It’s hardly news that inflation is proving sticky. And nor is it truly news the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) has long been spinning a dangerous and deeply confused narrative about its war on inflation. The latter simply hasn’t received much in the way of focused attention.
Since May last year, the central bank has raised interest rates sharply and in quick succession, crushing thousands of low- and middle-income households and pushing many more struggling families and individuals to the brink.
The accepted wisdom is that this is not only an orthodox approach to inflation demanded by both the circumstances and the national interest, but one that, by design, unapologetically exacts a high human cost.
“It’s really tough, I understand that. I hear those stories [of personal hardship] with a very heavy heart,” RBA governor Philip Lowe said in Senate estimates a few weeks ago.
However, he added: “Many have forgotten the really serious damage [untrammelled inflation] does to people, livelihoods and the functioning of the economy if it persists. It leads to higher interest rates and more unemployment.
“People are free to express their opinion [but] it is the job of the central bank to control inflation.”
Raising interest rates is, of course, the one and only tool the RBA has at its disposal to influence inflation, and it’s one predicated on stunting job growth. But it’s also one wholly, if not exclusively, suited to demand-driven inflation.
The hope is the price of things will come down if people are forced to clamp down on their spending and economic conditions deteriorate. In this way, the consequences carried by higher interest rates are supposed to inspire some level of fear in employees by hanging the spectre of unemployment over their heads like the sword of Damocles, frightening them into accepting real wage cuts as economically uncertain times roll on. The desired result is suppressed wage growth, lowered consumer demand and, eventually, controlled inflation — or so the thinking goes.
The obvious problem, however, is that the inflation of today, for the most part, isn’t demand-driven, which is what renders the RBA’s undisguised penchant for raising interest rates in recent times at best perplexing and at worst dangerous.
Perplexing because on the central bank’s own analysis, there’s nothing to indicate existing inflationary pressures are being driven solely or even primarily by demand as opposed to supply-side problems, the latter of which are the result of things it can’t plausibly influence, much less control. Perplexing, too, because average real wage growth at the time of the first interest rate rise was, as it is now, utterly non-existent.
And dangerous, because the RBA’s preoccupation with hitting households over and over with higher interest rates is itself fuelling inflation as corporations exploit its rhetoric to jack up their profits, risking — in the eyes of some leading economists — a recession in the long run.
All of which brings to the fore the frankly bizarre narrative the RBA is selling Australians to lend legitimacy to what it claims is a war on inflation, but could — from this vantage point — easily be construed as a war against ordinary households.
For one thing, the RBA has continually lectured unions and employees on wages, telling them of the need to be “flexible”, all the while conceding existing demand and wage growth, such as it is, has little to do with soaring inflation. Still, it says, it can’t rule out the very remote possibility the economy might witness excessive wage growth later on. And so, promises Lowe, expect more interest rate rises.
For another, it accepts in this connection that the overwhelming causes of inflation owe to supply-side disruptions such as the war in Ukraine, the pandemic and natural disasters that it can’t do anything about. And yet it insists that it remains the “job of the Reserve Bank to control inflation”. And so, promises Lowe, expect more interest rate rises.
And finally, while the central bank has acknowledged that continually pulling the lever on interest rates could ultimately prove misguided and deliberately set us on the path of a recession, Lowe tells us not to worry: “Smashing Australia into a recession is not our intention.”
In sum, the RBA’s full, incoherent story — in all its glory — runs like this: in its view, inflation is mainly a supply-side problem that it can’t fix but will furiously pretend it can fix; it’s not really caused by the labour market at all but could be down the track; and we’ll hopefully not end up in a recession, but hope’s never a sure thing — just remember the time we told you the cash rate would remain at 0.1% until 2024.
Except, of course, that’s not the full story. Tellingly, the only thing omitted from this confused and misleading narrative was any reflection of the considerable role excessive corporate profits are playing in fuelling inflation, for which the evidence is vast and growing.
According to recent analysis of the latest GDP data, nearly 70% of inflation sitting above the RBA’s ideal target range of 2.5% today can be sheeted home to the extraordinary profits banked by corporations.
The same analysis revealed businesses had increased prices by some $160 billion a year over and above taxes, labour and other costs as of September last year. Absent those extraordinary profits, it says, it’s unlikely the RBA would ever have had a valid reason to volley Australians with nine interest rate rises in 10 months.
