On top of the re-jigged stage 3 tax cuts,real household disposable income will be forecast to grow by 3.5 per cent in the coming financial year. Much of that increase,the biggest outside the COVID pandemic period of cash handouts,will be due to higher wages,but a full percentage point will come from the tax cuts.
In dollar terms,across all Australians the average tax cut for the coming year will be $1888.
This week,the Reserve Bank used its quarterly monetary policy statement to note that much of the weakness in consumer spending over the past year was due to a combination of “high inflation,tax payments growing faster than incomes and higher interest rates”.
It noted that real disposable income had declined “sharply” over the past 18 months,with the stage 3 tax cuts likely to result in real incomes “growing strongly” in the second half of this year.
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Chalmers said the budget would not add to inflation pressures in the economy,but it would deliver important relief to consumers through the tax cuts and other cost-of-living measures.
“We know people are under pressure and that’s why our wages policies and tax cuts for every taxpayer are so important. This is all part of a big focus in the budget on helping to ease cost-of-living pressures,” he said.