The Australian government will announce “significant” cuts at a budget update tomorrow as it remains committed to restoring a surplus, according to Australian Treasurer Wayne Swan.
“The toughest conditions in the global economy in generations have cut a swathe through traditional sources of revenues,” Swan said yesterday in his weekly economic note. “This will require more savings to be found. The savings will be significant.”
The federal government is preparing to reveal A$4 billion (US$4.1 billion) in spending cuts and other measures, the Sydney Morning Herald said on Saturday.
Increased charges for visa applications will boost revenue by about A$500 million, the Sunday Telegraph reported yesterday, without saying where it got the information.
Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard’s government has committed to restoring a budget surplus this fiscal year after four years of deficits even as growth slows.
Australia’s economy is succumbing to a slowdown in world growth that the IMF predicted this month would decelerate to the weakest pace since the 2009 recession.
“I have no doubts whatsoever about the critical importance of our budget strategy,” Swan said.
Returning to surplus was “appropriate” because of the Australian economy’s strong fundamentals including low unemployment, inflation in check and a robust investment pipeline, he said.
The government could abandon its surplus commitment and consider rate cuts if the global economy gets worse, the IMF said on Sept. 20.
The country recorded its widest trade deficit since 2008, with exports falling for the third straight month in August, the Bureau of Statistics said in an Oct. 3 report.
Australia, the biggest exporter of iron ore and coal, has managed to avoid recession for 21 years as China’s infrastructure-led economic stimulus fueled demand for commodities.
Slower demand growth for commodities this year has weighed on prices, denting projected tax revenues.
The price of iron ore has fallen 14 percent since July 1.
Taiwan’s foreign exchange reserves fell below the US$600 billion mark at the end of last month, with the central bank reporting a total of US$596.89 billion — a decline of US$8.6 billion from February — ending a three-month streak of increases. The central bank attributed the drop to a combination of factors such as outflows by foreign institutional investors, currency fluctuations and its own market interventions. “The large-scale outflows disrupted the balance of supply and demand in the foreign exchange market, prompting the central bank to intervene repeatedly by selling US dollars to stabilize the local currency,” Department of Foreign
Intel Corp is joining Elon Musk’s long-shot effort to develop semiconductors for Tesla Inc, Space Exploration Technologies Corp and xAI, marking a surprising twist in the chipmaker’s comeback bid. Intel would help the Terafab project “refactor” the technology in a chip factory, the company said on Tuesday in a post on X, Musk’s social media platform. That is a stage in the development process that typically helps make chips more powerful or reliable. The chipmaker’s shares jumped 4.2 percent to US$52.91 in New York trading on Tuesday. The Terafab project is a grand plan by Musk to eventually manufacture his own chips for
Taiwan Power Co (Taipower, 台電) yesterday said it plans to resume operations at two coal-fired power generators for three months to boost security of electricity supply as liquefied natural gas (LNG) supply risks are running high due to the Middle East conflict. The two coal-fired power generators are at Mailiao Power Plant in Yunlin County’s Mailiao Township (麥寮). The plant, operated by Formosa Plastics Group (台塑集團), supplied electricity to Taipower’s power grid until the end of last year. Taipower’s decision came about one month after Minister of Economic Affairs Kung Ming-hsin (龔明鑫) on March 10 said that the nation had no imminent
ENERGY ISSUES: The TSIA urged the government to increase natural gas and helium reserves to reduce the impact of the Middle East war on semiconductor supply stability Chip testing and packaging service provider ASE Technology Holding Co (日月光投控) yesterday said it planned to invest more than NT$100 billion (US$3.15 billion) in building a new advanced chip testing facility in Kaohsiung to keep up with customer demand driven by the artificial intelligence (AI) boom. That would be included in the company’s capital expenditure budget next year, ASE said. There is also room to raise this year’s capital spending budget from a record-high US$7 billion estimated three months ago, it added. ASE would have six factories under construction this year, another record-breaking number, ASE chief operating officer Tien Wu