The Borneo Post

Australia inflation eases to 17-year low

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SYDNEY: Australian inflation eased to a 17-year low in AprilJune, official figures showed yesterday, raising the prospects of another interest rate cut to shore up the economy.

Borrowing costs are already at a record-low of 1.75 per cent and economists said they could fall further after the consumer price index rose one per cent year on year, the weakest level since the June quarter of 1999.

It was also well off the Reserve Bank of Australia’s target of 2.03.0 per cent.

The 0.4 per cent on- quarter reading, however, matched market expectatio­ns and was stronger than in the January-March period, where prices fell 0.2 per cent – the first drop since 2008.

Australia has been growing stronger than most of the world’s most advanced economies, but like most countries it is struggling to

Quite clearly, deflationa­ry pressures globally are continuing to be imported to Australia, and intense competitio­n domestical­ly and historical­ly weak wages growth are keeping price pressures low and inflation below target. Shane Oliver, AMP Capital chief economist

kickstart inflation, with oil prices subdued and global trade tepid.

“Quite clearly, deflationa­ry pressures globally are continuing to be imported to Australia, and intense competitio­n domestical­ly and historical­ly weak wages growth are keeping price pressures low and inflation below target,” AMP Capital chief economist Shane Oliver said.

Underlying, or core inflation, which strips out volatile items and is more closely watched by the central bank, came in at 0.45 per cent on- quarter and 1.5 per cent annually.

Australia’s economy has been charting a rocky path after exiting an unpreceden­ted period of mining investment, with weak wages growth and non-mining industries failing to fill the gap left by the resources sector But analysts said overall growth expectatio­ns remained healthy and an August rate cut was not a definite.

“Inflation is clearly low enough to allow them to cut (rates), but... the data release is not screaming at the RBA to loosen policy again,” HSBC Australia economists said in a note. — AFP

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