Consumer Price Index – March Quarter 2005
April 26, 2005Australian Competition Tribunal Appointments
April 28, 2005Press Conference
Treasury Place, Melbourne
Wednesday, 27 April 2005
12 noon
SUBJECTS: March quarter Consumer Price Index, Sheik Faiz Mohamad’s
comments
TREASURER:
Today’s Consumer Price Index without question is good news for Australia.
It shows that in the March quarter the Consumer Price Index increased by 0.7
per cent and through the year by 2.4 per cent. A yearly increase of 2.4 per
cent shows that inflation remains moderate in Australia, notwithstanding the
fact that we are now at unemployment levels which are as low as they have been
in 30 years. And more importantly, the outcome of 2.4 per cent is just about
bang in the middle of the target that we have of 2 to 3 per cent.
In relation to the Consumer Price Index, there are a lot of measures that moved
down, for example clothing and footwear and motor vehicles, both no doubt influenced
by the fact that tariffs were reduced on 1 January of this year. There were
some areas that moved up, in particular in pharmaceutical benefits, that is
because the March quarter is traditionally a high pharmaceutical benefit quarter
because the safety net has run out at the end of the calendar year. In relation
to education, we also saw some price increases no doubt influenced by the fact
that HECS fees rose as a result of the new freedoms for universities in relation
to fees.
When you look through these figures however you don’t see any general
inflationary pressures. We had a report yesterday in relation to producer prices
which also showed the final stage of producer prices were very flat. And so
the picture that we get out of today’s figures is notwithstanding a strong
economy, notwithstanding unemployment falling to lows of 30 years, price pressures
remain contained in the Australian economy showing a growth economy with subdued
inflation.
JOURNALIST:
Do you expect Treasurer that inflation will now stay within the Reserve Bank’s
target band making any further interest rate changes unnecessary?
TREASURER:
I don’t think you could see in these figures any general outbreak of
inflation, nor are we forecasting any over the next 12 months, in the next financial
year, 2005-2006. So, I see a good outlook in relation to keeping inflation moderate
and of course we will be confirming our forecast when the Budget comes down
in May.
JOURNALIST:
(inaudible)?
TREASURER:
Well, in Australia as you know we have set our monetary policy according to
an agreement which has been entered into between the Governor of the Reserve
Bank and me, that is to target an inflation rate of between 2 and 3 per cent
over the course of the cycle. You have got an outcome today which is 2.4 per
cent, obviously within that band. When you are looking at monetary policy you
are obviously trying to look through the year and maybe look out 12 months,
maybe look out 18 months, but you would have to say in relation to these figures
that the outlook there is for continuing moderate inflation. So that is a pretty
good outcome in a growth economy which is now at 30 year lows for unemployment.
JOURNALIST:
The Treasury Chief Ken Henry yesterday apparently was warning the Reserve Bank
against raising interest rates saying that could lead to a recession, do you
agree with him?
TREASURER:
I don’t think it is right to say he was warning anybody. I think what
he was saying yesterday was he was giving an assessment of the stage of the
economic cycle and I think what he said yesterday was very much in line with
my own thinking that there has been this tendency in Australia to (inaudible)
with extreme scenarios of one day the economy is racing away uncontrollably,
the next day we are facing a crash. Sorry to disappoint economic journalists
but the truth of the matter is that we are somewhere in between. We have had
a strong growth economy and although it is probably not growing as fast as it
was a year or two ago, there is still a bit of oomph in that economy and that
is a good thing.
JOURNALIST:
Are petrol prices the key risk going forward? This figure includes a slight
fall in petrol prices but after the quarter they have obviously started going
up, is that the key risk going forward?
TREASURER:
Look I think in this quarter, that is the June quarter, petrol prices will
have risen again, we all know that from the pump, and whilst you have got petrol
prices detracting in the March quarter you would expect petrol prices to add
in the June quarter. But we know that the petrol price is just a function of
the world oil price, we know that world oil prices are going to go up and are
going to move around. When you are looking at inflation, you are generally trying
to look through those factors, you are generally trying to look through and
to find out what the underlying position is, so I wouldn’t place too much
store on the fact that petrol detracted this quarter anymore than I would place
store on the fact that it is likely to add in the next quarter. What we are
trying to do is we are trying to look through those commodities which vary according
to world cycle, we are looking for what is happening in the underlying economy.
