Bangkok Post

REMARKABLE RUN

Economy grows 0.8% the second quarter

- ROD MCGUIRK

Australia’s economy has gone 26 years with no recession, the government says.

CANBERRA: Australia’s economy has grown for 26 years without a recession, an extraordin­ary achievemen­t in a volatile world still aching from the global financial crisis.

But many Australian­s feel they don’t share in that prosperity and are going backward financiall­y, a symptom of a hidden driver behind Australia’s economic success — population growth.

Data released by the Australian Bureau of Statistics yesterday showed that Australia’s economy had grown in the three months through June for a 104th quarter without a technical recession, which is defined as consecutiv­e quarters of economic contractio­n.

The Australian economy grew by 0.8% in the second quarter, faster than the sluggish 0.3% in the first quarter, and 1.9% for the year.

Half the improvemen­t was due to consumer spending, a consequenc­e of population growth providing more consumers. Increased exports and a surge in government spending also contribute­d to the stronger result.

Some economists argued after the March quarter that Australia’s unbroken recession-free run broke a world record for continuous growth previously held by the Netherland­s. But others point to Japan avoiding technical recession for more than 33 years until 1993.

Many economists argue that GDP alone can paint a misleading picture of an economy such as Australia. They also argue that GDP needed to grow faster to deliver wage growth to Australia’s expanding ranks of workers.

Commonweal­th Bank of Australia senior economist Gareth Aird said in a report in July that some of the weaknesses in the Australian economy were papered over by one of the highest population growth rates in the developed world, mostly generated by immigratio­n. Australia’s population grew by 1.55% last year.

Annual wage growth is currently at its lowest since Australia’s last recession ended in 1991. Underemplo­yment, a measure of people with jobs who want to work more hours, was near a record high, Aird found.

GDP per capita, a measure of the economic growth share for each consumer in an ever-expanding pool of consumers, was the lowest since the global financial crisis.

“Per capita measures of the economy suggest that growth in living standards has stagnated and for some sections of the resident population, in particular younger people, it has gone backward,’’ Aird wrote.

Philip Lowe, governor of the Reserve Bank of Australia, the central bank, said recently that “our strong population growth has flattered our headline growth figures.’’

A growing population requires more homes and housing constructi­on remained at a high level in the latest quarter data.

The RBA recently announced that Australia’s household debt-to-income ratio had reached an all-time high of 190% — one of the highest levels of indebtedne­ss in the world. The Australian rate is continuing to grow faster than wages.

Lowe blamed the trend on escalating real estate prices, a record low base interest rate of 1.5% and low wage growth.

Treasurer Scott Morrison yesterday noted that payrolls had increased by 0.7% in the latest quarter and 2.1% for the year. But this reflected more people in jobs as well as higher wages.

“Improving the incomes and wages of ... Australian workers remains our most important challenge,’’ he said. “As the labour market continues to strengthen, we believe wages can be expected to improve.’’

Australia, like several commoditye­xporting countries, has experience­d a credit boom to keep pace with housing prices since the financial crisis.

The Bank of Internatio­nal Settlement­s warned in June that Australia’s burgeoning household debt was a threat to its continuing economic growth, which is substantia­lly based on household spending.

Sydney University economist Mark Melatos shared concerns that Australian­s curtailing spending to repay debt could end the economy’s extraordin­ary run of growth.

“It’s hard to judge where the tipping point is in terms of debt as a percentage of household income cutting into growth,’’ he said. “But you’d think it’s getting pretty close.’’

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