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The Guardian - AU
The Guardian - AU
National
Peter Hannam

Interest rates: RBA weighs up risk of ‘climb shock’ ahead of decision

People walk past the Reserve Bank of Australia in Sydney
Economists say the RBA will need to lift its key interest rate to quell inflation, but are split on how much it will jump by on Tuesday. Photograph: Steven Saphore/AAP

The Reserve Bank faces a delicate task of raising its key interest rate fast enough to quell inflation, but without causing so much “climb shock” to household budgets that the economy stalls, economists say.

The central bank board meets on Tuesday with economists almost evenly split between tipping the cash rate will be lifted either by 25 basis points to 0.6%, or 40 basis to 0.75%, according to Bloomberg. Any rate rise would be the RBA’s first back-to-back monthly increase in 12 years and possibly the biggest jump since a 50 basis point hike in February 2000.

“They should put rates up to 0.75% at least, just because inflation is as high as it is and employment [is] as strong as it is, so real interest rates are substantially negative,” said Warwick McKibbin, an Australian National University monetary policy professor and a former RBA board member during the bank’s last flurry of rate rises.

“That’s very, very stimulative to the economy,” he said. “The question is, do we need that much monetary stimulus where we still have what looks like fairly substantial spending by the federal government?”

The RBA’s first interest rate rise in more than 11 years landed smack in the middle of the federal election campaign last month, arguably denting the Morrison government’s claims to be good stewards of the economy. The new treasurer, Jim Chalmers, however, now faces the prospect of regularly having to explain why rates are rising, with investors betting on a steady and steep increase for months to come.

The RBA last month estimated the headline inflation rate would rise to 5.9% by the year’s end, a figure that now looks conservative as food and lately energy costs spike.

“Because of the war in Ukraine but also because of the disruption of electricity generation in Australia, there’s quite a significant energy price shock going through the system,” McKibbin said. The “substantial shift” in energy prices will probably last beyond short-term weather events and will push cost up across the economy.

Sarah Hunter, KPMG’s senior economist, said it was clear the RBA had to bring interest rates back to more normal levels “as soon is practically possible” to rein in inflation. The challenge, though, will be “to do so without creating ‘climb shock’ by moving rates too fast too soon”.

Hunter said the bank typically adjusted rates by 25 basis points and “we expect the RBA to continue to make normal moves”.

Sally Tindall, research director at financial comparison site RateCity, said “there was every chance” the RBA could raise rates by more than a quarter of a percentage point.

“With petrol and grocery prices continuing to shoot up, the case for a 0.40 percentage point hike is strong,” Tindall said. “Central banks across the world are struggling to get on top of inflation, and the [RBA] does not want to be one of them. The board will want to nip this in the bud.”

According to RateCity, owner-occupiers with 25 years to go on their mortgages can expect to pay $13 more a month for each $100,000 in debt they owe for a 25 basis point increase, assuming commercial banks pass on such an increase. At 40 basis points, the monthly repayments would rise by about $21 per $100,000.

The major banks are predicting the RBA will lift the cash rate multiple times this year. Applying typical conditions for a 25-year mortgage, the repayments burden will swell notably by the end of this year, with more pain to come next year, RateCity said.

The underlying economy remains strong, though, including GDP growth in the March quarter that was slightly quicker than economists had predicted. So-called stress testing by regulators indicate most households are well placed to absorb the costs.

New data out on Monday from ANZ also showed Australia’s job adverts increased modestly in May but remain close to the highest level in about 14 years. Compared with January 2020, just prior to the pandemic, ad numbers have risen about 55%.

McKibbin, who was part of an RBA board that lifted the cash rate six times in seven meetings, said the RBA should raise the cash rate to 0.75% on Tuesday but will probably resort to a quarter-point hike to 0.60%.

“I really think that [the cash rate] should be at least around 1% at the moment,” he said. “They’ve got a long way to go to get back to where I think they should be.”

Back in 2009-10, during the previous flurry of rate hikes, the RBA was dealing with excessive stimulus of demand as governments and central banks responded to the global financial crisis by spending too much and cutting rates too far.

This time around, a similar overshoot during Covid has been compounded by disruptions to global trade because of pandemic restrictions and, more recently, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and subsequent sanctions.

The challenge for the RBA is determining how much of the inflation stems from excessive demand that can be reduced by making loans more expensive, McKibbin said, adding we should get a clearer picture in the commentary accompanying Tuesday’s rates decision.

“It’s going to be very interesting; it’s not just the change [in rates],” he said. “It’s what RBA governor Philip Lowe says, because that’s going to be critical now.”

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