Rear View Mirror Still Shows Rising Inequality Across Australia!

The DFA surveys have been tracking the rising pressure on households, thanks to rising pressures from costs of living inflation, higher mortgage and rental payments, and static or falling real incomes, which are not expected to catch up with past peaks for years. Our latest release to end February 2025 is out, and I will make a show on this shortly, as well as cover the post code level analysis in next Tuesdays live stream. https://youtu.be/FUmpN6eKjsM

One of the points in our analysis is the rising levels of financial pressure for some households, while others are doing just fine, thanks you, with net wealth rising from home price growth, and investments thanks to stock market rises. Roughly one in three households are in financial clover, a third are hanging on just, but a third are continuing to fall behind, and getting into deeper financial do do.

But now the mother of all household surveys, the Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia (HILDA) Survey was released today. They reported that financial inequality in Australia is at its highest since 2001 just a young people find themselves shut out of the housing market. The report says there was a fall in home ownership between 2002 and 2018, but home debt across all households rose in a “sustained fashion” regardless.

And things are getting harder for single parents, who have seen a 76% increase in childcare costs per child since 2006 and more than half (51.2%) of respondents said their real income decreased between 2021 and 2022.

They now have released their 19th annual report with data from 2001 to 2022 called wave 22. Wait, you say. Surely, we are in 2025, so is this really that relevant? This is indeed one of my bug-bears about the HILDA reports, they are so lagged as to be seriously misleading.

But all up, the HILDA data does confirm the trends in our surveys, but the true impact won’t be seen until future releases of their surveys. But ahead of the upcoming election, it is important to recognise the rising disparity between those households under financial pressure and the rest of the community. Unfortunately politicians tend to be in the doing well category, (from property portfolio or other investments), not to mention any specific member, nudge nudge wink wink…

http://www.martinnorth.com/

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Author: Martin North

Martin North is the Principal of Digital Finance Analytics

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