Australia’s economy grew a slower-than-expected 0.2 percent in the three months through June, dragged down by waning Chinese demand for resources, including iron ore and coal, government figures showed yesterday.
Economists had forecast 0.4 percent growth in the April-to-June quarter. Australia’s resource-based economy grew by 0.9 percent in the January-to-March quarter.
However, latest Australian Bureau of Statistics data showed the slowest quarterly growth since the first quarter of 2013. Annual growth for the year through June was 2 percent, well below Australia’s long-term average of 3.2 percent.
Australian Treasurer Joe Hockey said the latest figures show that the Australian economy is resilient because other resource-reliant economies, including Canada and Brazil, are now in recession.
“The transition away from a reliance on mining investment is well underway,” Hockey told reporters. “Quite clearly there is resilience in the Australian economy that other economies that have huge exposure to commodity prices could only wish for.”
The Australian economy has entered its 25th year of continuous growth, although falls in prices for iron ore and coal, which are the nation’s biggest exports, have dented growth rates in the past few years.
Government data released on Tuesday showed that Australia’s trade deficit increased by 41 percent in the June quarter to A$19 billion (US$13.3 billion).
Hockey said a slowdown in mine construction was being offset by increases in the building and services industries.
He said 3.7 percent annual economic growth in the June quarter in the US, Australia’s third-largest trading partner, left Australia “relatively well positioned for any unexpected weakness in China,” Australia’s largest trading partner.
The Australian dollar twice dropped below US$0.70 yesterday, once before and once after the growth data was announced. The Australian currency had not fallen below US$0.70 since 2009.
The first fall yesterday was as a response to weak manufacturing data from China. Australia’s benchmark interest rate has been at a record low 2 percent since May.
The government halved its forecast price for iron ore from US$96 a tonne in 2014-2015 to US$48 in the current fiscal year, which began on July 1. The price peaked at US$185 in 2011.
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