ADVERTISEMENT

Australian Growth Misses Estimates as Household Spending Falters

Australia’s economy expanded slower than forecast in the three months through September.

Australian Growth Misses Estimates as Household Spending Falters
A man wears headphones as he and other commuters walk through Martin Place in Sydney, Australia, on Thursday. (Photographer: Brendon Thorne/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Australia’s economy grew slower than forecast as household spending rose at the weakest pace since the 2008 financial crisis, reinforcing the likelihood of the central bank keeping interest rates on hold for longer.

  • Gross domestic product rose 0.6% in third quarter from previous three months vs estimated 0.7% gain
  • GDP climbed 2.8% from year earlier vs forecast 3% rise
  • Household spending rose 0.1% -- the weakest gain since the fourth quarter of 2008
  • Household savings ratio was 3.2%, up from revised 3% in prior three months

The data reinforce a divide between an increasingly confident business community that’s hiring and investing and more pessimistic consumers saddled with record debt as reflected in their weak spending and lower savings. Given that consumption accounts for more than half of gross domestic product, the Reserve Bank of Australia is unlikely to add to households’ woes by lifting borrowing costs from the current record-low 1.5 percent.

The Aussie dollar fell to 75.88 U.S. cents at 12:58 p.m. in Sydney from 76.12 prior to the release. Traders aren’t pricing in a serious chance of an interest-rate increase until December 2018.

Australian Growth Misses Estimates as Household Spending Falters
What Our Economists Say
Tamara Henderson: This pickup was driven by private investment, which is no longer contracting. That’s the good news. The bad news is that household spending softened. This keeps rate hikes at bay.

Wednesday’s report also showed:

  • Non-dwelling construction soared 18.4%, adding 0.9 percentage point to growth
  • Public investment fell 7.5%, cutting 0.4 point from growth
  • The terms of trade fell 0.4 percent in the quarter, but were up 9.7 percent in the year

The GDP report also has an alternative wages measure for Australia, which showed compensation of employees climbed 1.2 percent in the period, a solid gain supported by strong jobs growth. The Australian Bureau of Statistics’ separate wage-price index last month showed just 0.5 percent growth for the September quarter.

However, as noted by Justin Fabo at Macquarie Bank Ltd., Wednesday’s report also showed average earnings per employee rose just 0.3 percent quarter-on-quarter and 0.6 percent year-on-year.

Business Vs Households

Australia’s economy is deep in transition toward services industries and away from mining investment, a period of upheaval that’s suppressed growth and wages. The shift has been helped by a burst of full-time hiring this year as more firms gain confidence. The RBA has signaled no near-term policy change as it provides companies and households with a degree of stability.

It’s paying off on the commercial side. Business conditions -- a gauge of the environment firms are operating in and closely watched by the RBA -- are at a record high. Yet households, which should be on the other end of these transactions, are struggling with recession-era levels of pay growth.

Meanwhile, China’s insatiable demand for Aussie iron ore to produce steel for skyscrapers and apartment blocks is entering a more mature phase; at the same time, its burgeoning middle class is boosting demand for Australian education for their children and tourism as their economy also transitions, proving a bonanza Down Under. 

Education exports to China were worth A$9 billion ($6.8 billion) in fiscal 2017, up 260 percent in a decade; and more than a million Chinese tourists visited Australia last year, a figure predicted to more than triple by 2026.

Australia’s central bank says it expects 3 percent GDP growth for the next couple of years. Given Treasury estimates the economy’s speed limit is 2.75 percent, that would start soaking up spare capacity, which Governor Philip Lowe on Tuesday signaled is starting to happen already.

“Forward-looking indicators continue to point to solid growth in employment over the period ahead,” Lowe said after leaving the cash rate at a record-low 1.5 percent for a 15th meeting. “There are reports that some employers are finding it more difficult to hire workers with the necessary skills. However, wage growth remains low. This is likely to continue for a while yet.”

--With assistance from Kimberley Verschuur

To contact the reporter on this story: Michael Heath in Sydney at mheath1@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Nasreen Seria at nseria@bloomberg.net, Chris Bourke, Victoria Batchelor

©2017 Bloomberg L.P.