Among the corporate winners, it bears mentioning, are Australia’s big four banks, with the Commonwealth Bank alone recording half-yearly earnings to December of $5.15 billion and NAB some $2.15 billion. Notably, both in recent weeks have acknowledged that their inflated bottom lines have directly benefited from the RBA’s “interest rate environment”.
Then of course there’s Australia’s two biggest supermarkets, Coles and Woolworths, which respectively banked half-yearly profits of $643 million and $907 million, and Qantas — the largest recipient of corporate welfare in Australian history. On Thursday it announced a record $1.43 billion half-yearly profit, though it denied this had anything to do with its $2 billion taxpayer handout during the pandemic, much less the economy’s wider inflationary pressures.
Lowe, for his part, has acknowledged the banks are profitable, but told Senate estimates this is “a positive for the country”.
“I know it’s hard for people to accept when they are suffering problems with their personal finances,” he said, “but the country is better off from having strong, resilient, effective banks.”
In reality, what’s truly difficult for people to countenance is the notion that their declining real wages are to blame for rising prices when the true culprit is largely the corporate profiteering enabled by the RBA in a highly concentrated and uncompetitive market.
As Ross Gittins recently put it: “Join the dots, and you realise the RBA’s plan to get inflation down quickly involves allowing a transfer of many billions from the pockets of households to the profits of big business.
“The RBA’s unspoken game plan is to squeeze households until demand for goods and services has weakened to the point where big business decides that raising its prices to increase its profits would cost it so many sales that it would be left worse off.”
Naturally, the revelation of Lowe’s lunch with bankers just two days after the RBA lifted the cash rate — which coincided with a sell-off in bond futures contracts — seems to add weight to this perception, though Lowe subsequently assured senators there was “nothing untoward” about the meeting.
On balance, the most charitable reading of the RBA’s actions, as the nation barrels towards what now seems like a predictable downturn, is that it’s trying to kill domestic demand just enough to reduce excess inflation but not so much that the economy crashes and burns. But given we can presume the RBA is fully cognisant of the true causes of inflation, this is tantamount to it setting fire to a forest during a drought, screaming about the need to put it out and then throwing petrol over it and hoping no one notices.
The less charitable reading is that the RBA knows it’s institutionally incompetent to deal with existing inflation, but nevertheless sees it as an opportunity to further entrench inequalities by setting the stage for corporate Australia to take advantage of ordinary Australians. To that end, it’s necessary for the RBA to insist that it’s the primary vehicle through which inflation can be solved, and not so much government via various well-directed fiscal interventions, such as a super-profits tax, price controls or subsidies.
Whatever its true motivations, the institutional failures here are systemic, and the entire rationale underpinning the RBA is on the line. It’s true its 1959 mandate — to ensure economic stability and to contribute to the “economic prosperity and welfare of the people” — was written for a less volatile world. But it’s equally true the RBA has long forgotten what it means to protect the latter.
So as a recession looms, let it not be lost on anyone that the downturn will principally owe to a series of decisions made by a handful of unelected officials in Martin Place, Sydney.
Little wonder one of the first acts of federal Treasurer Jim Chalmers last year was to order a review into the RBA.
Well said, Maeve. Blind Freddy can see inflation is being driven by the profiteering corporate sector, not the punter, who is the one getting crucified by the RBA…
The corporate sector is the galloping horse.
The punters are the jockey, perched backwards in the saddle holding on to nothing.
The RBA has only one tool – a whip with which to hit the jockey in the face.
At least Jockeys are remunerated quite well.
Yep a packet of my fav thin chips is currently “on sale” for double the price of its competition smaller supermarket. Why. It is concentrated ownership of our food bowl by multnational players. They own the logistics like the newscorp own the distribution news networks. Guess what less competition in a free trade makes the economy tank. What about local ownership and more of it only given to local players. It is not one set of factors; his arrogance is mindblowing and so lazy; it is a so difficult to maneouve decision making at the top. Rubbish it is actually quite easy if you open your blinkers mate
When is human society going wake up to the monumental fraud that is conventional market economics? Lowe pontificates about the virtue of ‘strong banks’ and favourable business conditions because he can see the world only through his miserable economic lens where everything is reduced to money.
Having said that, it is the government’s job to redistribute wealth and income fairly and humanely. But we have a government too timid and scared of business and the banks to do the radical things that are obviously needed.
