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Australia’s trade surplus swells, signals Q1 growth revival

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SYDNEY: Australia’s trade surplus swelled to a 10-month peak in March as resource exports boasted a bumper run, suggesting the economy sprang ahead in the first quarter after a disappoint­ing end to last year.

The batch of data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics yesterday also showed approvals to build new houses hit a threeyear high in March and rapid population growth promised to support constructi­on for many months yet.

The country’s trade surplus climbed to A$1.53bil in March, more than double forecasts, while January and February were both revised to show fatter gains.

As a result the surplus for the whole March quarter amounted to A$4bil, a huge turnaround from the previous quarter’s A$1bil shortfall.

Analysts estimated that could have added around half a percentage point to gross domestic product growth in the quarter, reversing a big drag from the December quarter.

“Importantl­y, real net exports likely made a positive contributi­on to growth, whereas we anticipate­d a broadly neutral impact,” said Westpac senior economist Andrew Hanlan. “The outlook for exports is also positive, led by LNG as new capacity comes on stream, and by services such as education and tourism in response to strong demand from Asia and complement­ed by the recent retreat in the Australian dollar.” Shipments of liquefied natural gas (LNG) have been on a tear and helped lift exports in the March quarter almost 8% above the previous quarter.

Analysts now suspect GDP growth may have doubled in the March quarter to around 0.8%-1%.

That would be welcome news to the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) which has been counting on a marked accelerati­on this year and next to revive inflation and wages.

It would also please the Liberal National government of Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull which is due next week to hand down what is likely to be the last annual budget before a general election.

Adding to the upbeat news was a surprising­ly steep 2.6% rise in approvals to build new homes in March.

Detached houses alone were up more than 10% on the year ago, a tonic for growth given they are far quicker to build than apartment towers and involve a much broader range of small businesses.

Craig James, chief economist at CommSec, noted the value of approvals for homes and commercial buildings had climbed to A$126bil in the year to March, a record high. “The building pipeline is already choc-a-bloc, but it continues to expand,” said James. “Constructi­on companies are already claiming they can’t find the staff they need. There will be upward pressure on wages.” — Reuters

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