Inflation Lower Than Expected But Not A Game Changer For The RBA

 | Apr 26, 2017 13:54

Originally published by AMP Capital

Australian consumer prices rose by 0.5% in the March quarter and annual growth in prices rose to 2.1% - a little bit below market expectations (of a 0.6% lift over the quarter). The groups that recorded the most significant prices rises were as expected – higher fuel and electricity prices, a lift in some broader housing-cost measures and health prices (seasonal impact of changes in the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme). Price falls were based in international holiday travel (a seasonal effect), fruit and furniture (post-Christmas sales)

The Reserve Bank of Australia’s (RBA) underlying measure of inflation (the average of the trimmed mean and weighted median) which takes out extreme price fluctuations was up by 0.4% in the March quarter (also a little below expectations of a 0.5% lift) but annual growth lifted to 1.8% (from 1.5% in the previous quarter). The RBA targets inflation of 2-3% over time (see chart below), so the latest upward move in underlying inflation would certainly be welcomed by the central bank given that the RBA rate cuts in 2016 were largely in response to very low inflation readings. The rise in both headline and underlying inflation are also consistent with the RBA’s own inflation forecasts (which see headline inflation of 2% and underlying inflation of 1.75% by the June quarter).