And I think as you look at what is happening in the underlying economy, you
would see a moderate inflation outcome.
JOURNALIST:
Mr Costello, just on another matter. I don’t know whether you heard the
comments, there were comments aired on radio this morning from Sheik Faiz Mohamad
who is a cleric in Sydney. He has suggested that the way Australian women dress
makes them, and I quote ‘eligible for rape.’ I wondered whether
you had a response to a comment like that.
TREASURER:
Well I have seen comments reported in newspapers that somehow the dress code
of Australian women invites sexual attack or unwanted sexual attention. And
if such comments are made I consider them totally inappropriate, untrue and
unhelpful. Australian women are free to dress in the western style and nothing
gives an excuse for them to be molested in anyway. This is Australia, women
are free to dress as they choose and they deserve to be safe on our streets
and in our parks and they are entitled to respect. And if anybody does suggest
that somehow being molested is acceptable or excusable because of the way in
which women dress they are wrong.
JOURNALIST:
Coming back to Dr Henry Treasurer, he also apparently said that short term
changes in fiscal policy don’t really have any effect on monetary policy.
Does that mean that there is room for further tax cuts in your Budget?
TREASURER:
I think the important thing in relation to fiscal policy is to get some idea
of dimension. If you were running budget deficits, yes of course that would
put pressure on interest rates, but we are not in Australia, we are running
budget surpluses – unlike the Americans and the British and the Europeans. So,
Australia starts off so far in front of Britain and Europe and America and Japan
that we are almost in a different category. If we were running a budget position
like they are, then yes, the dimension of that would be such as to have a significant
influence. The second point I would make in relation to fiscal policy is the
important thing is how it varies from year to year as to whether it has been
tightened or whether it has been loosened. A lot of people overlook that fact.
You get a lot of silly commentary coming out of people like the Labor Party
that overlook that fact, but that is the key ingredient here.
JOURNALIST:
Treasurer, you are saying that wages pressure remains contained so you may
no longer see the possibility of wage claims putting upward pressure on interest
rates, you no longer see that?
TREASURER:
I have always said that if wage claims get out of whack with productivity that
would be a big pressure on the Australian economy.
I have always said that if people think, not based on productivity, they could
have a five or a six per cent per annum wage claim, that would be a risk. To
date we haven’t seen that. We have seen some people making ambit claims,
we have seen a few instances of where it has happened. But my warning is, do
not take that into the general economy. That would be a problem for the general
economy and I would say to people, you can still have a real wage increase,
on 2 per cent inflation. You can still have a real wage increase of 3 and
4 per cent and once more that real wage increase of 3 and 4 per cent backed
up by productivity will be consistent with the economy continuing to grow but
anyone who thinks out there that they can take advantage and got for 6 or 7
or more, and if that became widespread in the Australian community that would
be a problem. Yes.
JOURNALIST:
Some analysts have interpreted Ken Henry’s statements as he was referring
to interest rates potentially going up next week. To those people would you
say or could you say whether or not you think it is appropriate that he should
be giving hints like that when he actually sits on that Board?
TREASURER:
Well Ken Henry is Treasury Secretary, he makes a very strong contribution in
that capacity. He is obviously one of the senior economic officers in the country
and he is as entitled to have his view on the economy as the Reserve Bank Governor
or any journalist or any banker or the people who seem to be absolute experts
on everything these days, bank economists. So, absolutely I would defend his
right to make a contribution.
JOURNALIST:
And how are you feeling gearing up to your, is it tenth Treasurer?
TREASURER:
Yes it is.
JOURNALIST:
How is it going?
TREASURER:
Well we are working hard.
JOURNALIST:
How is the mood going.
TREASURER:
We are working very, very hard and in little under two weeks time all will
be revealed. Thank you very much for your time.