Australia’s trade data released yesterday shows that our resources exports are in serious trouble. The news coverage has positively reported that our ‘trade deficit shrank in May’. But the lift in our exports this month was less than 1% and a blip compared to the shellacking our exports have received over the last 15 months. Our key minerals exports have plummeted 34 per cent since their peak – that’s a bigger fall than the GFC slump in 2008.
What will fill the gap?
As the resources tide goes out, the big question for Australia is: What will we fall back on? Unfortunately, during the mining boom, we allowed most of the rest of our export base to wither. As the chart below shows, our exports have gone backwards as a proportion of our economy over the last 15 years in almost every non-resources industry.*
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The narrowest export base in 50 years
In 2000 less than one third of Australia’s exports came from resources, but today more than half is made up of just three commodities. IMF data shows that Australia’s exports are now more concentrated than they have been for more than 50 years.* We have the narrowest export base since the Korean War wool boom in the 1950s.
Is Australia still a developed country?
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Our extreme dependence on bulk commodities is almost unique among advanced economies. Before the boom, Australia’s export concentration was broadly in line with other similar high income countries. But by 2010 our export concentration had soared. Today our exports are more concentrated than the average of even the middle income countries. And even some low income countries like Nepal, Kenya, and Tanzania have greater export diversity than Australia.
Leith van Onselen is Chief Economist at the MB Fund and MB Super. He is also a co-founder of MacroBusiness.
Leith has previously worked at the Australian Treasury, Victorian Treasury and Goldman Sachs.