Interest rates: RBA economist Sarah Hunter says rate relief may take some time to flow through to consumers

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Interest rates: RBA economist Sarah Hunter says rate relief may take some time to flow through to consumers


Australian consumers and businesses hoping for quick relief from the Reserve Bank’s recent interest rate cut may be in for disappointment, with the central bank confirming the full benefits won’t materialise until well after the next Federal election.

Setting rates is a delicate balancing act, said Sarah Hunter, the Reserve Bank’s most senior economist, where the impact of policy lags by up to a year. Speaking at a banking summit, Ms Hunter explained that the upswing from February’s rate cut would take nine to twelve months to fully flow through to GDP, pushing any boost to growth and spending well into late 2025 or beyond.

That timing could leave the next government, rather than the current one, reaping the benefits of the shift toward looser monetary settings.

The RBA uses a macroeconomic forecasting tool known as the MARTIN model to track how rate changes ripple through different parts of the economy. Imports and exports react fastest, thanks to shifts in the exchange rate; dwelling investment follows, as lower mortgage rates stimulate housing demand; consumer spending starts slowly but builds over time as mortgage payments adjust; and finally, business investment responds, driven by improving consumer confidence.

Ms Hunter said the Board judged it was “the right time to take some restrictiveness away” at its February meeting but remained cautious about further cuts. She pointed to early signs of recovery in household spending, particularly in the December quarter last year, as evidence the economy was already stabilising. Increases in the ABS household spending indicator and credit and debit card data reflected a modest lift in disposable incomes, aided by Stage 3 tax cuts.

While part of that spending growth was linked to Black Friday sales, Ms Hunter noted the Bank had seen signs of more discretionary spending, such as dining out, which suggested improving consumer sentiment.

Still, uncertainty clouds the outlook. Chief among concerns is the Trump administration’s aggressive trade policy.

“One of the things we are focused on right now is US policy settings, the impact of these on the global economy and how this flows through to activity and inflation here in Australia; we have been using scenarios, analysis and judgement to assess the policy implications,” Ms Hunter said.

That uncertainty may already be filtering through to households. Shortly after Ms Hunter’s speech, an ANZ Roy Morgan survey showed consumer confidence had dropped to its lowest level since October 2024. Less than one in ten Australians expect “good times” for the economy in the next twelve months, and half say they are worse off than this time last year.

“The impacts of ex-tropical cyclone Alfred have pushed Queensland confidence to equal-lowest with South Australia, while global trade uncertainty may be weighing on confidence nationally,” ANZ economist Sophia Angala said.

Business confidence isn’t much stronger. The latest ACCI-Westpac survey of manufacturing conditions showed a modest improvement to start the year, with increases in new orders and output. Yet, firms continued to grapple with rising input costs and persistent labour shortages, squeezing margins. Manufacturers pared back expectations for business conditions over the next six months, citing concerns over US tariffs and weakening export prospects.

The OECD has also weighed in, issuing a fresh warning overnight that Australia faces slower growth ahead, primarily due to rising global trade tensions. In its latest interim outlook, the OECD downgraded Australia’s 2026 growth forecast to 1.8 per cent, down from 2.5 per cent, now well below the Reserve Bank’s 2.3 per cent projection.

For the current year, growth is forecast at 1.9 per cent, but global risks loom large. The OECD cut its global growth outlook to 3.1 per cent in 2025 and three per cent in 2026, cautioning that a broader trade war sparked by the Trump administration could sap growth and reignite inflation.

Despite February’s rate cut, further easing looks unlikely in the near term. Ms Hunter revealed the inflationary effects of monetary policy take even longer than the GDP impact — peaking around mid-2026 — underscoring the RBA’s reluctance to move hastily. After years of high inflation described by governor Michele Bullock as hitting lower-income Australians “very hard”, the Bank is expected to hold steady.

Markets currently price the chance of another cut at just 10 per cent for the next meeting at month’s end, meaning any rate reprieve likely won’t come before voters head to the polls.

With further interest rate relief unlikely in the short term and global risks rising, an increasingly bitter election campaign is adding to the uncertainty. The Government has warned the cupboard is bare for new spending promises, leaving little scope for fiscal stimulus. Together, these factors risk pushing business and consumer confidence back into a holding pattern, with households and firms waiting for clarity on the post-election outlook.

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