With Jim Chalmers’s third budget on May 14, Australians will be looking for some more cost-of-living relief – beyond the tax cuts – although they have been warned extra measures will be modest.
As this week’s consumer price index showed, the battle with inflation has not yet been won. The government can’t afford to have an over-generous budget add to inflation and further delay a pre-election reduction in interest rates.
In this podcast, we’re joined by independent economist Chris Richardson to discuss the budget and Australia’s economic outlook.
Richardson say while the growth figure will be downgraded in the budget, not all is bad,
It will be downgraded, for the year just finishing, for the financial year just soon to start. It is tough times. To be fair, the Australian economy is growing. There hasn’t been a recession. There hasn’t been some of the problems that people expected.
On inflation, however, he says the new figures paint a much bleaker picture,
They are ugly. So, in the last three months, prices grew by 1%. Over the last year, they grew by a bit more than 3.5%. And yes, it’s falling. It’s not falling as fast as the Reserve Bank had predicted. There’d been hopes from some people that there might be an interest rate cut sooner rather than later.
But those numbers today, I tell you: absolutely, you are not getting a rate cut in Australia until the end of this calendar year at best.
Like many other economists, Richardson is critical of Anthony Albanese’s Future Made in Australia interventionist industry policy. He says while there’s some potential benefit, the government doesn’t seem to be focused on the right areas,
You look at something like solar panels, and throwing money at that is just spectacularly dumb. That is just a waste of money. It’s the equivalent of asking taxpayers to smoke $100 notes. And I do worry that bits of the new industry policy are a little bit more around having announcements in some key marginal seats in Queensland, for example, then they are around good policy.


France Faces Long Road to Economic Rebalancing as Weak Demand and High Rates Weigh, Says Citi
China Keeps Loan Prime Rates Unchanged for 13th Straight Month as Policymakers Prioritize Credit Demand Recovery
US Dollar Climbs to One-Year High as Fed Rate Hike Expectations Surge
Today’s space race could turn fatal if we don’t agree on new rules
Australia Inflation Cools in May, But Core CPI Keeps RBA Rate Hike Risks Alive
Goldman Sachs: US Dollar Likely to Stay Strong Despite Oil Price Retreat
Oil Prices Slip as Iran Sanctions Relief and Hormuz Shipping Recovery Ease Supply Concerns
With Iran and the US signing a peace deal, where does that leave Benjamin Netanyahu?
Japan, U.S. Discuss Yen Weakness as Currency Intervention Concerns Grow
Sell the Bounce": Gold Rally Stalls Near $4165 as Fed Hawks Slam the Door on Rate Cuts — Targets $4000/$3600
How Donald Trump has changed the way diplomacy is done
Asian Stocks Slip as Oil Rebounds Amid Fed Rate Hike Fears
AI Memory Boom Sparks Global Chip Supply Crunch 




