IMF says Australia needs to raise interest rates further to control inflation

An independent assessment of Australia's economy suggests interest rates will need to lift higher and governments will need to pitch in to bring inflation down.

A worker arranges apples for sale at a market

Headline inflation lifted 5.4 per cent annually in the September quarter, far above the central bank's target range of 2-3 per cent. Source: AAP / Joel Carrett

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has urged Australia's central bank to keep lifting interest rates to bring inflation down faster.

Consumer price growth remains "well above" the Reserve Bank of Australia's target range, the global organisation has warned, with the price of services remaining high, as is the case in many advanced economies.

"Staff therefore recommend further monetary policy tightening to ensure that inflation comes back to the target range by 2025 and minimise the risk of de-anchoring inflation expectations," IMF staff wrote in a statement on Australia's economy.

Headline inflation lifted 5.4 per cent annually in the September quarter, well below the 7.8 per cent peak in December though far above the central bank's target range of 2-3 per cent.
The stronger-than-expected dataset has fuelled when the central bank board meets on Tuesday.

The IMF said federal and state governments should help take pressure off inflation by rolling out public investment projects at a "more measured and co-ordinated pace", given supply constraints.

Treasurer Jim Chalmers said the independent assessment of the economy supported his government's budget strategy, with inflation data released last week showing its cost-of-living policies took half a percentage point off inflation.
"This report welcomes the government's broader economic agenda, including investments in cheaper and cleaner energy, cheaper childcare, and skills and vocational training, as well as policies to boost housing supply," he added.

The IMF said Australia's economy has proved resilient, though growth is forecast to slow or 1.25 per cent in 2024.

There are risks factors that could lead to even weaker growth, but the global organisation was most concerned about the inflationary outlook, including the possibility of households losing faith in prices coming down fast enough, prompting them to start demanding higher wages.

Energy - particularly petrol - and food prices were also identified as risks to the inflation outlook, as well as uncertainty around household consumption patterns and how willing people were to spend their saving buffers built up during the pandemic

The IMF also made some longer-term recommendations, including focusing on tax reform, productivity growth, and supporting the green transition.

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Published 1 November 2023 12:40pm
Source: AAP



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