Australia's Economic Outlook Dims: RBA Lowers Productivity and Wage Growth Forecasts

October 15, 2025
Australia's Economic Outlook Dims: RBA Lowers Productivity and Wage Growth Forecasts
  • RBA assistant governor Sarah Hunter explained that productivity growth is vital for sustainable real wages, as it enables nominal wages to rise without fueling inflation.

  • The forecast for sustainable wage growth has been lowered from 3.5% to 3.2%, reflecting weaker productivity and inflation dynamics.

  • Australia's central bank has revised down its outlook for productivity growth from 1% to 0.7%, signaling a potential slowdown in economic expansion and wage increases.

  • The medium-term potential output growth has been adjusted to about 2% annually, down from previous estimates of 2.25%, indicating weaker economic prospects.

  • Australia's GDP growth rate of 1.8% in the June quarter was slower than expected, aligning with the revised lower potential growth due to decreased productivity.

  • Weaker productivity and wage growth could lead to prolonged higher interest rates, especially impacting consumer and rate-sensitive sectors.

  • This development places Australia alongside other developed nations facing similar productivity challenges, emphasizing the need for increased investment and innovation to maintain living standards and competitiveness.

  • Reduced productivity and lack of competition among major businesses may be costing Australians around $3,000 annually per person.

  • Lower productivity expectations suggest that market growth prospects may be tempered, potentially leading to softer earnings for Australian companies and affecting investor sentiment.

  • Despite these downward revisions, Australia's GDP has performed slightly better than anticipated, though inflation remains persistent in some sectors.

  • The Reserve Bank of Australia has increased its inflation and price growth forecasts for the upcoming year, pointing to ongoing inflationary pressures.

  • The RBA paused interest rate hikes at 3.60% in September, citing concerns over rising inflation and a tight labor market, with employment growth slowing more than expected.

  • Ms. Hunter noted that while wages could temporarily catch up without causing inflation, persistent low productivity could hinder real wage recovery.

Summary based on 2 sources


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Sources

RBA’s grim wages warning to Aussies

news.com.au — Australia’s leading news site for latest headlines • Oct 15, 2025

RBA’s grim wages warning to Aussies

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