From the Chief Economist
Had it not been for the 0.3 percentage point contribution to GDP from government consumption and 0.1 from government investment, GDP would have contracted this quarter.
Spending by foreign students – scheduled to be capped – was one of the few areas of good news in the private sector.
Household consumption (contributing more than half of GDP) was low again, with discretionary consumption falling in real terms and even spending on food falling by 1.0 per cent in the quarter.
Annual consumption growth of just 0.5 per cent was below the Reserve Bank of Australia’s forecast of 1.1 per cent. Saving was also low with households putting away just 0.6 per cent of their income. Had it not been for social benefits to households (which outpaced growth in income tax), household spending and saving would likely have been even lower.
High Commonwealth and state government spending has been a factor driving the national statistics for some time now, and has pushed public spending to a post-war record 27.6 per cent of GDP.
Commonwealth social benefits were up 15.8 per cent in 2023-24 compared to 2022-23, driven by increases in aged care, disability, health, childcare and family and non-government schools. State and local government expenditure also rose with increased employee expenses.
Budget papers show that government spending – across the Commonwealth and states and territories – will be even greater in the future, and further debt will be taken on to pay for it. Net debt across the consolidated general government sector, currently around 30 per cent of GDP, is projected to rise to 34 per cent of GDP by 2026-27. It was 19.3 per cent in 2018-19.
The spending by governments is doing nothing to improve productivity, with GDP per hour worked down 0.8 per cent in the June quarter, and only 0.5 per cent higher over the year. For employers, this is bad news. It also contributed to unit labour costs rising 5.4 per cent over the year.
This is the worst possible combination of statistics, as it means Australian businesses are gaining very little from government spending, which is focused on short-term cost-of-living relief for households and band-aid fixes to neglected problems.
Private business investment fell 1.5 per cent in the quarter, with a 2.4 per cent decrease in machinery and equipment investment. For the private sector, there’s a lack of encouragement to invest for Australia’s long-term prosperity.
The recent super-sized export income gains faded as iron ore and coal prices fell.
While governments spend, and productivity growth remains low, the Reserve Bank needs to keep policy tight. The lack of co-ordination between fiscal and monetary policy means the path to low and stable inflation – and therefore lower interest rates – is rockier than it needs to be.