The Oceania Times

Top Menu

  • About us
  • Contact Us
  • Cookie Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions

Main Menu

  • Australian Economy
  • Brokers
  • Commodities
  • Currencies
  • Financial Market
  • Gold and Precious Metals
  • Investment
  • Stock Shares
  • About us
  • Contact Us
  • Cookie Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions

logo

The Oceania Times

  • Australian Economy
  • Brokers
  • Commodities
  • Currencies
  • Financial Market
  • Gold and Precious Metals
  • Investment
  • Stock Shares
  • Bridge Investment Group (NYSE:BRDG) & Artisan Partners Asset Management (NYSE:APAM) Head-To-Head Survey

  • NIPCO leverages on PIA, to increase investment in petroleum sector | The Guardian Nigeria News

  • ‘Fluffy’ crab from Australia that wears sea sponge like a hat named after Darwin’s ship

  • US Fed meeting to dollar index: Top 5 triggers for yellow metal next week

  • Amphastar Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (NASDAQ:AMPH) CFO William J. Peters Sells 18,386 Shares

Australian Economy
Home›Australian Economy›Australia’s economy is on the up, but the IMF forecasts a sharp fall is coming

Australia’s economy is on the up, but the IMF forecasts a sharp fall is coming

By Megan
April 22, 2022
10
0
Share:

retail tech easter 2022 trading rules economy pensioners pension

There are nearly 30,000 retail vacancies, and pensioners could help fill the gap. Source: Unsplash/Kentaro Toma.

While the Australian economy is powering along courtesy of hundreds of billions in deficit spending, emergency low interest rates and a dramatic spike in energy prices, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has confirmed that 2023 is going to be a return to business as usual for Australia — pre-pandemic business, that is.

In its latest global forecasts, the IMF says the commodities boom unleashed by Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine will boost GDP in Australia this year, allowing us to outperform the world economy. Real growth in Australia is projected to rise to 4.2% this year, compared with a 4.1% rise forecast in the January edition of the fund’s World Economic Outlook — but well above the lowered world estimate for 2022 of 3.6%.

No wonder Australian shoppers are happily spending at the moment — Australian Bureau of Statistics monthly spending data for households, released on Wednesday, showed a 7.7% rise in February after a 5% rise in January, with clothing and footwear (20.2%), recreation and culture (17.8%), and hotels, cafes and restaurants all showing strong growth. It’s not just energy prices — consumers are buoyant, too (which might end up being a telling factor in a tight election).

But growth is forecast to fall sharply in 2023, to just 2.5% — well below the 3.6% estimated for the world next year — returning us to the position we were in during the years of subpar economic growth leading up to the pandemic.

Inflation is forecast to rise 3.9% (it was 3.5% in 2021), but that will be well below the forecast for advanced economies of 5.7%. It is forecast to fade to 2.7% in 2023. Unemployment is forecast to be 4% this year, rising to 4.3% in 2023, a forecast that the Morrison government will ignore in its election campaign.

Get in quick for a pay rise

What will drag down growth? Our best frenemy, China. The IMF forecasts GDP growth there of 4.4% this year, down from 8.1% last year. First-quarter GDP rose an annual 4.8% in China but the quarter-on-quarter GDP figures (before the dramatic impact of the lockdowns in April in cities such as Shanghai) slowed to a weak (by Chinese standards) 1.3%, down from 1.6% in the three months to December. China’s growth in 2023 is forecast to recover to 5.1%, unlike much of the rest of the world (including Australia). That assumes the present COVID-19 wave leaves no lasting impact on the Chinese economy.

The other factor is interest rates: the IMF assumes a significantly tighter monetary policy in Australia as in the rest of the world, even if it doesn’t share the enthusiastic assumptions of inflation hawks that the Reserve Bank will jack up interest rates dramatically, starting in June.

Get daily business news.

The latest stories, funding information, and expert advice. Free to sign up.

But think through what the IMF forecasts mean. In 12 months’ time, whatever labour market pressures there are for higher wages growth will begin evaporating as unemployment rises. Those pressures have yet to yield any noteworthy wage rises so far. Workers have a limited period to get the benefit of a tight labour market. If you’re in a long-term contract or multi-year enterprise agreement, bad luck — you’ll miss out (exactly the kind of agreements Morrison and big business want to extend across the workforce, they revealed this week).

John Howard scored a palpable hit on Paul Keating during the recovery from the early 1990s recession when he referred to “five minutes of economic sunshine”. It summed up the mood of a nation that had seen meagre rewards for its punishment from a ferocious period of economic and financial turmoil, exacerbated by the Reserve Bank’s determination to put fighting inflation ahead of fighting unemployment.

But it also accurately sums up what the government, big business and the Reserve Bank have in mind for Australian workers between now and 2023, if the IMF is anything to go by.

This article was first published by Crikey.

Source link

Previous Article

Australia would be among the biggest economic ...

Next Article

Brokers, how to create and leverage your ...

