But it won't continue.
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You'll have to excuse me for not believing ALP's budget predictions. I wouldn't care to cite the number of times they have promised a surplus and did not deliver.
But by measuring the debt, you've already taken account for revenues. Also, Australia has plenty of room to tax more if desperately needed:
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Which is something we definitely could do in the next boom part of the economic cycle. We've generally kept revenues confined to 25% of the GDP since just about forever, but we could take more.
Debt-per-GDP is different to Debt-per-revenue. GDP is the production of the entire nation, revenue is what the country receives in taxes. Debt-per-GDP is like comparing a personal debt against the income of your extended family.
And also, are you kidding me? More taxes? 25% of GDP is not high enough? Call me greedy, but if I create wealth using my own hands, taking a quarter of it away without choice is barely acceptable, let alone even higher.
Also, having a long-term debt really isn't such an issue, as long as it remains stable... All other AAA economies out there have a stable long-term debt.
I struggle to understand why you think having a debt is not an issue. Right now, we are continuously trading debt between different debtors as a way to continuously extend the loan (hence, the debt level is 'stable'). This is of course, assuming that there will always be debtors happy to lend, and that we don't really have any intentions to pay off the debt. It is exactly like paying a credit card off with another credit card.
The very scenario I'm afraid of is currently playing out in the EU. EU has been in crisis mode since '08, and as certain countries' debt spiralled out of control, the EU reserves are starting to run dry. When the EU can no longer give out more loans and bail-outs (which can happen very soon with the situation in Spain), there will be a chain of defaults and write-downs that will have terrible impact on their local economies and the global economy. The situation in EU seems almost inevitable, and given the monthly crisis we hear about the US, Japan and EU, holding debt right now is seriously risky, even if the debt level is stable. The way to shield against these chain-effect defaults is to minimize our debt. You may be a bit more optimistic about the global economy, but shoot me for wanting our economy to be as independent as possible.
So, to summarise my point. No. It's not okay to have debt, even if it is stable. And more taxes is not the answer.