X
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact
  • Expert Resources
Get the latest news! Subscribe to the Money Management bulletin
  • News
    • Accounting
    • Financial Planning
    • Funds Management
    • Life/Risk
    • People & Products
    • Policy & Regulation
    • Property
    • SMSF
    • Superannuation
    • Tech
  • Investment
    • Australian Equities
    • Global Equities
    • Managed Accounts
    • Fixed Income
    • ETFs
  • Features
    • Editorial
    • Expert Analysis
    • Guides
    • Outsider
    • Rate The Raters
    • Top 100
  • Media
    • Events
    • Podcast
    • Webcasts
  • Promoted Content
  • Investment Centre
No Results
View All Results
  • News
    • Accounting
    • Financial Planning
    • Funds Management
    • Life/Risk
    • People & Products
    • Policy & Regulation
    • Property
    • SMSF
    • Superannuation
    • Tech
  • Investment
    • Australian Equities
    • Global Equities
    • Managed Accounts
    • Fixed Income
    • ETFs
  • Features
    • Editorial
    • Expert Analysis
    • Guides
    • Outsider
    • Rate The Raters
    • Top 100
  • Media
    • Events
    • Podcast
    • Webcasts
  • Promoted Content
  • Investment Centre
No Results
View All Results
No Results
View All Results
Home News Financial Planning

Keating foreshadows prolonged slower growth

by John Wilkinson
October 23, 2008
in Financial Planning, News
Reading Time: 3 mins read
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Investors have probably seen the best of times, with the global economy heading for a long period of slow growth, according to former Prime Minister Paul Keating.

Keating said the current economic cycle was part of a much longer economic wave that could last 25 years or more.

X

“Economic waves are driven by different things,” he told a Super Ratings conference in Melbourne.

“At the turn of the last century, electricity drove an economic wave that lasted until 1929.

“The post Second World War wave was driven by consumption and ran until the 1960s.”

Keating said the current economic wave started in about 1992 and was driven by the digital age.

“The main driver was the infrastructure needed for telecoms and that lasted until the fall of the NASDAQ in 2001,” he said.

Within each wave there were cycles that delivered a boom time, recession, depression and a recovery.

Keating said this economic wave had produced two cycles so far and we were about to enter the recession phase.

“We have seen the innovation and technology in this wave mature,” he said.

“This has been the growth cycles, now we are entering the recessional cycle.

“So for the next seven or eight years we will see stock markets go sideways, which is what happened between 1966 and 1982.”

He said the next cycle would see companies delivering single digit price to earnings.

“This gives us some idea of how things will play out.”

Keating said the great winner in the last economic wave was Japan, and China would be the winner in the next wave.

“Japan had its time from 1962 to 1992, when it grew on average 8.5 per cent every year,” he said.

“China will do all of that, sometimes delivering higher growth and sometimes lower.”

BT chief economist Chris Caton, speaking at the same conference, said China would possibly stop Australia slipping into recession.

Australian growth is forecast at 2.1 per cent next year, but he warns we haven’t had a recession for 17 years.

“The chance of Australia going into recession has stepped up and if the unemployment rate hits 6 per cent, then we will be in trouble,” Caton said.

“The best outcome for Australia will be a period of slow growth for a number of years.”

Economic growth for China next year is forecast at 8.8 per cent, but the impact of the US and most of Europe being in recession has not been factored in.

Caton argued the US has been in recession most of this year and said the belief a country has to have two negative quarters before it is in recession is wrong.

“Falling housing statistics, negative employment growth and other negative factors means the US has been in recession for about seven months now,” Caton said.

Tags: BTGlobal Economy

Related Posts

ASIC bans former UGC advice head

by Keith Ford
December 19, 2025

ASIC has banned Louis Van Coppenhagen from providing financial services, controlling an entity that carries on a financial services business or performing any function...

Largest weekly losses of FY25 reported

by Laura Dew
December 19, 2025

There has been a net loss of more than 50 advisers this week as the industry approaches the education pathway...

