Government should encourage savings and productive investment

By Daryl Dixon
Updated December 15 2014 - 10:13am, first published October 5 2014 - 12:15am
Nothing in it: Reserve Bank governor Glenn Stevens recently spoke at the Melbourne Economic forum.
Nothing in it: Reserve Bank governor Glenn Stevens recently spoke at the Melbourne Economic forum.
Nothing in it: Reserve Bank governor Glenn Stevens recently spoke at the Melbourne Economic forum.
Nothing in it: Reserve Bank governor Glenn Stevens recently spoke at the Melbourne Economic forum.
Nothing in it: Reserve Bank governor Glenn Stevens recently spoke at the Melbourne Economic forum.
Nothing in it: Reserve Bank governor Glenn Stevens recently spoke at the Melbourne Economic forum.
Nothing in it: Reserve Bank governor Glenn Stevens recently spoke at the Melbourne Economic forum.
Nothing in it: Reserve Bank governor Glenn Stevens recently spoke at the Melbourne Economic forum.

Long gone are the days when senior bureaucrats made and kept their decisions behind closed doors. Now we have jawboning and public attempts to influence commercial and investment decisions. Judging from recent statements, there's the desire to talk the dollar down further to as low as US 80 cents and suggestions that there may be little downside risk to regulatory controls to reduce the rapid growth of investor borrowing.

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