Cheap interest rates over..inflation on the horizon

inflation

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

http://money.ninemsn.com.au/article.aspx?id=839770

The days of historically low interest rates could soon be over as a rebound in the economy restrains the Reserve Bank’s use of the monetary scalpel.

Minutes from the central bank’s July meeting, due out on Tuesday, are expected to talk up the Australian economy’s resilience in the face of global financial instability.

With interest rates at a 49-year low, and middle-income earners benefiting from recent federal government stimulus programs, inflation may return to the headlines during the coming year.

An Access Economics business outlook report says interest rates will be raised again in 2010 and 2011.

Access Economics director Chris Richardson said that while the Reserve Bank may cut interest rates one more time to help banks cope with borrowing costs, a less dire than expected set of unemployment numbers next year may herald the start of a recovery.

The government expects unemployment to peak at 8.5 per cent during the next financial year.

Mr Richardson, however, said the jobless rate could hit a ceiling of 7.5 per cent in 2010, up from 5.8 per cent at present.

“We think the Reserve has one more rate cut … I would say before Christmas,” he told AAP.

“They (interest rates) are as low as they have been for some time and can’t stay there.”

The Reserve Bank left the cash rate on hold at three per cent in July.

In announcing the decision, central bank governor Glenn Stevens pointed to a stabilising global economy and strengthening growth in China.

Access Economics said a rebound in Australia’s second biggest trading partner China, a major buyer of bulk commodities, could spare the commodities states of Queensland and Western Australia from the worst aspects of the global crisis.

“If China’s recovery stabilises into something sustainable, WA has a bad 2009/10 instead of an ugly one,” the outlook report said.

Inflationary pressures, which usually govern the direction of interest rates, are showing further signs of easing.

Producer prices, or the costs of making goods and services, declined by 0.8 per cent in the June quarter, Australian Bureau of Statistics figures released on Monday showed.

This was the biggest quarterly fall since the data series began in 1998.

The Australian dollar rose above 80 US cents in June for the first time in eight months, helping to reduce imported production costs.

Economists are also expecting consumer price index data for the June quarter, due out on Wednesday, to show signs of easing.

Mr Richardson said inflationary pressures were easing, as they always do in a downturn, but global stimulus measures would eventually put pressure on prices.

“The risk is that a world awash in money sees inflation in the recovery,” the business outlook report said.

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i am a believer in an inflationary phase coming..within a year

“The risk is that a world awash in money sees inflation in the recovery,” the business outlook report said.”

401

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~ by seeker401 on July 22, 2009.

2 Responses to “Cheap interest rates over..inflation on the horizon”

  1. [...] Read the rest of this great post here [...]

  2. It seems every analysis that I saw on TV, if you remember back to our earlier conversation on when I watched TV (last week I saw this), all were fearful of inflation in the future they said. But most macro-economists of today, thus including all central bankers, have a high time preference, meaning, they only think about today. And that’s how everybody justified their fears. They said we have no other choice today, and they explicitly would even say they’ll worry about inflation later when it comes.

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