Cockatoo guide

Keynesian Put: How Government Policy Supports Australian Markets in 2026

Want to stay ahead of the next policy shift? Subscribe to Cockatoo for sharp analysis on markets, government moves, and what it means for your money.

Ever wondered why share markets bounce back after a crisis, or how Australia’s economy stays afloat during global shocks? Enter the ‘Keynesian Put’ — a powerful, often invisible hand propping up markets when things go south.

Unpacking the Keynesian Put: A Modern Market Safety Net

First coined in the aftermath of the Global Financial Crisis, the ‘Keynesian Put’ refers to the expectation that governments will step in to stabilise markets during severe downturns. The phrase nods to John Maynard Keynes, whose economic theories championed active government intervention, and borrows from the ‘put option’ in finance — a contract that limits downside risk.

Unlike the ‘Greenspan Put’ or ‘Fed Put’ (named after US central bankers), the Keynesian Put is broader. It includes fiscal stimulus, government guarantees, and even direct asset purchases. In Australia, its fingerprints are everywhere — from JobKeeper during the pandemic to RBA bond-buying in 2020-21.

How the Keynesian Put Works in Australia

When markets wobble, investors often expect Canberra and the Reserve Bank to intervene. This expectation shapes behaviour, sometimes even fuelling risk-taking. Here’s how it has played out in recent years:

The result? Australia’s markets have become more resilient — but also more reliant on policy support. Investors now price in a ‘floor’ beneath risky assets, underpinned by government action.

The Pros, Cons, and Risks of a Perpetual Safety Net

The Keynesian Put isn’t free. While it can prevent deep recessions, it also brings trade-offs:

Pros:

  - Reduces panic selling and market crashes

  - Supports employment and household wealth

  - Helps businesses survive temporary shocks

Cons:

  - Encourages risk-taking ('moral hazard')

  - Blurs the line between public and private risk

  - Can inflate asset bubbles, especially in housing

In 2026, these debates are front and centre. With inflation moderating but cost-of-living pressures lingering, the Albanese government faces calls to balance support with fiscal discipline. The RBA, meanwhile, is wary of overreliance on monetary tools, especially as household debt remains high.

Looking ahead, the challenge is to calibrate the Keynesian Put — offering a safety net without removing all risk or fuelling runaway asset prices. Policymakers are signalling more targeted, conditional support rather than blanket bailouts.

What It Means for Investors and Households

For Australians, understanding the Keynesian Put is crucial. It shapes how super funds, property, and shares respond to shocks. Savvy investors watch policy moves as closely as earnings reports, knowing that government intervention can shift market dynamics overnight.

Key takeaways for 2026:

Households and investors should stay nimble, watch policy signals, and remember that while the Keynesian Put is powerful, it isn’t permanent or unconditional.