The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Australia maintains key rate at record low

Sliding currency offers prospect of additional stimulus for economy

- The negotiatio­ns

SYDNEY: Australia kept interest rates at a record low as it has for the past two years, while a currency sliding toward 70 US cents offers the prospect of additional stimulus for the economy.

As expected, Reserve Bank governor Philip Lowe left the cash rate at 1.5%, a stance he expects will eventually tighten the labour market and spur enough wage growth to speed up inflation.

While the Aussie dollar’s more than 10% drop since February may help quicken that process, there’s a risk that rising mortgage rates and falling property prices could encourage households to put away their wallets.

“One continuing source of uncertaint­y is the outlook for household consumptio­n,” Lowe said in a statement after the decision. “Household income has been growing slowly and debt levels are high.”

On the exchange rate, the governor noted “it has depreciate­d against the US dollar along with most other currencies.”

The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) has said its next rate move is more likely to be up than down; the governor, since taking the helm in September 2016, has been reluctant to cut further given the diminishin­g returns from easier policy.

Yet the RBA’s stimulus was eroded somewhat when Westpac Banking Corp last week said it was hiking its key mortgage rate by 14 basis points, more than half a typical RBA increase, to compensate for higher offshore funding costs.

That prompted traders to push out their bets for the central bank’s first rate hike since 2010 and drive down the currency.

Many analysts now see the Aussie dropping into the 60s, potentiall­y boosting the competi- tiveness of exporters and import-competing industries and allowing them to take on more staff.

The Aussie dollar would probably need to fall into the 60s for a sustained period – potentiall­y almost a year – to change the RBA’s calculatio­ns.

The central bank currently doesn’t see unemployme­nt falling to the 5% level generally associated with faster wage growth until December 2020. The jobless rate is currently 5.3%.

Australia is also on track for a change in government in the first half of next year to a less business-friendly administra­tion.

The Labour party may dilute the current government’s income tax reductions that – in an environmen­t of stagnant wages – are one of the few options available to boost household incomes.

Australia’s economy has avoided recession – measured locally as two consecutiv­e quarters of contractio­n – for 27 years. — Bloomberg

 ??  ?? Growth strategy: A man walks past the headquarte­rs of RBA in Sydney. Governor Philip Lowe left the cash rate at 1.5%, a stance he expects will eventually tighten the labour market and spur enough wage growth to speed up inflation. — Reuters
Growth strategy: A man walks past the headquarte­rs of RBA in Sydney. Governor Philip Lowe left the cash rate at 1.5%, a stance he expects will eventually tighten the labour market and spur enough wage growth to speed up inflation. — Reuters

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