Household savings are much lower than believed,in a sign people are struggling to make ends meet.Credit:Tanya Lake
So confident was it,the bank revised up its forecasts for the nation’s household savings ratio – the proportion of net disposable income that is not consumed by households – in its most recent outlook on the economy,from 0.9 per cent to 3.2 per cent for the final three months of 2023.
By the middle of this year,it reckoned the savings rate would still be about 3.2 per cent before increasing by year’s end.
But that version of the economy took a battering on Wednesday when the Australian Bureau of Statistics said nope,household savings are actually much,much lower than we thought.
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It revised the household savings ratio all the way back to the start of last year. In the December quarter,instead of the RBA’s 3.2 per cent,the ABS now puts the rate at 1.6 per cent before falling to 0.9 per cent in the first three months of this year.
In the September quarter of last year,when many Australians discovered they owed the Tax Office cash because of the end of the low- and middle-income tax offset,it was just 0.2 per cent. The last time a 0.2 per cent savings rate was recorded was in late 2007.
For years,we’ve been told Australians had saved up cash during the COVID pandemic,which they’ve been spending,adding to inflationary pressures. But Westpac’s economists,in light of the new figures,reckon that instead of drawing down about 23 per cent of their $255 billion in additional savings that was put away during the pandemic,the real figure is about 45 per cent.