The Gold Coast Bulletin

Exports, government spending ease recession worries

- PAUL GILDER

A REBOUND in exports and government spending have boosted the Australian economy in the three months to June, re-energising hopes the momentum to avoid a recession has been regained.

And despite a weaker-than- expected rise in wages, evidence of solid consumer spending and business investment appear to have the economy in sound shape to offset the effects of next year’s projected slump in homebuildi­ng activity.

Australia’s gross domestic product grew 0.8 per cent in the June quarter, for an annualised rate of 1.8 per cent, figures from the Australian Bureau of Statistics yesterday revealed.

It was below expectatio­ns of a 0.9 per cent quarterly jump following a rally in net exports after the weather-related disruption­s to coal supplies during the March quarter.

GDP growth in the three months to March slipped to just 0.3 per cent – the weakest rate in almost eight years.

Yesterday’s figures earned a cautious tick of approval from economists and kept the nation on course to achieve average annual growth of 3 per cent in the coming year.

Contributo­rs to the economy were broadbased in the latest quarter, led by a jump in government spending, especially at the state and local levels, which grew 25.5 per cent.

Household spending was up 0.7 per cent for the quarter, although consumers dipped deeper into their piggy banks to do so, with the savings rate sliding to a nine-year low.

Amid controvers­y over how much energy the nation should be exporting, a surge in liquefied natural gas shipments coupled with greater demand for iron ore saw the value of exports rise 2.7 per cent for the three-month period.

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