has experienced a long period of
rationalisation whereby the technological capacity of the fleet was increased
while the size of the fleet has decreased—almost by half.[129]
The GFC has effectively meant that a reduced, but efficient fleet now waits to
see if lobster markets will return.
2.96
While lobster fishermen in WA ride out this difficult period, the
Commonwealth Government is offering a variety of assistance programs to primary
industries in Australia. The Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry
detailed for the Committee a number of programs already in place to support the
agricultural sector in particular. These programs are focused on increasing
productivity and investment in the sector and preparing it for climate change.
In direct response to the GFC, the Government cites its Nation Building and
Jobs Plan as well as the Rural Financial Counselling Service and the Farm
Management Deposits Scheme as programs which will assist the agricultural
sector through this difficult period. Direct cash stimulus payments are also
expected to be of assistance.[130]
2.97
Most importantly, from an industry perspective, is the boost in
investment in regional infrastructure which is expected as part of the
Government’s Nation Building Economic Stimulus Plan. Many representatives of
regional economies that rely, in part, on primary industries cited greater
infrastructure spending by government as the primary form of assistance
required during this period and into the future:
The economic infrastructure investment—we are talking about
roads, rail, ports, telecommunications and water infrastructure—is an
incredibly key element in enabling agriculture to extend its contribution to
the Australian economy, particularly to capitalise on the opportunities that we
think are there and will continue to escalate over the medium to long term.[131]
2.98
In Busselton, representatives of the South West region stressed
repeatedly the need for increased transport infrastructure spending to expand
the economic capacity of the region:
I am going to sound like a broken record…at our board level
there has been this coalescing of views, whether you are the shire president of
Donnybrook-Balingup, the shire of Collie or the shire of Capel, with regard to
the significance of the port, the capacity to expand the port in a timely way
and to ensure connectivity.[132]
2.99
Those from the forestry sector who spoke with the Committee support the
Government’s efforts to combat the effects of the GFC, but noted:
If Tasmanian timber can be used in schools and new housing,
if the earth-moving equipment of forest contractors can be redeployed for roads
and if we can encourage small businesses to take up new investments, this could
lessen the impact.[133]
2.100
Certainly, the Government’s investment in regional schools, community
and transport infrastructure is expected to do just that. In NSW, the Business
Chamber had initial concerns that local contractors may miss out on work
related to the government stimulus package but later confirmed that no chamber
members have had that experience.[134]
Banking and lending sector
Introduction
2.101
Australia is lucky in that the GFC has impacted its banking sector less
than in other countries. This has much to do with the strong regulation of the
banking industry by the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA),
whose close supervision and strong approach to risk management has resulted in an
Australian banking sector that is more stable than those in overseas countries.
Nevertheless, Australia’s lending institutions have not entirely escaped the
effects of the GFC. Its impact has been felt by banks, non-bank lenders, mutual
ADIs[135] and the businesses that
utilise their services.
Impact of the GFC on the regional banking and lending sector
2.102
Representatives of the Australian banking sector advised the Committee
that despite tough economic conditions internationally:
Australian banks have remained well capitalised, with strong
lending books, as well as being profitable. They have also continued to lend
despite tight and volatile credit markets and increased costs of funds.[136]
2.103
Despite these assurances, the Committee has received evidence from
around Australia which suggests that banks’ lending criteria have become more
stringent since the onset of the GFC:
…Many local residents are more careful about their borrowings
as are the banks with their lending practices (i.e. Loan to Valuation Ratios
(LVR) have been reduced by most major banks for both residential and commercial
loans).[137]
2.104
It is difficult for the Committee to confirm the veracity of these
claims but the Committee has received enough anecdotal evidence to suggest that
banks’ risk profile may have changed as a result of the crisis. The banks do
admit that ‘there is a limit to the amount of risk and debt the banking
industry can provide to a business’[138] and there have been
highly geared companies which, as a result of the GFC, have been unable to secure
additional credit.