0
Shares
  • 0
  • +
  • 0
  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Megan

Related articles More from author

  • Australian Economy

    Australia’s minimum wage earners to get $40 a week pay rise, Fair Work Commission rules | Australian economy

    June 15, 2022
    By Megan
  • Australian Economy

    Two-year move to democracy for Mali junta

    June 7, 2022
    By Megan
  • Australian Economy

    how Labor should manage the economy

    May 22, 2022
    By Megan
  • Australian Economy

    Uni staff divided over latest merger push

    June 3, 2022
    By Megan
  • Australian Economy

    Australian visa backlog keeping engineers out of country amid skills shortage | Migration

    June 9, 2022
    By Megan
  • Australian Economy

    Australian Defence Minister to visit India today to boost security ties

    June 20, 2022
    By Megan

Leave a reply Cancel reply

You may interested

  • Investment

    Which One Fares Better? – Forbes Advisor INDIA

  • Brokers

    How the pandemic changed broker prospecting for new business

  • Gold and Precious Metals

    Gold stays on the bridge to nowhere

  • LATEST REVIEWS

  • TOP REVIEWS

Timeline

  • July 3, 2022

    Bridge Investment Group (NYSE:BRDG) & Artisan Partners Asset Management (NYSE:APAM) Head-To-Head Survey

  • July 3, 2022

    NIPCO leverages on PIA, to increase investment in petroleum sector | The Guardian Nigeria News

  • July 3, 2022

    ‘Fluffy’ crab from Australia that wears sea sponge like a hat named after Darwin’s ship

  • July 3, 2022

    US Fed meeting to dollar index: Top 5 triggers for yellow metal next week

  • July 3, 2022

    Amphastar Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (NASDAQ:AMPH) CFO William J. Peters Sells 18,386 Shares

Best Reviews

Latest News

Investment

Bridge Investment Group (NYSE:BRDG) & Artisan Partners Asset Management (NYSE:APAM) Head-To-Head Survey

Bridge Investment Group (NYSE:BRDG – Get Rating) and Artisan Partners Asset Management (NYSE:APAM – Get Rating) are both finance companies, but which is the better investment? We will contrast the ...
  • NIPCO leverages on PIA, to increase investment in petroleum sector | The Guardian Nigeria News

    By Megan
    July 3, 2022
  • ‘Fluffy’ crab from Australia that wears sea sponge like a hat named after Darwin’s ship

    By Megan
    July 3, 2022
  • US Fed meeting to dollar index: Top 5 triggers for yellow metal next week

    By Megan
    July 3, 2022
  • Amphastar Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (NASDAQ:AMPH) CFO William J. Peters Sells 18,386 Shares

    By Megan
    July 3, 2022
  • Recent

  • Popular

  • Comments

  • Bridge Investment Group (NYSE:BRDG) & Artisan Partners Asset Management (NYSE:APAM) Head-To-Head Survey

    By Megan
    July 3, 2022
  • NIPCO leverages on PIA, to increase investment in petroleum sector | The Guardian Nigeria News

    By Megan
    July 3, 2022
  • ‘Fluffy’ crab from Australia that wears sea sponge like a hat named after Darwin’s ship

    By Megan
    July 3, 2022
  • US Fed meeting to dollar index: Top 5 triggers for yellow metal next week

    By Megan
    July 3, 2022
  • Bridge Investment Group (NYSE:BRDG) & Artisan Partners Asset Management (NYSE:APAM) Head-To-Head Survey

    By Megan
    July 3, 2022
  • Australian economy survived Covid better than most but recovery could slow, OECD says | Australian ...

    By Megan
    September 14, 2021
  • The Best Online Brokers, According to 5 Financial Experts

    By Megan
    September 14, 2021
  • Is Disaster Looming for Australia’s Economy?

    By Megan
    September 29, 2021

Trending News

  • Investment

    Bridge Investment Group (NYSE:BRDG) & Artisan Partners Asset Management (NYSE:APAM) Head-To-Head Survey

    Bridge Investment Group (NYSE:BRDG – Get Rating) and Artisan Partners Asset Management (NYSE:APAM – Get Rating) are both finance companies, but which is the better investment? We will contrast the ...
  • Investment

    NIPCO leverages on PIA, to increase investment in petroleum sector | The Guardian Nigeria News

    28 Mar Nearly two years after the Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) Limited announced plans to reduce the cost of oil production to about $10 per barrel, this effort has ...
  • Australian Economy

    ‘Fluffy’ crab from Australia that wears sea sponge like a hat named after Darwin’s ship

    New Delhi: A “fluffy” crab that uses a sea sponge like a hat to protect itself, discovered off the coast of Australia, has been named after a ship that English ...
  • Gold and Precious Metals

    US Fed meeting to dollar index: Top 5 triggers for yellow metal next week

    Gold prices remained trapped in a range this week, wherein there was a divergence in domestic and international gold prices. The precious metal witnessed a decline in the international markets, ...
  • Stock Shares

    Amphastar Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (NASDAQ:AMPH) CFO William J. Peters Sells 18,386 Shares

    Amphastar Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (NASDAQ:AMPH – Get Rating) CFO William J. Peters sold 18,386 shares of the business’s stock in a transaction on Thursday, June 30th. The shares were sold at ...
  • About us
  • Contact Us
  • Cookie Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
© Copyright The Oceania Times. All rights reserved.

SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER

Get our latest downloads and information first. Complete the form below to subscribe to our weekly newsletter.