As the political debate focuses on the cost of living and the level of government spending in the economy,Chalmers welcomed the third consecutive quarter of real wage growth but stressed the government knew Australians were still struggling with high prices.
“When we came to office,real wages were falling by 3.4 per cent,” he said.
“Since our election,average annualised wage growth is double the rate we saw under our predecessors. This return to sustainable wages growth under a Labor government is welcome,but we know people are still under pressure.”
Annual wage growth clocked in 0.3 percentage points higher than the annual inflation rate of 3.8 per cent as public servants collected their highest pay increases for a June quarter in 12 years. Public sector wages contributed a quarter of overall wage growth in the June quarter – up from 19 per cent at the same time last year.
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The day after Reserve Bank deputy governorAndrew Hauser dismissed predictions on the next interest rate move as the words of “false prophets”,economists warned bigger pay packets could keep inflation sticky and interest rates higher for longer.
KPMG chief economist Brendan Rynne said the strength in public sector wages reflected a surge in recruitment and $30 billion in wage increases for childcare,aged care and disability care workers.