I despair.
Timid is being polite – shit scared of frightening the Murdoch horses would be closer to the mark.
Come on Dr Jim, polish your pair and give the greedy corporates the whack they need..!!
The Murdochs’ power is waning with his print rags declining in readership while the SMH/Age readership increases. With the probability of all mainland states all mainland states being Labor shortly, sensible pollies would ignore the increasingly hysterical News pages .
Yea and there’s a real problem there. If you walk around Parliament House for a while, everyone’s reading The Australian as if it’s The Bible. And politicians are terrified of negative coverage by The Oz. Because everyone in Parliament House reads it. So when bad coverage happens it’s a big story. In Parliament House. Meanwhile, in the rest of the country sales of the print edition are down to about 50K a day, or less. That’s for the whole country. And the online edition is behind a hard paywall. So the influence of Murdoch is unfortunately out of all proportion. It’s the Canberra Bubble in action.
How do you propose he does that ? It’s not illegal to make profits; how do we judge what is real profits and what is profiteering in order to control it ?
Ummm duhhh look at the facts; there is black and white my darling and there is market domination which is what we have contrary to the last century . Of course there has always been rich and poor and hard work etc but the markets and our public services were there to balance our the dominant players by law and red tape and controls of regulation. The neo libs push the lie the market and business are always doing it right and not asserting undue market manipulation and unfair advantages over the wealth and opportunities and resources we own; they lied and call fairness a dirty word and called for us to end the age of entitlement; bitter donkeys who view myopically things as blanket conservatives are too bitter and dull to see the truth and creative ways to create a way out; they lack imagination and blame victims for the disgraceful abuses of governance and oversight of our resources.
Polish your pair.. hilarious . That is so good. I am cracking up. One has to stay positive and informed . We have labor stopping right to march peacefully were have a problem Vote independents and Greens
‘Labor’ has been very disappointing in failing to address gross economic inequality imo also
So after 9 months in office, you expect a complete revolution, given the parlous state the economy and society was left in after the 9 years of deliberate bastardry by the cons ?
I, for one, was hoping for more than nothing or “same as the last mob”
No no but to simply say ok new coal mines and let’s keep the same people in power in top spots; and being ok with the top 1% tax cuts and to keep the same mob in job provider scams and to keep very on the down low about Assange and to vote in overnight incursion into freedom to public demonstrations with 50G fines and to keep the same in power… it speaks poorly
I don’t despair and agree with everything else. Maybe we should all write to Jim Chalmers and encourage him to take them all on.
It’s not time to go csp in hand or to try to appease a media that is only concerned with having Liberals in government. Now that we have a Labor hovernment they should be doing everything that needs doing for the people – that’s the hope they were elected on and the snail pace is totally discouraging, we might as well have stuck with the bug business government, at leadt we expected them to leave us tp struggle alone.
That is CAP not csp.
We saw were not acting at a snail’s pace got Gough!
How is it ‘moving at a snail’s pace’ to do the things they’ve already done ?
Rome wasn’t built in a day.
The libs in power because they are better in business .. How many facts and failures have they clocked up with a unfair bias in the media ; could not run a bath… oh gawd the water waste and sell off to multinational owned farms and investors.. more like raiders… corporate raiders they future employers… disgustin.. Indue card made for indigenous and single mums kids so they can’t buy from a corner store owned small business employing 49,995 less people than other “small business” owners.. what policy hogwash Where is the ACCC all buggered..it is a cartel syndicate ..duopoly, oligopoly, it is anti democracy mess; leased the Port of Darwin for 99 years! And then paid billions 167 billions to one untested tender… What is commercial smart in that uncontested contract or the one through the lobby in covid and the pathology testing overmilking our health care budgets; and the general public blame single mums getting 50 bucks a day to rear 3 kids ..and blame older “karens” for stepping on the toes of a few blokes who suggest she hates em when in fact she just wants to be in a safe space away from mansplaining loud mouth misogynists…..wake up Australia
Yep. He’ll put it in his universal out tray. Best thing is to, fine if u want to go down this path, is to vote for their rivals. Greens perhaps. Independent also.
