Australia doles out energy, rent relief in balm for inflation
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[May 14, 2024] By
Stella Qiu and Wayne Cole
SYDNEY (Reuters) - Australia's government plans to spend billions to cut
energy bills and rent, lowering headline inflation and providing relief
for voters grumbling about cost of living pressures ahead of an election
next year.
In his third annual budget since taking office in 2022, Treasurer Jim
Chalmers on Tuesday pledged more money for renewables, critical minerals
and defense, alongside a long planned cut to income taxes worth an
average A$1,888 a year for each taxpayer.
"The number one priority of this government and this budget is helping
Australians with the cost of living," Chalmers said in his budget speech
to parliament.
"Annual inflation has more than halved from its peak in 2022...but we
know people are still under the pump. That's why we designed our cost of
living policies to ease these pressures."
The proposed A$3.5 billion in energy bill relief - equivalent to an
annual A$300 rebate for every household - is estimated to reduce
headline inflation by around half a percentage point for the fiscal year
ending June 2025.
As a result, Treasury now expects an easing in inflation back to the
central bank's 2-3% target band by the end of this year.
That would be a welcome surprise for the Reserve Bank of Australia,
which was forecasting inflation to pick up to 3.8% by the year end from
the current 3.6%, raising the risk of another interest rate hike.
The ambitious inflation projections come as Prime Minister Anthony
Albanese's Labor government faces growing criticism over soaring
consumer prices ahead of a federal election, which is due by early next
year.
However, analysts suspect core inflation could still remain sticky even
with the extra cost of living relief, which also runs the risk of adding
to spending later in the year.
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Office workers walk past the General Post Office building during
lunchtime in Sydney, Australia May 4, 2018. REUTERS/Edgar Su/File
Photo
Other cost of living measures in the budget include an increase in
the rent assistance program and debt relief for students, as well as
more investment to make medicines cheaper.
Investing in Labor's Future Made in Australia subsidy program is the
other big theme of the budget, with the government pledging to pour
more than A$20 billion over the next 10 years to help domestic
industries compete globally.
It also includes hefty tax incentives for the production of
renewable hydrogen and for the processing and refining of critical
minerals, a market China dominates globally.
The government will also spend A$5.7 billion more in the next four
years on defense - the largest increase in decades - as it upgrades
its missiles, drones and warships to counter China's rising
influence in the region.
All of that spending means the budget will swing back to deficit in
the next few years after posting two straight surpluses on a strong
labor market and high commodity prices.
The government projects a combined A$122 billion in the red over the
four fiscal years to 2028, though that will still be relatively
small at around 1% of gross domestic product on average.
The government kept its long-term commodity price assumptions
unchanged in the budget, with iron ore spot prices seen falling to
$60 per ton by the March quarter of 2025, and thermal coal prices to
$70 per ton.
(Editing by Sam Holmes)
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