That 1.8 per cent,on top of a 3.5 per cent jump in the September quarter and a 3.2 per cent burst in the December quarter,has dragged Australia’s economic output beyond where it was going into the pandemic.
It’s a wonder what the combination of the lowest interest rates on record,about $300 billion in federal handouts (plus plenty from the states and territories) and a ban on Australians leaving the country will do for the local economy.
That combination has been parlayed by the nation’s consumers into the strong economic rebound.
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Household consumption has grown a remarkable 14 per cent or almost $33 billion over the past nine months. It took 6 years for consumption to grow that much ahead of the pandemic.
Direct spending by consumers accounted for more than a third of the March quarter result. That doesn’t include their spending on new homes or thehuge spike in house prices.
It accounted for almost 80 per cent of the December quarter result and the economy would have contracted in the September quarter if not for the extraordinary shopping habits of Australians.