Townsville Bulletin

Coalition chances take a hit

- MATTHEW KILLORAN

THE Reserve Bank Governor Philip Lowe made it clear that his decision was not political, but that doesn’t mean its impact won’t be.

Interest rates rising again were inevitable. They were at emergency levels for the pandemic and that emergency has passed.

But that doesn’t mean this was news Prime Minister Scott Morrison, or homeowners, wanted to hear less than three weeks out from an election.

There are many people who will have purchased a home, at inflated prices, on earlier forecasts from the RBA that interest rates would not be increased until 2024.

But circumstan­ces changed and interest rates went up and will again and again before the year is done, likely reaching 1.5 per cent.

With grocery prices on the rise, petrol prices edging back up despite the fuel excise cut, this is just one more pressure on the family budget.

The fact is, they are still at historical­ly low rates and Dr Lowe said he had to move because the economy was doing well.

That will be cold comfort for many people.

A generation of homeowners who have never experience­d a rate rise are going to have to learn to tighten their belts in the coming months and years.

Rate rises probably won’t be the biggest factor that determines the outcome of the election, just like it wasn’t in 2007 for John Howard.

But it will likely cost votes.

 ?? ?? Philip Lowe.
Philip Lowe.

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