The latest RBA meeting on the 6th of October has signalled the end of what Glenn Stevens has called a 'mild downturn'. After holding interest rates at 3% for 12 months the cash rate has now started heading up (though only slightly ) after the RBA decided to put them at 3.25% on Tuesday.
After Lehman Bros in the U.S filed for bankruptcy in Sept 2008 the RBA cut the cash rate by 4.25% over a 6 month period in a bid to prevent major credit and AD issues in Australia.
Thus the signal that Australia's downturn is possibly over has been given by the RBA. If you want to read why G.Stevens believes Australia avoided the major problems experienced in the G7 in particular then read this concise summary.
The question remains- Is Australia out of the recession? and why is the cash rate rising when inflation is still below the 2-3% target range?
Wll the answer is a pre emptive strike, a move to curb excess borrowing at a low rate of interest and to send the market a signal.
Of note is that unemployment has fallen very slightly from 5.8% to 5.7% which is a further indication of a return to expansionary conditions. What will be interesting is that Glenn Stevens also said "a degree of policy discipline will be needed". This means that he expects fiscal policy will also slow down its expansionary phase and that spending will decrease- however will this happen in light of the fact that the next Budget leads up to the next election?
It will be interesting to see what the ALP does??
No comments:
Post a Comment