Two Victorian AZ NGA-backed practices form $10m business

by ShyAnn Arkinstall
December 19, 2025

AZ NGA-backed advice firms, Coastline Advice and Edge Advisory Partners, have announced a merger to form a multi-disciplinary business with $10 million combined...

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

VIEW ALL
Promoted Content

Consistency is the most underrated investment strategy.

In financial markets, excitement drives headlines. Equity markets rise, fall, and recover — creating stories that capture attention. Yet sustainable...

by Industry Expert
November 5, 2025
Promoted Content

Jonathan Belz – Redefining APAC Access to US Private Assets

Winner of Executive of the Year – Funds Management 2025After years at Goldman Sachs and Credit Suisse, Jonathan Belz founded...

by Staff Writer
September 11, 2025
Promoted Content

Real-Time Settlement Efficiency in Modern Crypto Wealth Management

Cryptocurrency liquidity has become a cornerstone of sophisticated wealth management strategies, with real-time settlement capabilities revolutionizing traditional investment approaches. The...

by PartnerArticle
September 4, 2025
Editorial

Relative Return: How fixed income got its defensiveness back

In this episode of Relative Return, host Laura Dew chats with Roy Keenan, co-head of fixed income at Yarra Capital...

by Laura Dew
September 4, 2025

Join our newsletter

View our privacy policy, collection notice and terms and conditions to understand how we use your personal information.

Podcasts

Relative Return Insider: MYEFO, US data and a 2025 wrap up

December 18, 2025

Relative Return Insider: RBA holds, Fed cuts and Santa’s set to rally

December 11, 2025

Relative Return Insider: GDP rebounds and housing squeeze getting worse

December 5, 2025

Relative Return Insider: US shares rebound, CPI spikes and super investment

November 28, 2025

Relative Return Insider: Economic shifts, political crossroads, and the digital future

November 14, 2025

Relative Return: Helping Australians retire with confidence

November 11, 2025

Top Performing Funds

FIXED INT - AUSTRALIA/GLOBAL BOND
Fund name
3 y p.a(%)
1
DomaCom DFS Mortgage
211.38
2
Loftus Peak Global Disruption Fund Hedged
110.90
3
SGH Income Trust Dis AUD
80.01
4
Global X 21Shares Bitcoin ETF
76.11
5
Smarter Money Long-Short Credit Investor USD
67.63
Money Management provides accurate, informative and insightful editorial coverage of the Australian financial services market, with topics including taxation, managed funds, property investments, shares, risk insurance, master trusts, superannuation, margin lending, financial planning, portfolio construction, and investment strategies.

Subscribe to our newsletter

View our privacy policy, collection notice and terms and conditions to understand how we use your personal information.

About Us

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Collection Notice
  • Privacy Policy

Popular Topics

  • Financial Planning
  • Funds Management
  • Investment Insights
  • ETFs
  • People & Products
  • Policy & Regulation
  • Superannuation

© 2025 All Rights Reserved. All content published on this site is the property of Prime Creative Media. Unauthorised reproduction is prohibited

No Results
View All Results
NEWSLETTER
  • News
    • All News
    • Accounting
    • Financial Planning
    • Funds Management
    • Life/Risk
    • People & Products
    • Policy & Regulation
    • Property
    • SMSF
    • Superannuation
    • Tech
  • Investment
    • All Investment
    • Australian Equities
    • ETFs
    • Fixed Income
    • Global Equities
    • Managed Accounts
  • Features
    • All Features
    • Editorial
    • Expert Analysis
    • Guides
    • Outsider
    • Rate The Raters
    • Top 100
  • Media
    • Events
    • Podcast
    • Webcasts
  • Promoted Content
  • Investment Centre
  • Expert Resources
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us

© 2025 All Rights Reserved. All content published on this site is the property of Prime Creative Media. Unauthorised reproduction is prohibited