by Mr Beefy » Wed Nov 16, 2011 8:36 am
by gossipgirl » Wed Nov 16, 2011 8:44 am
by Jimmy_041 » Wed Nov 16, 2011 9:15 am
by CK » Wed Nov 16, 2011 9:19 am
by Jimmy_041 » Wed Nov 16, 2011 9:29 am
by redandblack » Wed Nov 16, 2011 9:30 am
by Leaping Lindner » Wed Nov 16, 2011 9:40 am
redandblack wrote:What were his advisors thinking??![]()
![]()
http://images.smh.com.au/2011/11/15/277 ... -420x0.jpg
by redandblack » Wed Nov 16, 2011 9:44 am
by Leaping Lindner » Wed Nov 16, 2011 9:54 am
by Jimmy_041 » Wed Nov 16, 2011 10:11 am
redandblack wrote:I agree, DOC & LL.
(and most of what was before that)
by Psyber » Wed Nov 16, 2011 10:13 am
redandblack wrote:Interest rates had risen in Australia from about 10% at the end of 1975 to 12.5% at the end of the Fraser years. So, after 8 years government, Mr Fraser had seen an interest rate rise of about 2%, from a high base.
Rates then kept rising under Hawke and Keating, reaching 17.0% in 1990. Keating then "did some good things in reforming the economy'![]()
The result was that in the next 3 years, interest rates had halved, to 8.5% by Sept 1996.
Thought that was worth a mention![]()
Oh, I agree that Keating's speech was punctuated with lots of 'you knows' and other similar things. Mr Abbott's is punctuated with constant ums and ahs.
The difference is that it's always worth putting up with Keatings speech blemishes, because you know a pearler will crop up any moment.
With Mr Abbott, all you get is the ums and ahs.
by redandblack » Wed Nov 16, 2011 10:40 am
by wycbloods » Wed Nov 16, 2011 12:33 pm
Psyber wrote:redandblack wrote:Interest rates had risen in Australia from about 10% at the end of 1975 to 12.5% at the end of the Fraser years. So, after 8 years government, Mr Fraser had seen an interest rate rise of about 2%, from a high base.
Rates then kept rising under Hawke and Keating, reaching 17.0% in 1990. Keating then "did some good things in reforming the economy'![]()
The result was that in the next 3 years, interest rates had halved, to 8.5% by Sept 1996.
Thought that was worth a mention![]()
Oh, I agree that Keating's speech was punctuated with lots of 'you knows' and other similar things. Mr Abbott's is punctuated with constant ums and ahs.
The difference is that it's always worth putting up with Keatings speech blemishes, because you know a pearler will crop up any moment.
With Mr Abbott, all you get is the ums and ahs.
That's the shortened version of the history R&B - one just selects the starting point to suit I guess...
Interest rates had been over 17% during the Whitlam era too - I had friends paying 17.5% on their home loan then.
So, it appears, they dropped to 10% around the time of the "Dismissal" in late 1975 and rose a little in rebound later.
They were then still 5% down on the peak a few years earlier.
With the election of the ALP again in the 1980s, I predicted the return of the same pattern and was geared up for it.
I had my car finance locked in at 9% and a property loan at 14% when they hit 17% again and that was in late 1987 and early 1988.
The drop in rates came after the economic collapse in 1987-88 as a result of the "stagflation".
People then had properties were worth less than the loans on them taken out a few years earlier - that had more impact on people than the recent GFC effect.
(Back then one of my patients who had paid $64K for a house in Craigmore, and owed $54K, had lost his job, and the best offer he got was $48K.)
I don't know what the official "history" says, but I recall the years accurately because I was involved in the process.
I started bailing out of debt during late 1987 when the writing was on the wall, and had sold the property to clear the 14% loan in January 1988.
I was lucky to break even on the sale as property prices were falling rapidly.
In 1988 I was on the AMA-SA committee trying to save them from bankruptcy after its property development in Ward Street, encouraged by the state government and State Bank, suffered similarly.
by DOC » Wed Nov 16, 2011 1:59 pm
by Jimmy_041 » Wed Nov 16, 2011 2:17 pm
redandblack wrote:Interest rates had risen in Australia from about 10% at the end of 1975 to 12.5% at the end of the Fraser years. So, after 8 years government, Mr Fraser had seen an interest rate rise of about 2%, from a high base.
Rates then kept rising under Hawke and Keating, reaching 17.0% in 1990. Keating then "did some good things in reforming the economy'![]()
The result was that in the next 3 years, interest rates had halved, to 8.5% by Sept 1996.
Thought that was worth a mention![]()
Oh, I agree that Keating's speech was punctuated with lots of 'you knows' and other similar things. Mr Abbott's is punctuated with constant ums and ahs.
The difference is that it's always worth putting up with Keatings speech blemishes, because you know a pearler will crop up any moment.
With Mr Abbott, all you get is the ums and ahs.
by Gozu » Wed Nov 16, 2011 2:25 pm
by Gozu » Wed Nov 16, 2011 2:32 pm
by DOC » Wed Nov 16, 2011 2:37 pm
Gozu wrote:What were the interest rates again when John Howard was Treasurer?
by redandblack » Wed Nov 16, 2011 2:38 pm
Jimmy_041 wrote:redandblack wrote:Interest rates had risen in Australia from about 10% at the end of 1975 to 12.5% at the end of the Fraser years. So, after 8 years government, Mr Fraser had seen an interest rate rise of about 2%, from a high base.
Rates then kept rising under Hawke and Keating, reaching 17.0% in 1990. Keating then "did some good things in reforming the economy'![]()
The result was that in the next 3 years, interest rates had halved, to 8.5% by Sept 1996.
Thought that was worth a mention![]()
Oh, I agree that Keating's speech was punctuated with lots of 'you knows' and other similar things. Mr Abbott's is punctuated with constant ums and ahs.
The difference is that it's always worth putting up with Keatings speech blemishes, because you know a pearler will crop up any moment.
With Mr Abbott, all you get is the ums and ahs.
So, you are saying Keating was responsible for the interest rates halving by Sept 1996?
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