Crunch meeting: RBA faces test on another large rate rise
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The RBA has been lifting interest rates to slow inflation, which at a monthly level has reached its fastest pace since the 1990-91 recession.
The Melbourne Institute’s monthly measure of inflation, released on Monday, showed a 0.5 per cent lift in prices through September. Its measure of underlying inflation increased by 0.4 per cent, taking the annual rate up to 5.4 per cent.
The RBA seeks to keep inflation between 2 and 3 per cent.
At its September board meeting, RBA members discussed whether to lift interest rates by a quarter or half percentage point. The minutes showed the RBA is aware of the way interest rates take time to work through the economy and that it had “quite quickly” lifted rates over the previous four months.
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Since the September meeting, interest rates on government debt have soared, almost every currency in the world has fallen in value against the American dollar and sharemarkets have shed value over growing fears of a global recession either late this year or in early 2023.
CoreLogic on Monday reported a further fall in house values, which shows Sydney values down by 9.2 per cent since January while they have edged down by 6.2 per cent in Melbourne.
Financial markets put the chance of another half percentage point rate increase at Tuesday’s meeting at 80 per cent, but economists are more mixed with some expecting the RBA to back a quarter percentage point lift.
The same markets have the cash rate reaching 4.1 per cent by the middle of next year.
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AMP Capital chief economist Shane Oliver said if the Reserve Bank moved rates in line with financial market expectations, the economy would tumble into recession.
“This would more than double average household interest payments and push total mortgage repayments to record highs relative to household income and drive a 30 per cent or so fall in prices,” he said.
Research by the National Housing Finance and Investment Corporation, to be released on Tuesday, suggests a further lift in interest rates will do little to quell inflation in the building sector.
The housing construction sector has been one of the key sources of inflation over the past 12 months.
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High levels of construction activity and ongoing building and labour shortages have taken the annual inflation rate across the sector to an all-time high of 20.3 per cent. A year ago, the rate had fallen to just 1 per cent.
But the corporation’s research into the factors behind construction cost inflation shows 83 per cent of it is due to supply constraints. It noted this showed cost pressures would likely persist even if interest rates slowed demand for new housing.
By contrast, through the early stages of the pandemic, three-quarters of the cost inflation in building was due to strong demand from those wanting a new home or renovation work.
Over the past 12 months, the cost of plywood and steel reinforcement has increased by more than 25 per cent. Some structural timber products have gone up in price by more than 40 per cent.
The corporation’s head of research, Hugh Hartigan, said there were signs supply constraints were easing, which should reduce price pressures over months. But higher interest rates would create their own issues.
“Rapidly rising interest rates and the strongest building cost inflation in several decades are providing headwinds for the future supply pipeline, with building approvals now well off their highs,” he said.
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