Australia growth accelerates faster on exports

By BLOOMBERG

SYDNEY • Australia’s economy expanded faster than forecast in the first quarter (1Q) as exports rebounded, underscoring the central bank’s expectation of stronger growth this year.

Gross domestic product (GDP) advanced 1% from the prior quarter, with overseas shipments accounting for half the expansion, the Australian Bureau of Statistics said in Sydney yesterday. Economists had forecast a 0.9% gain. The economy expanded at an annual pace of 3.1%, also beating estimates for a 2.8% increase.

Australia’s economy enjoyed a tailwind from revived exports following disruptions late last year; it’s set for a further boost from liquefied natural gas (LNG) shipments as large projects in the northwest come online.

The central bank is acting as an anchor, keeping the benchmark interest rate at a record-low 1.5% and with no immediate prospect of a tightening; however, the reliance on overseas sales for growth was noted by economists.

“We doubt that the strength of net exports will be sustained as there was an element of catch-up,” said Paul Dales, chief economist for Australia at Capital Economics Ltd. “We fear that still subdued real income growth and the weakening housing market will mean a lot of the softness in consumption lingers.”

The Australian dollar rose to 76.54 US cents (RM3.06) at 1:03pm in Sydney yesterday from 76.34 US cents before the release.

Reflecting weak wages growth, the household savings ratio fell to 2.1% in the 1Q, the lowest level since the final three months of 2007, from a downwardly revised 2.3% as consumers drew on funds to maintain spending.

Household spending grew by just 0.3%, adding 0.2 percentage point to GDP growth.

Government spending advanced 1.6% as authorities in the eastern states embark on major infrastructure projects to cope with expanding populations in their major cities.

“Recent data on the Australian economy have been consistent with the bank’s central forecast for GDP growth to pick up, to average a bit above 3% in 2018 and 2019,” governor Philip Lowe said on Tuesday after standing pat for a 22nd month.

“Business conditions are positive and non-mining business investment is increasing. Higher levels of public infrastructure investment are also supporting the economy.”

Yet, the Reserve Bank of Australia chief’s optimism came with his repeated warning that a “continuing source of uncertainty is the outlook for household consumption” amid sluggish wages growth and high debt.

Traders are pricing in little chance of a rate hike before mid-2019 as the jobless rate remains well shy of the central bank’s estimated full employment rate at 5%. Only at that level or lower is the economy expected to generate sufficient wage growth to drive inflation back up to the midpoint of the 2%-3% target range.

Yesterday’s report showed private investment in machinery and equipment continued to grow strongly, particularly in industries outside the resource sector. Production of coal, iron ore and LNG recorded strong increases.

RELATED ARTICLES

Friday, January 4, 2019

Lukewarm outlook for Malaysia in 2019

Friday, November 6, 2020

BoE announces RM810b extra cash stimulus

Wednesday, December 18, 2019

Major inflation likely next year, says MIDF