Friday, November 8, 2024

If you’re feeling too scared to spend money right now, some relief is on the way

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At the moment, things look awful.

The latest Bureau of Statistics count of retail spending (spending online and in shops) released Tuesday shows we spent less in April than in February.

The Westpac card tracker, which tracks spending by Westpac customers, shows spending on essentials has fallen 1.6 per cent since April. Spending on non-essentials (what Westpac calls discretionary spending) has fallen 2.2 per cent.

Each month for decades now the Melbourne Institute has asked Australians whether “now is the right time to buy a major household item”.

This month, in a survey conducted just before and just after the federal budget, only 15.2 per cent said it was. That’s the second-lowest percentage in the three decades I have been keeping results.

Go back a few years to the time before COVID (and even during COVID in the lockdowns) and the proportion was typically double — 30-40 per cent of Australians said now was a good time to buy a major household item.

The economic growth figures due for release next week might well show living standards, as measured by GDP per person, going backwards for the fourth consecutive quarter — for an entire year.

It’s something that hasn’t happened since the early 1980s, in more than 40 years.

The good news (and there is good news) is things are about to get a little better, beginning very soon, in July.

Reasons to be (more) cheerful

Already well-publicised (probably over-publicised given its size) is the $300 per household electricity rebate, which will work out at $75 per quarter, or 82 cents per day.

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