Breaking: Headline inflation eases to 4.2 per cent in April as fuel prices fall
Breaking: Headline inflation eases to 4.2 per cent in April as fuel prices fall
Fall in auction clearance rates could be good news for first home buyers
Betashares: What does the Budget's tax changes mean for my investment portfolio?
A lot of confusion around by the sounds of it
Find out if you're among the budget's winners or losers
What if we used taxes or superannuation to control inflation, not just interest rates?
The (RBA’s) problem is we’re all too rich
non archived version here (i use FF and the ByPass Paywalls extension) https://www.afr.com/politics/federal/the-rba-s-problem-is-we-re-all-too-rich-20260507-p5zura [https://www.afr.com/politics/federal/the-rba-s-problem-is-we-re-all-too-rich-20260507-p5zura] >The bank’s fight against inflation is much harder due to the extraordinary boom in household wealth, which is keeping the economy motoring along. Expect interest rates to stay high. >We’re one of the richest countries in the world, with one of the fastest growth rates of wealth, too. What that means is that the consumer’s resilience to an income shock is greater than what was in the past.” Second only to Luxembourg >Why? Because for all the talk of sinking consumer confidence due to rate hikes and the Iran energy shock, the economy is absolutely motoring along. >Consumers are holding up well, too. The household spending indicator, released just before the RBA’s decision on Tuesday, suggested consumption growth is running at an annualised rate of 6.5 per cent, which Tharenou suggests GDP growth for the March quarter could come in at 2.75 per cent, an acceleration from the December quarter. >But Tharenou keeps coming back to those numbers around Australian wealth. Reducing aggregate spending is going to be very tough because we are sitting on so much wealth. >These are numbers that sum up the feeling that so many of us have, when we hear about a cost of living crunch, but can’t get a table in a restaurant on a Saturday night, or pay through the nose for a seat on a plane.
Migration, crypto and red tape to feature in budget bid for economic growth
Live: RBA hikes interest rates to 4.35pc in third rate rise for 2026
RBA's decision on interest rates a choice between two evils: recession or inflation