CBA predicts Australia’s economy will see a slowdown until stage-three tax cuts, lower interest rates, and easing inflation take effect

CBA predicts Australia’s economy will see a slowdown until stage-three tax cuts, lower interest rates, and easing inflation take effect

CBA predicts Australia’s economy will see a slowdown until stage-three tax cuts, lower interest rates, and easing inflation take effect

The chief economist of Commonwealth Bank predicts that Australia’s​ economy will slow down until mid-2024. However, a combination of tax‍ cuts, interest rate cuts, and easing inflation is expected to boost spending.

In January, the CommBank Household Spending Insights index rose 3.1%, reversing December’s 3.5% slide. The rebound was ⁢led by⁣ a⁤ 13.5% rise in travel ‌and recreation spending, thanks⁢ to record crowds⁤ at the Australian Open in​ Melbourne. Household goods spending‌ was also ⁤up 10.5%.

The effects ⁢of ​the⁣ Reserve Bank’s‌ interest rate⁣ rise will be felt this ‍month as variable lending ‍rates get ​adjusted after a lag. “February​ numbers will⁢ be critical,”​ CBA’s Stephen Halmarick said.

Australia’s gross domestic product likely expanded 1.5% in 2023 with household consumption up just 0.4%. ⁢Annual GDP ‌growth will slow further to 1.3% by June⁢ before reviving to 1.8% by the end of 2024.

How households respond to the rising cost of living, higher interest rates, and taxes ⁣was one of the RBA’s key uncertainties in its rates setting. Should spending slow faster than expected, ⁣the central bank would be more inclined⁤ to⁣ cut interest rates.

The ⁤CommBank spending index, which⁢ tracks the‌ purchases of more than 7 ​million CBA customers, registered modest increases in most​ of its ​12 categories. Victoria’s reading was ‍up 2.8% for the month alone, leading⁣ other​ states.

By the second half of 2024, households should start to get some relief, Halmarick said.

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Stage-three tax⁣ cuts: what’s changed and how we got here⁤ – ‍video

The stage-three tax⁢ cuts⁣ – which have been revised by the Albanese government to increase the‍ benefits ⁣for‍ those earning as ⁣much⁢ as $146,000 a year – would kick ⁢in from 1 July, Halmarick said.

CBA predicts the ‌RBA will‌ start to cut interest rates from September,‍ lopping 75 basis points‌ off the current 4.35% by the ‌year’s end. Similar sized cuts should arrive by mid-2025.

Inflation, too, should be “pretty close to 3%” by the end of‍ 2024. Consumer‍ prices were up 4.1% in the December quarter just past, compared with a year earlier.

“The combination of those three things will ⁢improve household disposable income,” Halmarick said.

The CommBank index was up 3.6% last ​month compared with January 2023. The biggest increases were for insurance,⁤ up 11.3% from a year earlier, with spending on⁤ health up 7.8% ‌and education 6.8%….

2024-02-15 01:07:33
Source from www.theguardian.com

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