2.105
Part of the perception that banks have reduced access to credit for
business in regional Australia may be related to confusion about the definition
of a bank. In Geelong, for example, evidence received by the Committee (and
partially quoted above) noted that manufacturing businesses are ‘finding it
difficult to get any financial accommodation from the banks’, however, that
evidence goes on to state that ‘GE Commercial Finance has really tightened its
requirements’.[139]
2.106
GE Commercial Finance is not a bank, it is a non-bank lender. Non-bank
lenders have been hit particularly hard by the GFC. Their inability to raise
reasonably priced money on wholesale funding markets has resulted in increased
credit costs for their customers[140] and in some cases,
non-bank lenders have exited the market altogether.[141]
2.107
Mutual ADIs (authorised deposit-taking institutions) are perhaps the
most prevalent lending institutions in regional Australia.[142]
Mutual ADIs are financial institutions owned by their customers and include
credit unions, building societies and friendly societies. Mutual ADIs rely
heavily on deposits for funding in order to function but, over time, they have
increased their mortgage lending ‘by tapping securitisation markets’ which
‘virtually closed down’ as a result of the GFC.[143]
2.108
Mutual ADIs are active in regional Australia but they do very little
business lending; however like the banks, mutual ADIs report that they have not
contracted their business lending as a result of the GFC:
…commercial lending is not a major feature of our operations,
but those who do it are particularly located. They have not reported to us that
they have contracted their lending at all, but nor are they seeking to widely
expand that lending either. Those who are operating in the communities in which
they have always operated and provided that commercial or small business
lending are continuing to do so…[144]
2.109
The availability of credit is vital to the continuing prosperity of the
Australian economy. The Commonwealth Government, therefore, moved quickly at
the onset of the GFC to support Australia’s lending institutions during this
period. On 28 November 2008, the Government implemented the Bank Guarantee
Scheme for a period of three years to protect the funds of financial
institutions and to engender confidence and stability in the banking sector.
2.110
Under this voluntary scheme, deposits over $1m per customer and wholesale
funding liabilities are guaranteed by the Government upon payment of a fee
based on the credit rating of the institution. The lower the credit rating the
higher the fee charged. Institutions such as banks with the higher AAA credit
rating are charged a lesser fee than the lower rated credit unions and building
societies. For example, institutions that are AAA to AA rated, such as banks, are
charged 70 basis points to access the scheme. Lower A+ to A rated institutions are
charged 100 basis points and BBB+ and below (and unrated) institutions are
charged 150 basis points.
2.111
Although the Bank Guarantee Scheme is providing a level of stability and
security across the banking sector, the Committee has heard concerns that the
differential pricing structure has meant that mutual ADIs that have not opted
to utilise the Government Bank Guarantee Scheme are finding it difficult to
attract large deposits, because depositors are seeking institutions that have
the security of the Government backing.[145]
2.112
The Scheme also demands that users have a credit rating—something which
most mutual ADIs do not have. The mutuals are concerned that an agency rating
will become a requirement for them and if their rating is lower than a banks,
competition may be stifled in the marketplace as consumers choose to work with
higher rated agencies.[146]
2.113
Competition, or the lack of it, is being cited by mutual ADIs as the
primary concern surrounding the Government’s Bank Guarantee Scheme. They argue
that competition in the banking sector has diminished, with less market share
being experienced by the credit unions, building societies and regional banks
despite the departure of non-bank lenders from the market. Mutual ADIs report
that it is the major banks that have increased their market share because of
the cost benefit they derive from the Government’s Bank Guarantee Scheme.[147]
2.114
The Committee is aware that the Senate Economics References Committee
tabled a report on 17 September 2009, in which differential pricing within the
Government’s Bank Guarantee Scheme was examined. In that report, the Senate
Committee found that the markets were not pricing all guaranteed debt
identically and therefore the Government should ‘review the need to apply
differential premia for ADIs with different ratings’.[148]
2.115
The Committee also understands that the Government has advised the mutual
ADI sector that its Bank Guarantee Scheme is ‘under constant review’.[149]
Representatives of the mutual ADI sector observe that:
…we are yet to see any movement, although we are actively
making suggestions to the government about ways we believe funding could be
adjusted to better serve the interests of competition.[150]
2.116
Given the degree to which regional Australia relies on mutual ADIs, the
Committee is concerned about the potential for decreased competition in the
regional banking sector. Like its Senate colleagues, this Committee also
encourages the Government to review its differential pricing structure within
its Bank Guarantee Scheme.
2.117
Competition in the banking sector has suffered as a result of the GFC.
