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By Much of this is beyond the control of any government, but the winners will still be under pressure to ease the cost-of-living crisis without stimulating yet more inflation. They will also take the blame should rates have to rise so fast that they tip the economy into recession, even if that is really the responsibility of the independent central bank. So far, the centre-left Labor opposition looks set to end
the nine-year reign of the conservative Liberal National
government at the Labor has pledged to tackle the rising cost of living by
supporting commensurate wages gains, putting pressure on Prime
Minister His argument took a body blow this week when official wage data showed annual growth of just 2.4%, less than half the 5.1% pace of consumer price inflation. Labor jumped on the figures to claim ordinary Australians were going backwards in real wages, and that at a time when the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) was raising borrowing costs. The RBA underlined its determination to beat inflation by
lifting interest rates at a Financial markets are wagering it will have to hike every month for the rest of the year, taking rates from the current lowly 0.35% to as high as 2.75% by Christmas. If right, that would be one of the most drastic tightening
campaigns in modern history and a major burden for households
that owe a record It would add more than DEBT, AND MORE DEBT Just the prospect of rate rises has cast a pall over the
national mood. A respected survey of consumers from Westpac this
month showed sentiment cratered at lows last seen in "The Australian household sector is one of the most indebted
in the world, so they are more sensitive to changes in interest
rates than at any other time," warns "This elevated level of household indebtedness means that the RBA must thread the rate hike needle carefully." Adding insult to injury, rising borrowing costs also threaten to upend the housing market which boasted its strongest year ever in 2021 as values surged 25% across the nation. Prices have already started to slip in The public sector has debt problems of its own having run up
record budget deficits through the pandemic and a gross debt
pile of Another A year ago the government could borrow for three years at zero percent. It now costs around 3%. Yet both major parties have committed to more spending, not
less, and to radical cuts in income taxes due from mid-2024 that
are estimated to cost Many economists argue this simply cannot be afforded given
added spending on health, defence and climate change mitigation.
How the winner this weekend settles this vexed issue, could
well decide the next election.
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