Reserve Bank governor Michele Bullock and Treasurer Jim Chalmers.Credit:Alex Ellinghausen
By any measure,the living standards of most people are going backwards. Economic output per person has been falling for the best part of two years as a combination of low wage growth,high interest rates and high taxes hit households.
The slice of the Australian economic pie shared among all of us – GDP per capita – has shrunk by 2 per cent over the past year. Year-on-year,it’s more than $1600 each.
The past year has served up a combination of energy supplements,cheaper medicines,near-free public transport,the stage 3 tax cuts,a lift in wages and a jobs market so tight it’s got the Reserve Bank jumping at shadows – but none of this has been enough to get households spending over the past three months.
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Household consumption – the driving engine of the economy – has fallen since March.
Instead of spending money,households have increased the amount they squirrel away in their bank accounts or under the mattress.
Immigration and public spending – including major projects such as suburban rail and defence equipment – is keeping the country barely ticking over.