As Treasury states, ‘the global financial crisis has affected the competitive
dynamics of the banking system’:[151]
…with investor demand for residential mortgage-backed
securities (RMBS) drying up in late 2007 and early 2008, smaller lenders have
found it more difficult to raise funds with which to finance new lending at
competitive rates of interest. As a result, from mid-2007, a number of smaller
financial institutions were forced to exit the market, merge with stronger
entities, or relinquish market share to entities with more diversified sources
of funding.[152]
2.118
Prior to the GFC, the securitisation markets allowed smaller lenders to
‘better manage their capital base and to continue to increase home lending and
compete with the major banks.’[153] The GFC effectively
closed these markets, and in response, the Government committed to investing up
to $16 billion in residential mortgage backed securities (RMBS) to ‘support
continued competition from smaller authorised deposit-taking institutions and
non-ADI lenders throughout the GFC’.[154]
2.119
To ensure a continued supply of affordable credit for smaller lenders
once the Government has completed its RMBS purchasing round, some participants
of this inquiry have recommended the introduction of an Australian mortgage
bond program or regional housing bond scheme similar to Canada’s Mortgage Bond (CMB)
Program.[155] (A brief outline of the
Program can be found in Appendix D).
2.120
Participants of this inquiry have argued that a similar scheme for Australia
and perhaps regional Australia only, would assist Australians ‘to access home
loans throughout economic cycles’.[156] It is suggested that an
Australian program would operate in a similar fashion to the Canadian one,
whereby an accredited lender (perhaps in regional Australia, say Bendigo Bank)
writes loans (with very tight criteria) to home buyers. That lender would then
take those loans and “warehouse” them with another facility—perhaps a larger
lending institution. The Australian Government would then use those loans to
create bonds, with a government guarantee attached, and sell them to investors.
It is anticipated that the bonds would be insured by either a government or
private insurer. The sale of the bonds to investors creates the funds which are
made available to lenders to write more loans.[157]
2.121
The argument for introducing a similar program in Australia focuses on
creating greater competition in the lending market through the increased availability
of funds for smaller lenders and the generation of lower costs for lenders and
borrowers.[158] When queried on the
Canadian Scheme and its implications for introduction in Australia, the
Treasury advised the Committee that there is evidence which suggests that the
Canadian scheme has resulted in cost savings for larger lenders.[159]
Treasury noted however, that there has been no substantive evidence to suggest
that Canadian mortgage borrowers have benefited from reduced interest rates.[160]
Indeed, the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) notes that the Canadian scheme did
not stop Canadian mortgage interest rates from rising following the onset of
the GFC.[161]
2.122
Most importantly, the RBA found evidence that:
…smaller lenders may have retained the small cost-savings
from the program as increased margins rather than passing them on to borrowers.[162]
2.123
The Treasury has also raised concerns that a similar scheme in Australia
could have ‘the potential to create moral hazard’ because a higher than optimal
degree of risk taking may be encouraged.[163] Furthermore, permanent
government support for the RMBS market ‘has the potential to distort price
signals in financial markets and the efficient allocation of capital’[164]
meaning a less risky investment would be more attractive to investors. Evidence
from the Canadian scheme indicates that the government-backed securities sector
has grown at the expense of the corporate and securitisation sectors of the
Canadian bond market.[165]
2.124
Of course, the other way to drive down cost is through competition.
ABACUS believes that the introduction of a Canadian mortgage bond style scheme
in Australia would assist in supporting competition in the banking
sector—particularly in regional Australia.[166] Evidence regarding Canada’s
scheme as an effective facilitator of competition is mixed. Evaluation of the
scheme reveals that [the scheme]:
…increased the availability of mortgage funding for smaller
lenders in the five years following its introduction in 2001…[and]…played an
important role in maintaining smaller lenders’ access to funds throughout the
turbulence in international capital markets, and may have even facilitated the
entrance of new smaller players over this period.[167]
2.125
Conversely, the Treasury notes that ‘Canada continues to have a
highly-concentrated banking sector…notwithstanding two decades of government
intervention’.[168] When the Committee
queried smaller lenders about declining competition in regional Australia, it
was advised that Australian mutual ADIs had had a marginal decline in market
share since the onset of the GFC, but had not been able to take up any of the
excess capacity that was available when non-bank lenders exited the market.[169]
It is suggested that Australian mutual ADIs have been growing but not at the
rate of the larger banks.[170]
2.126
The Committee also notes comments by the RBA made in a submission to the
House of Representatives Standing Committee on Economics regarding the need for
government intervention in the RMBS market to foster competition:
While it is true that lenders relying on securitisation have
lost market share in recent months, it has always been the case that some
phases of the economic cycle favour some forms of financing more than others.
