Easing import prices might influence the Reserve Bank today
by Alan Thornhill
Although car and house sales have been strong, easing price pressures might save Australia from another interest rate rise today.
At this stage, though, that is still far from certain and we will all have to wait until 2.30 this afternoon before we will know for sure.
That’s when the Reserve Bank plans to release the results of a review of Australia’s interest rates, that its board will conduct early today.
Either way, figures that the Australian Bureau of Statistics has just published are sure to weigh heavily on the board’s deliberations.
These include the bureau’s balance of payments figures and business indicators for the December quarter.
Other figures, published by the Housing Industry Association, are also likely to be influential.
They showed a 9.5 per cent rebound in the sales of Australia’s large volume residential builders in January.
The association’s chief economist, Harley Dale, said a sustained improvement, of this kind, would suggest that a recovery, driven both by people upgrading – and investors – would be “achievable.’
The Federal government’s now discontinued subsidy for first home buyers has been driving the market for some time now.
The bureau’s balance of payments figures showed some mixed results.
They revealed, for example, that Australia’s current account deficit rose by $2.7 billion, or 19 per cent, in the quarter to almost $17.5 billion.
That is expected to detract 1.3 percentage points from Australia’s economic growth in the December quarter, on a volume measure.
The bureau’s figures also showed that Australia’s net foreign was almost $648 billion at the end of December.
That represented a rise of 2 per cent over 2009.
Detailed figures, in the Statistician’s bulletin, also suggested that new vehicle imports had been particularly strong during the quarter.
But one figure, in the Statistician’s bulletin, stood out.
A technical indicator, called the implicit price deflator, fell by 2.1 per cent in the December quarter.
This suggests that Australia’s imports, in the December quarter, will have a significant impact on other price pressures in the economy.
The strength of the $A, over most of the December quarter, helped there.
The Reserve Bank aims to keep Australia’s inflation in a 2-3 per cent range, over the course of the business cycle.
It looks at pressures, like these, very closely, when it reviews Australia’s interest rates, as it will do today.
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Alan Thornhill is a parliamentary press gallery journalist. Private Briefing is updated daily with Australian personal finance news, analysis, and commentary.
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