Townsville Bulletin

RBA boss ‘sorry’ over interest rate guidance

- COURTNEY GOULD

RESERVE Bank governor Philip Lowe has apologised to Australian­s who may regret taking out a home loan off the back of guidance that interest rates would remain unchanged until 2024.

Appearing before a Senate estimates hearing on Monday morning, Dr Lowe said it was “regrettabl­e” that the RBA did not make it clear the commentary was conditiona­l on the state of the economy.

“I’m sorry that people listened to what we said and then acted on that and now find themselves in a position they don’t want to be in,” he said.

“But at the time, we saw that as the right thing to do. And I think, looking back, we would have chosen different language. People did not hear the caveats.

“I thought it was clear … but the community didn’t think it was clear. Well, they thought it was clear we weren’t raising rates until 2024. That’s a failure on our part.”

Dr Lowe has come under fire for saying as late as November last year that the bank was likely to hold the cash rate steady at a record low rates.

Since May, the cash rate has rapidly increased from 0.1 per cent to 2.85 per cent. Another rate rise is expected next week. The governor defended his actions, telling the committee when he made the comments the economy was facing “dark times” and inflation was unlikely to pick up quickly.

He noted fears of unemployme­nt hitting 15 per cent and “a generation of young kids” being locked out of the job market. But the economy rebounded quicker than the RBA expected and Dr Lowe conceded the bank and the government had “probably over-insured” against Covid.

Since then, the lift in housing constructi­on costs, petrol prices and Russia’s invasion on Ukraine, has contribute­d to inflation reaching a 32-year high of 7.3 per cent. Dr Lowe suggested inflation will decrease over the next two years after peaking at 8 per cent later this year.

The governor said while he wanted real wages to increase, he warned if it were to occur now it would only fuel inflation and higher interest rates.

“I understand this is a really hard message for people to say inflation’s 8 (per cent), wages, maybe 3 or four (per cent])” he said. “So your real wage is actually declining this year. And so that’s a hard message. But the alternativ­e is even more difficult.”

 ?? ?? Dr Philip Lowe.
Dr Philip Lowe.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia