Let’s have a little look at the interest
rate issue. During the 2004 election campaign, Mr
Howard said: “I will guarantee that interest rates will always be lower under a
Coalition Government. Who do you trust to keep interest rates
low?”
If interest rates rise tomorrow morning and
the banks pass on the increase to mortgage holders, it will be seven straight
interest rate rises since May 2002 and three rises since the October 2004
election.
For someone taking out an average mortgage,
these interest increases mean an extra $650 per month or $7,825 per year on
interest payments alone. Have a look at this table. It shows how mortgage rates
have moved since April 2002 and the monthly “interest only” payments on that
loan.
| Date | Change in interest rates |
Interest payments on average mortgage* |
| April 2002 | (Rates on hold) | $794.88 |
| 8 May 2002 | Up ¼ per cent | $827.38 |
| 5 June 2002 | Up ¼ per cent | $863.93 |
| 5 November 2003 | Up ¼ per cent | $1,076.94 |
| 3 December 2003 | Up ¼ per cent | $1,100.07 |
| 2 March 2005 | Up ¼ per cent | $1,296.49 |
| 3 May 2006 | Up ¼ per cent | $1,400.64 |
| 2 August 2006 | Up ¼ per cent | $1,447.02 |
*Interest
only. Source: Reserve Bank of Australia,
Australian Bureau of Statistics
What’s more, Australian interest rates are
now higher than in:
-
The United States
- Europe
- Britain
- Canada
- Sweden
- Switzerland
- Japan
- China
- Malaysia
- Singapore
- South Korea
- Taiwan
- Thailand
- Chile
- Peru
- Israel
- Saudi Arabia
- The Czech Republic
- Poland
To name a few.
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