It's not quite that simple, it's more the inflationary impact in the drop of the dollar that erodes the savings, and whilst it may have an effect on inflation, and therefore the real value on people's savings, there is not a 1:1 correlation between the AUD:USD exchange rate and amount of inflation. Unless of course you are planning on a move to the US or anywhere with currency pegged to the US, and want to take your savings with you.
NZ is doing very well economically. They are lucky that they are not lumbered with an excessive welfare state like Australia
NZ is doing very well economically. They are lucky that they are not lumbered with an excessive welfare state like Australia
When Rudd, Gillard and Swan ran up hundreds of billions in deficits they told us it wasn't a problem. I guess they meant it wasn't a problem for them to fix. Now it looks like it might take 50 years to fix as the post war baby boomers shuffle off to retirement. This has become a structural problem.
Our currency is just holding at 76 cents against the US dollar and mining and oil jobs are getting trashed thick and fast.
We have to move faster away from the age of entitlement to an age of contribution.
When Rudd, Gillard and Swan ran up hundreds of billions in deficits they told us it wasn't a problem. I guess they meant it wasn't a problem for them to fix. Now it looks like it might take 50 years to fix as the post war baby boomers shuffle off to retirement. This has become a structural problem.
We have to move faster away from the age of entitlement tso an age of contribution.
Precisely!
Also worth noting is The Aussie dollar is currently lower against the NZD than during the period around 2003-2005 ( when the AUD v NZD hovered around $1.07 for quite a while) whilst at the same time the Aussie dollar hit below 60 US cents.
The Kiwi Economy has turned a corner, whilst our own economy is looking rather shaky.
Ridiculous comparison - cows produce milk every day which the Chinese babies consume every day - and that'll prolly go on for a while yet - absolutely impossible for NZ or Aus or whoever to produce sufficient quantities of milk going forward to satisfy the ever increasing Chinese demand. My lordy I take a suitcase full of baby formula to China each month for 2 diff babies - I could take a container load each month if permitted.NZ isn't that far off, either, with a huge reliance on dairy exports to China
Ridiculous comparison - cows produce milk every day which the Chinese babies consume every day - and that'll prolly go on for a while yet - absolutely impossible for NZ or Aus or whoever to produce sufficient quantities of milk going forward to satisfy the ever increasing Chinese demand. My lordy I take a suitcase full of baby formula to China each month for 2 diff babies - I could take a container load each month if permitted.
Well all AUD cash, property and stocks have dropped 25% x whatever % you intend to spend/invest outside Australia, before inflation.
I stand by my assertion that a 25% drop in the value of AUD doesn't mean that 25% has been wiped off the savings of most Australians.
And you are about the only person on this planet who does not consider this to be the case.Indeed. The vast majority of Australians have most of their savings in AUD bank accounts and local stocks (and their houses, if you believe that's a form of saving)
Yep they're all fat cats them people in business - they all deserve a haircut.Given we import pretty much everything we consume, however, that AUD drop is going to start biting soon - though the massive markup on most retail products here would suggest there's plenty of cream in the supply chain to start eating into before visible prices start going up.
Yep they're all fat cats them people in business - they all deserve a haircut.
Yanks are starting to feel the pain also - high USD starting to slow their exports - it's a vicious circle.Speaking with an expat in Chiang Mai and he mentioned that Thailand is hurting with the THB pegged to an overly high USD and may break away. Some saving grace.