He said zip to the poor woman and her daughter on the Q&A recently about the poor family impending eviction day; he just said as his colleagues have recently done by saying “that is a matter for…..” Too nice nice imo seem scared of questions; unlike the other mob bombastic and irrational and immoral decisions full of narrow right wing ideaology that the market and business people have some connection to great wisdom and insights; rather than real change and dynamic policy and employing Australians for our enterprises and our futures we are born into this country and like our indigenous brothers and sisters our rights should be unalienable and ours first; our rights are not as Hockedonian once spewed on as entitled in the negative they are positive and we should have our rights protected and build on by our government .
It ain’t radical to do the job they’re being paid to do. By us. What’s radical is their refusal to do it.
And you expected it all to have happened in 9 months or less ? Grow up !
Not sure “ conventional market economics “ applies here in any way in the land of the oligopolies and duopolies, BA. Hell, the only reason we have four big banks is because so far successive governments have refused their repeated requests to couple up. Still, it makes price fixing and profit gouging oh so easy, when there’s only a couple of you, doesn’t it?
And how do you suggest the government reins in the teal causes of inflation – corporate greed and Reserve Bank ineptitude ?
What radical things do you think are obviously needed ?
Come on, don’t be shy – you’re quick to blame for matters directly out of any government’s control; let’s hear the solutions.
real, not teal.
The country would be better off with a Government owned bank providing basic services (savings account, EFT debit card, PPoR homeloans at RBA rates) at no cost, so that the vast majority of people were not required to interact with the predatory banking system just to live their daily lives.
Could not agree more. Banking is a public good and a necessity to participate in society.
The situation lays bare the insanity of how we workers who produce value (important goods, services etc) through our work are compelled to funnel large amounts of that value to private banks who don’t actually create anything much of value.
Who was it again that decreed the sell off of the Commonwealth Bank from under its taxpayer owner’s noses? And tell me again, what were its recently announced profit figures?
That was done by none other than that WA prolix yet policy free buffoon, lecturer in US History. Mr Schaltenbrand. I think. Labor’s answer to Andrew Peacock.
As your reference to an obscure USA case seems to have little bearing on the subject, I can only assume you are gutlessly referring to Kim Beazley.
As Kim was never in power, how would any opinion of his have carried any weight in any argument ?
Admittedly it was Keating who, to the utmost shame of Labor supporters, and the detriment of the nation, swallowed the Kool Ail of neo-liberalism and privatised the bank.
But then everyone followed the then trendy gibberish of the Austrian economists, not foreseeing the consequences of rampant capitalism.
You are wrong on a number of counts. I am not gutless but who has guts on a web platform? You’re gutless for calling me gutless. Kim Beasley was in power. He was the Finance Minister who privatised the Commonwealth Bank. He was the Transport Minister who privatised QANTAS. He tried to say when Opposition leader that with Telstra, “That’s different”. How? Beasley was utterly useless and he sold helicopters with mounted machine guns to the PNG armed forces who used them in Bougainville against their separatists. He had no conscience on human rights either. He had no idea of what was happening in the eastern states (particularly re: Badgerys’s Creek airport or transport policy like a second airport servicing Sydney – he didn’t want to know). He was Labor’s worst leader in the 2000s and late 1990s. God there were some. Mark Latham and Simon Crean along with Kim vying for No 1 spot. Keating wasn’t even the PM at the time of the CBA’s privatisation. Hawke was and still had 3 months to go.
Keating. The other bloke you can blame for just about everything wrong today.
As a pensioner, one of millions, my bank charges me no fees. This is so that they don’t have millions more enemies than they already have, and it doesn’t cost them too much because we’re mostly skint anyway. In effect, mortgagees and businesses pay our fees for us. Weird or what.
No fee bank charges? I am a pensioner with Bendigo and still get charges! Best I look around and save $150 per year. All ATMs look the same to me
I’ve been fee free with NAB for years now. I think every bank charges you to use others’ atms. Why do you think there’s so few actual bank ATMs these days?
Even Uk banking fees were banned for small banking. We are so gullible and now can’t even march without being marched off to court.
Fact is the European have in place privacy data protection. And banking fees were outlawed. But in the lucky country (for some) no such govt. controls. fine when most of us had luck on our side… but the sell outs going on and our resources sell outs by the neo libs have seen the proverbial chickens come home to roost.. the facts are they would have us all on our knees keeping them in profits in the Caymans
Seems like Phil has been bought too. Is there no one beholden to big biz? So now we have to burn 100s of thousands of mortgage holders to increase the comfort of a few billionaires?
Getting angry.