Securitisation has been strongly favoured over the previous five years of very
low global interest rates; now it is at a disadvantage. Our view of recent
events is that they are cyclical in nature rather than a permanent change to
the structure of the market, in the sense that when market conditions settle,
securitisation will pick up again. As such, it would be premature at this stage
to embark on proposals such as the setting up of new government bodies to
support certain forms of financial activity.[171]
2.127
In analysing this issue, the Committee is cognisant of the needs of
regional Australians. The Committee would only support the introduction of
such a scheme in Australia if there was clear evidence that regional
Australians were worse off because of smaller lenders’ access to funds
(resulting in higher mortgage borrowing costs for regional Australians) over
the long-term economic cycle.
Accessing credit in regional Australia
2.128
Most businesses need credit. In a growing economy the demand for credit
is often driven by a desire for growth. In a slowing economy credit is required
for cash flow.[172] This downturn has been
somewhat unique because the GFC has resulted in a general lack of liquidity
which has impacted the availability and cost of credit for individuals and
business. This section will specifically examine credit issues for business.
2.129
Throughout this inquiry, the Committee has received evidence suggesting
that businesses in regional Australia are experiencing difficulties accessing
credit.[173] The NSW Business
Chamber, for example, conducted a survey of its members, which noted that in
the three month period to March 2009, 30 per cent of respondents, most of whom
are in regional NSW, thought it had become harder to access credit.[174]
2.130
The difficulty lending institutions have faced accessing wholesale
credit markets has clearly had a flow-on effect for businesses, as available
credit has constricted. The GFC has also curtailed lenders’ appetite for risk,
and a as result, ‘some loans that would have been offered prior to the GFC are
no longer readily available.’[175]
2.131
Banking institutions provide credit, but so too do other businesses and
during this crisis, suppliers have reduced their payment terms thereby putting
further pressure on regional businesses.[176] Where lenders have been
willing to provide credit, the cost has also increased.
2.132
The increased cost of credit in the form of higher interest rates or
increased collateral has been a common experience facing business owners in
regional Australia. Thirty three per cent of respondents to a NSW Business
Chamber’s survey found that ‘credit had got more expensive to access’.[177]
The Committee has also heard that interest rates being charged are so high that
the viability of some projects is threatened.[178]
2.133
Credit costs for businesses have increased because lending institutions
are changing the way they handle risk[179] and because some
non-bank lenders have exited the market:
Those non-bank lenders who would have, say, lent money to
people who we would not have now exited. That means there are a group of
businesses and institutions that are not getting money. That is because prior
to the global financial crisis they would not have met banks’ risk profiles and
banks would not have lent to them.[180]
2.134
Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) research shows that business
lending fell by just under 15 per cent between January and February this year,
which may in part be attributed to banks tightening their lending criteria.[181]
Although the banks and other ADIs such as credit unions and building societies
have asserted that they are still lending,[182] the experience of
business owners in regional Australia seems to contradict this:
Certainly they tell us that they are finding it very
difficult to get any financial accommodation from the banks since the global
financial crisis became evident. The banks say that that is not the case; that
there is plenty of money around, and they will lend. But the bank staff
themselves, on a confidential basis, will tell you that their lending criteria
have changed dramatically and they require a much more rigorous assessment of
projects, particularly development projects.[183]
2.135
The higher cost of obtaining credit has not only limited the capacity of
many small and medium sized businesses to weather this global downturn, but in
some cases has been the catalyst to cease trading. The Government has
acknowledged this and taken the following action:
n establishment in
March 2009 of a small business complaints clearing house within the office of
the Minister for Small Business, Independent Contractors and the Service
Economy. Complaints about access to and cost of bank finance are referred for
resolution through the Australian Bankers Association to senior management at
the particular bank concerned;[184] and
n activation from 1
September 2009 of Ozcar, a taxpayer-funded financing scheme to provide
liquidity support to car dealer financiers.[185]
2.136
The Committee was advised by the Australian Bankers Association (in
July), that the use of the small business complaints line in the Minister for
Small Business’ office has been ‘extremely low…somewhere in the order of 57 to
60 contacts’, which would indicate that ‘either people do not know about it or
that the incidence of credit problems is low’.[186]
2.137
Given the volume of anecdotal evidence received by the Committee
suggesting that credit has become more difficult to access, the Committee is
inclined to believe that people have not been adequately informed about the
existence of the Small Business Credit Complaints clearing house phone line.
