The Weekly Advertiser Horsham

Robust domestic economic growth

- With Robert Goudie CFP Graddipfp Consortium Private Wealth

Australia is rebounding from the pandemic, with domestic economic growth forecast to reach 3.5 percent this financial year.

Some analysts predict it might be even stronger — possibly reaching as high as four percent.

Much of this is due to the lingering impact of the Federal Government’s massive $343-billion health and economic pandemic support packages, as well as further spending in response to recent floods in New South Wales and Queensland.

The government is also spending some $18-billion on infrastruc­ture, mostly rail and road improvemen­ts, in an attempt to boost productivi­ty and efficienci­es throughout the economy, particular­ly in the regions.

Tightening geo-political tensions in Asia and around the world has prompted the government to earmark as much spending again on strategic defence measures, including a new naval submarine base on the east coast.

Commodity prices

The sudden, and largely unexpected, war in Ukraine has prompted a spike in oil prices as a shadow falls over the continued supply of Russian oil and gas to Western Europe.

While prices will ease with the arrival of the northern summer, they are expected to remain stubbornly high.

The war, along with continued supply interrupti­ons due to the pandemic’s lingering impact on world trade, means prices for key commoditie­s such as iron ore, coal, and wheat will remain high for the foreseeabl­e future.

For Australia, this is, on balance, good news, meaning the price we are paid for key exports will remain strong, driving both domestic profits and government tax revenue higher.

Employment

Domestic unemployme­nt is set to fall to 3.75 percent in the coming months – its lowest level in some 50 years.

Meanwhile, whole sectors, such as the aged-care and child-minding sectors and a number of agricultur­al sectors, are reporting desperate staff shortages, prompting calls to lift migration levels and allow more temporary workers into the country. Nonetheles­s, low wage growth continues to dog the economy. While the government is forecastin­g quarterly wage growth of 3.25 percent by the middle of next year, this is still below the expected inflation rate. This means most Australian­s will face little relief from higher living costs.

Nonetheles­s, the continued strength of government spending, combined with prevailing strong terms of trade, should boost profits across the board, leading to higher returns for investors.

On the horizon

As always, there are clouds on the horizon. The United States was already facing inflationa­ry pressures, and the impact of the Ukraine war on oil prices is likely to push the US inflation rate higher still, possibly touching 7.9 percent this year.

The US Federal Reserve has started to pull monetary policy back in with a series of interest-rate hikes, fanning fears that the US economy might fall into recession later this year.

The US is not alone. The Australian Federal Treasury expects global trade bottleneck­s – the war in Ukraine and higher oil and food prices – to prompt an uptick in the local inflation rate above the Reserve Bank’s preferred inflation band of 2.5 to three percent.

Rising inflation is, in turn, spurring fears of a domestic interest-rate hike, with many analysts expecting the cash rate to increase by one full percentage point, which could cause home-loan rates to rise across the country. • The informatio­n provided in this article is general in nature only and does not constitute personal financial advice.

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