“Meanwhile, households’ appetite to spend will be Ozempic-ed as unemployment edges higher, real wage gains moderate, and global uncertainty clouds the outlook.”
Oxford believes real per-person spending will increase 0.8 per cent. Consumers will be unlikely to regain full confidence to spend until late next year and into 2027.
At the state level, Oxford is forecasting Queensland (gross state product growth of 2.4 per cent in 2025-26) and Western Australia (2.3 per cent) to continue supporting the economy.
Victoria’s economy is expected to be the third-strongest with growth of 1.9 per cent – and NSW the slowest at 1.4 per cent. Both economies are tipped to slow, in part due to the completion of mega-infrastructure projects such as metro rail projects in Sydney and Melbourne.
“With infrastructure pipelines past their peaks, the baton has shifted to households, who are only slowly returning to spending as real incomes improve,” Oxford noted.
Recovery of household spending in Victoria and NSW, which also have the nation’s largest mortgages, will hinge on whether the Reserve Bank continues to ease monetary policy after three rate cuts so far this year.
Expectations of a cut lifted after poorer-than-expected employment figures showed the jobless rate at a four-year high in September. Economists are expecting this week’s inflation report to show price growth lifting in the past three months.
Oxford expects unemployment to keep rising, noting a lift in youth unemployment – which has climbed from 8.9 per cent in March to 10.5 per cent – is a sign of the slowdown in the jobs market.
Donald Trump’s ongoing tariff war flared at the weekend, with the president threatening a 10 per cent tariff on Canadian goods.Credit: AP
Higher than expected inflation does not mean the Reserve will necessarily baulk at a rate cut.
Inflation has climbed to 3 per cent in the United States, where the Federal Reserve’s inflation target is 2 per cent. But financial markets expect the Fed’s monetary policy committee to cut rates by a quarter of a percentage point later this week, taking America’s key lending rate to 3.75-4 per cent.
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AMP deputy chief economist Diana Mousina said if underlying inflation rises by 0.8 per cent in the September quarter, taking the annual result to 2.7 per cent, a cut by the Reserve is likely.
“If numbers come in line with our forecasts we expect a November rate cut, given the downside risks in the labour market. But the breakdown in inflation will also be important, to see if higher inflation is occurring in demand-driven parts of the economy,” she said.
Events in the US continue to cloud the global economic outlook. At the weekend President Trump announced he would impose a 10 per cent tariff on imports from Canada – America’s largest trade partner – over a television advertisement from the Ontario provincial government that used footage of former president Ronald Reagan supporting lower tariffs and free trade.
Treasury secretary and Reserve Bank board member Jenny Wilkinson noted in her department’s annual report the Australian economy had shown “resilience” in the face of global trade tensions and ongoing conflict in areas such as the Middle East and Ukraine.
“The global economy is potentially facing the longest stretch of below-average growth since the early 1990s,” she said.
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