When queried about the lack of knowledge in the community regarding the
complaints line, the Department of Innovation, Industry, Science and Research
conceded that more publicity should lead to a greater level of response.[187]
Greater response is more likely to occur now that the complaints line is being
made accessible through the Small Business Support Line, which acts as a link
to information and referral services on a wide range of business issues.[188]
2.138
Awareness of government assistance was also an issue raised in relation
to Ozcar. Business representatives in Broken Hill advised the Committee that
car dealers there found information about Ozcar ‘not easily understood’.[189]
The Committee understands that it will always be a challenge for government to
ensure that information about its programs is being adequately communicated and
understood in the community. However, communication is an important component of
any government program and therefore, the Committee expects that the Government
is making every effort to educate the public about the assistance available to
them, particularly during a period of crisis such as currently being
experienced.
2.139
The need for a program such as Ozcar illustrates the credit problem
facing businesses throughout Australia. Ozcar was designed to assist car
dealers as non-bank lenders such as GE Credit exited the market after the onset
of the GFC. When the Australian Bankers’ Association advised the Committee that
their members have ‘continued to lend despite tight and volatile credit
markets’[190] this does not contradict
evidence the Committee has received around Australia suggesting that credit has
been hard to access. Credit from traditional lending institutions, such as
banks and other authorised ADIs may have increased in cost and they may be less
likely to assume greater risk, but it is the lack of alternate credit sources,
which may account for the apparent lack of available credit in regional
Australia.
Business and downturns
2.140
Many business operators in regional Australia have never run a business
during a downturn or have never experienced one of this magnitude.[191]
Suddenly, they have been forced to respond to a rapid decline in demand for
products and services as well as a sudden lack of available credit which has
traditionally assisted businesses through cyclical downturns or ensured ongoing
cash flow:
Previously when we have been through these experiences before
it has not affected the financial institutions—they have always been willing to
see businesses through by extending their overdrafts and things like that
because they know that, in a cycle of about five years or so, the zinc and lead
prices will go through their normal cycle and people will be able to repay
their commitments. But this time it is more than that and financial
institutions are very reluctant to come to the aid of businesses.[192]
2.141
The response from business in regional Australia has varied. Each
business is attempting to survive in its own way with some common trends
emerging. Labour cost is often the first issue to be examined and certainly
employment figures suggest that businesses are reducing their labour force
and/or the hours worked.[193] However, some are
looking to future-proof their business by ‘re-negotiating supply terms,
implementing staff training and increasing marketing outputs’.[194]
2.142
Some of this activity is occurring independently, but the Committee has
received sufficient evidence to suggest that many businesses in regional
Australia are seeking and receiving advice from business advisory services:
…there is a real hunger out there for information about how
to focus on numbers, in particular—keeping an eye on your cash flow, keeping an
eye on making sure that you are paying bills and bills are coming. There are
those sorts of issues. That has been a large part of our events program for
this year, and it has been very popular with our members.[195]
2.143
Government has a strong role to play alongside industry groups in
assisting regional businesses through this period. This chapter has noted some
of the Commonwealth Government programs which provide business mentoring and
support. Some, such as Enterprise Connect and the Business Enterprise Centres
(BECs), were not designed as a response to the GFC, yet have taken a direct
role in assisting firms during the crisis.[196] For example, BECs and
other registered business organisations have received additional funding for
the Small Business Advisory Service which is intended to ‘enhance access to
information and advice on issues important to sustaining and/or growing small
business in response to the current global financial crisis’.[197]
2.144
The Small Business Advisory Service is being complemented by the Small
Business Support Line which:
…provides small business with advice
and to put them in touch with specialist advisers on matters such as obtaining
finance, cash flow management, retail leasing, personal stress and hardship
counselling and promotion and marketing advice.[198]
To date, over 2220 people have utilised
the Small Business Support Line and 90 per cent of those surveyed have
expressed satisfaction with the service.[199]
2.145
Likewise, Enterprise Connect offers a range of business services (noted
in Submission 169) and through the Innovative Regions and Remote Enterprise
Centres, supported by Enterprise Connect, regional and remote Australia also
has access to business support services.[200]