Did anyone really believe the historically low interest rates were here to stay? Rates are nowhere near when many of us gained our first mortgage.
Phil told us they were. Until 2024, I recall.
give me the job Phil; All I have to do is make irrelevant and incorrect announcements about sharing a room or stating things I am going to do and then proceed not to do same.. Piss easy
Mortgages back then were nowhere near as high as they are today, Peter. People are saddled with debt like never before. Besides, the point is the RBA’s blunt instrument doesn’t impact supply driven inflation, which is the origins of the mess we’re in. The rest of the inflation problem has been caused by the RBA raising interest rates to no end. We need the government to intervene via fiscal policies.
Yeah, and neither are the wages comaprison.
That’s true, but the amounts required for even an average house are multiples of what we borrowed.
I remember 18% but on a much lower mortgage loan of around $100,000!!
$18,000……Today $1.2 million costs- on 6% would be 72,000 on comparable loan yes?
Yes but property prices are so much higher and more difficult to pay off. His low rates for his Liberal mates while they were in office helped promote and sustain this property boom during a word catastrophe. This has never happened before. Even Glen Stevens, former RBA Governor, Bible basher from the Shire, raised them during Howard’s tenure as PM. But to do what Lowe did and raise them in May 2022 for the first time in years stink of political favouritism.
Sorry world catastrophe. Word catastrophe – ha!
oh of course this is what is going on.. but inexplicably the noice labour boys and girls are playing footsies with those they seemed too cosy with … aka their collegues in a game of “our go now- then your go”
Don’t get angry, get even – by not voting for the people in debt to big business. Which are Lab and LNP.
I guess the question is at what point do australians take to the street and protest?
ha, ha, ha – “real” Australians don’t protest
Well, it’s about time they did and big timecat that because Lowe has no idea what he’s doing unless he’s trying to feather his own nest after he gets kicked out of the RBA for being useless at the job he’s being paid to do FOR ALL THE PEOPLE IN AUSTRALIA not overseas companies who bank in the Caymans.
how bout we start up our own contacts with farmers groups and peoples’ buying power in markets; real markets we can even get free labour courtesy of us we can apply for training and use volunteers to do the work at the bottom, middle management and top and even employ our own lobby cartels for free.. if ya can’t beat em join em
What, and get locked up for months?
Rubbish you would at worst be given a ticket for public nuisance or similar unless you continually offend. You can protest lawfully and still achieve your goals
Effective protest is rarely “lawful” (and if it is, it doesn’t stay that way).
It used to be lawful.
Peter and his developer mates in S.A have changed the law to make even handing out flyers outside a job trainers office illegal it is enough to dampen our rights to protest it is not always a positive change but a eating out of democracy and hard fought for freedom of association … Unions have been coddled and yet the limp damp squib attitude of I am everyman and nothing is bad
Grundle’s just said he’s prepared to lie down on the road in front of traffic. Send him an email.
Now, is the answer – i have my signs already planned –
“VALUES BASED ECONOMICS = EAT THE RICH”
“WE HAVE THE NUMBERS THAT COUNT”
“WE ARE A HANGRY MOB – END SUPERMARKET PROFITEERING”
“INFLATION RISING + INTEREST RATES RISING + BANK PROFITS RISING + HOMELESSNESS RISING + HUNGER RISING = PEOPLES UPRISING”
“HOW LOWE CAN WE GO? END THE RECESSION BANK OF AUSTRALIAS REIGN OF TERROR”
name a date & time and i (and MANY others) will be there to march.
Other actions could include boycotts, strikes of various kinds, sit ins, sleep outs, petitions, public events promoting economic/political education alongside entertainment, social media campaigns..
Great start, Jess. I’ll see you at the picket line once I’ve sorted my signs out reminding the government there’s such a thing as fiscal policy and we elect the idiots to use it, though I fear if one of them says “Independent RBA” one more time I’m just going to brain them with a blank picket sign from sheer anger and frustration.
“independent RBA” is like an independent CPP…. what a joke
use cash so they dont get a cut from our transactions ie the Party bloke who owned indue card – why do you think the libs are putting pokies on plastc
Most of them are getting too heavy to hit the pavement. Living off the only food that’s still reasonably priced – processed and sugary crap.
Um not unless you want a jail term in S.A, Qld, NSW and Tas.. or you have Rinehart/ Nine pockets and power