The Reserve Bank of Australia yesterday cut its benchmark interest rate by a quarter of a percentage point to a record low of 1 percent in a bid to boost the economy.
The cut is the second in consecutive months. Previously the bank had not shifted the rate in almost three years.
“This easing of monetary policy will support employment growth and provide greater confidence that inflation will be consistent with the medium-term target,” Reserve Bank Governor Philip Lowe said in a statement.
The outlook for the global economy remained reasonable, but uncertainty generated by the trade and technology disputes was affecting investment and meant that the risks to the global economy were tilted to the downside, Lowe said.
The changes were widely expected after Lowe said in May that inflation was likely to remain below the bank’s target range of 2 to 3 percent a year and that a decrease in the cash rate would likely be appropriate.
The bank’s board moves interest rates at monthly meetings to keep inflation within the target range.
Inflation is currently running at 1.3 percent.
The bank wants Australia’s jobless rate to fall below 5.2 percent so wages can rise faster.
With parliament sitting yesterday for the first time since May elections, the government is giving priority to passing tax cuts worth A$158 billion (US$110 billion) over the next decade to boost economic activity.
Lowe’s statement on the economy was positive, National Australia Bank economist Ivan Colhoun said.
“It’s talking about an optimistic view of the world, but with some downside risks related to trade wars, and it’s a reasonably optimistic view of the Australian economy as well,” Colhoun told Australian Broadcasting Corp.
“There is a positive spin to the rate cut. We talk about emergency rates. In fact, very low rates are the norm around the world. Australia and New Zealand are coming to that norm a lot later than other countries,” Colhoun added.
Australia’s economy is suffering from the end of a mining boom — largely to supply China— that carried the country through the global economic crisis without a recession.
It has not suffered a recession since the June quarter of 1991.
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