Will The RBA Blink First?

On Melbourne Cup day we will get the next RBA cash rate decision. Michelle Bullocks testimony before the Senate this week was pretty vague – waiting for data, will update forecasts etc.

But as Christopher Joye writes in the AFR, following the material upside surprise to inflation in the September quarter, almost all economists and investors agree that the Reserve Bank of Australia should lift interest rates in November.

But participants worry that a concerted campaign to politically compromise Australia’s central bank may result in the RBA remarkably choosing not to seek to combat its existential inflation crisis.

This would be the latest in a chapter of accidents, with the RBA cutting rates too low, and stoking the economy via the Term Funding Facility, and Quantitative Easing. Their yield control attempts went wrong, and then they held rates way to low, promising no hike for years. And their forecasting is a disaster.

This is a central bank with a 4.1 per cent cash rate that is just a smidge above what it assesses to be the neutral rate of 3.8 per cent. And that is a cash rate that is 1.0 to 1.5 percentage points below peer rates in the US, Britain, Canada and New Zealand.

Even the RBA’s outgoing assistant governor Luci Ellis, who is now chief economist at Westpac, called a “hike” only days after she predicted that inflation would not be robust enough to warrant one.

In sum, we know the RBA should hike in November. Whether it actually does or not appears to now be a question of its ability to resist political interference.

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Author: Martin North

Martin North is the Principal of Digital Finance Analytics

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