Consumption Risk-sharing within Australia and with New Zealand
Access status:
Open Access
Type
Working PaperAbstract
quantify how output risks are smoothed within Australia, and between Australia and New Zealand. About 85 percent of shocks were smoothed within Australia through credit and capital markets, with fiscal policy a source of dis-smoothing after 1992. Risk-sharing between Australia and ...
See morequantify how output risks are smoothed within Australia, and between Australia and New Zealand. About 85 percent of shocks were smoothed within Australia through credit and capital markets, with fiscal policy a source of dis-smoothing after 1992. Risk-sharing between Australia and New Zealand was greater than within Europe, occurring mostly through credit markets. With fully integrated financial markets between Australia and New Zealand since 1960, the average welfare gain would be 2.7 percent of certainty-equivalent consumption over 50 years, although these gains favour New Zealand. Australia’s gains are from the pooling of PPP risks. These potential gains were largely resolved by the deregulations and CER trade agreement of the early1980s.
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See morequantify how output risks are smoothed within Australia, and between Australia and New Zealand. About 85 percent of shocks were smoothed within Australia through credit and capital markets, with fiscal policy a source of dis-smoothing after 1992. Risk-sharing between Australia and New Zealand was greater than within Europe, occurring mostly through credit markets. With fully integrated financial markets between Australia and New Zealand since 1960, the average welfare gain would be 2.7 percent of certainty-equivalent consumption over 50 years, although these gains favour New Zealand. Australia’s gains are from the pooling of PPP risks. These potential gains were largely resolved by the deregulations and CER trade agreement of the early1980s.
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Date
2005-05-01Issue
2005-6Publisher
Department of EconomicsLicence
OtherFaculty/School
Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, School of EconomicsShare