Markets

Australian Economy Is Capable of Stronger Growth: RBA’s Lowe

Published

on

  • Australian Economy Is Capable of Stronger Growth: RBA’s Lowe

Australian central bank Governor Philip Lowe said his economy is capable of faster growth if lawmakers can overcome political gridlock, while warning weak wage gains are likely to keep plaguing developed nations.

“It is important that we have a sharp focus on the reforms that can make a real difference to our living standards,” Lowe said in a speech delivered in Canberra Monday. “If we don’t do this, we will fall behind.”

Since the 2008 global financial crisis, Australian politics has become increasingly polarized as parties exploited those losing out from proposed reforms to gain electoral advantage. This has resulted in risk-aversion increasing among government and limited action, meaning Australia hasn’t cemented a significant economic reform since a goods and services tax was introduced in 2000.

“The positive news is that there is no shortage of good ideas here,” Lowe said. “The not-so-positive news is that there is a shortage of good ideas that can successfully navigate the political process.”

The governor reiterated the RBA’s forecast that growth will accelerate over the next couple of years amid a synchronized upswing in the global economy.

Income Warning

But he warned that average per capita income in the next couple of decades was likely to be lower than in the past quarter-century, a period when Australia’s economy managed to avoid a slump. The RBA chief said while 26 years without a technical recession — or two consecutive quarters of economic contraction — “is a significant achievement,” strong population growth has “flattered” Australia’s gross domestic product data.

During a panel discussion at the Crawford Australian Leadership Forum, Lowe also addressed the theme of weak wage growth that’s bedeviled western nations including Australia — and causing discontent among workers — particularly when nations like Germany, the U.K., the U.S. and Japan are at or close to full employment.

Exit mobile version