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‘We’re serious about this’: RBA boss gets real as inflation spikes again

Inflation rose in April to 6.8 per cent, sending a collective shudder through the markets ahead of next week’s Reserve Bank board decision on interest rates, but it’s not as bad as it looks.

May 31, 2023, updated May 31, 2023
RBA Governor Philip Lowe

RBA Governor Philip Lowe

The sharemarket reacted badly to the inflation figures dropping more than 90 points on concerns that it would lead to another interest rate hike. It recovered slightly in the late afternoon trade to be down 86 points.

“Ignore the noise,” one economist said, because a significant contributor to the inflation increase was automotive fuel.

The increase there was because of the restoration of the fuel excise which impacted the annual movement for April 2023.

It pushed transportation inflation up to 7.1 per cent from 0.8 per cent the previous month.
Other economists thought it could lead to higher interest rates far sooner than anticipated.
Economist Warren Hogan said the three-month annualised rate was around 6 per cent.

“Bottom line is inflation (is) down from peak, but not looking like coming down quickly. (It) confirms strong tightening bias. Can’t rule out a hike next week,” Hogan said.

Food inflation has come back slightly to 7.9 per cent and housing was 8.9 per cent, down from 9.5 per cent.

ANZ Bank said the forecast of a cash rate of 4.1 per cent (currently 3.85 per cent) in August has been tilted toward earlier and more action from the RBA.

It said the data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics today on construction work, inflation and credit were all consistent with a higher interest rate.

The CPI figures were released as Reserve Bank governor Philip Lowe outlined a number of risks to the central bank’s task of returning inflation to target.

Lowe said rents would start to fall when more people form bigger households by bringing in a flatmate or staying at home with their parents.

He said there were two major factors driving prices to eye-watering levels – that people opted for more space during the pandemic, and that the population was booming as borders reopened.

It would take time for new supply to come online to meet the higher demand but that high prices would eventually cause people to “economise on housing”, he added.

“Kids don’t move out of home because the rent is too expensive or you decide to get a flatmate, that’s the price mechanism at work,” he told a Senate estimates hearing on Wednesday.

“We need more people, on average, to live in each dwelling.

“And prices do that”

Lowe said rents were a “very significant issue” as the single largest component of the consumer price index.

“They’re very important and we’re expecting growth in rents and, as measured in the CPI, it’d be kind of around close to 10 per cent.”

Inflation expectations, which refers to the rate at which people expect prices to rise in the future, also posed a risk to the central bank’s task of returning inflation to target.

The governor said this was one reason the central bank board decided to hike interest rates in May after pausing for one month in April.

“There are a whole bunch of reasons we did that, but one of them was to reinforce the idea in the community’s mind that we’re serious about this, that we will do what’s necessary to get inflation to come down,” he said.

He was hopeful inflation would continue to come down over the coming quarter and months

“We really want people to understand that we’re serious about this, that we’ll do what’s necessary, and not to question our commitment to get inflation back down, as painful as that is, we’ve got work to do there,” he said.

Weak productivity growth is also weighing on the governor’s mind.

He explained that without productivity growth, unit labour costs are getting too high.

“Over the last three years, there has been no increase in the average output produced per hour worked in Australia – no increase for three years,” Lowe said.

“It’s a problem for the country and it’s a problem for the inflation outlook as well.”

The governor said unit labour costs were growing at the rate of around 3.5 to four per cent and that made it hard to bring inflation back to around 2.5 per cent.

“And the best solution to this is a lift in productivity growth.”

Lowe said the reasons for weak productivity growth were complex and that the pandemic had a lot to do with it.

“Businesses were in survival mode rather than growth mode and investments slowed down and there were disruptions,” he said.

“That’s now behind us. So perhaps we’ll now see productivity growth pick up.”

The central bank started lifting interest rates last year to tackle high inflation.

-with AAP

 

 

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