Big Consequences As The Inflation Higher For Longer Drama Plays Out As Expected…

Well now we know. While the annual Australian headline inflation rate slipped to 2.8%, which is just within the RBA’s target 2-3% band, from 3.8% in the June quarter and is the lowest since March 2021, underlying inflation remains well above the RBA’s 2 per cent to 3 per cent target band at 3.5 per cent in line with forecasts. Annual Goods inflation was 1.4 per cent, down from 3.2 per cent in the June quarter.

The trimmed mean measure of consumer prices, which smooths out volatile items, rose 0.8% in the three months through September, matching estimates, but services inflation rose to 4.6% from 4.5% last time around. This is the prices of all those things you can’t drop on your foot. The biggest culprits were rent, insurance, education, and medical, dental and hospital services costs. Education prices were up 6.4 per cent. The cost of taking pets to the vet rose by 5.8 per cent in the year to September, while the price of a haircut went up by 6.3 per cent and the cost of a visit to the mechanic jumped by 4.3 per cent. The common theme. Wages growth.

While a first rate cut in February remains possible, with the consumer starting to feel more upbeat, wealth booming, strong population growth keeping housing costs sticky and governments still spending up a storm, the RBA doesn’t appear to have a lot of room to move.

Next year’s RBA board meetings are not until mid-February, the end of March and late May – a mile away for anyone struggling with debt.

Higher for longer remains my call as financial pressures on many households continue to build. Something will break. No Christmas rate cut present coming from Santa this year.

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Author: Martin North

Martin North is the Principal of Digital Finance Analytics

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