Inflation data key to Albanese’s election hopes as cost of living, interest rates top voter concerns

Cost of living pressures and public anguish about higher interest rates have meant prime minister Anthony Albanese’s hopes of winning the next federal election could ride on one critical stat.

The Australian Bureau of Statistics is due to release its latest figures for trimmed mean inflation on Wednesday, widely expected to be the main influence on whether the Reserve Bank of Australia adjusts the cash rate.

Economists revealed that further signs of slowing inflation would open the door for a February rate cut, while inflation remaining stubbornly high would likely mean a rate hold.

It comes as new polling from Roy Morgan revealed cost of living and keeping interest rates down have become the most important issues for much of the electorate.

About 57% of respondents said they considered “keeping day-to-day living costs down” as one of their top three issues. This made it by far the most common concern for voters.

“Keeping interest rates down” was a top three issue for 19% of voters, up from 8% in 2022 – higher than the proportion of voters who said immigration was a top issue (14%).

'The Reserve Bank of Australia and the cash rate': youtube.com/mortgagechoice

Roy Morgan chief executive Michelle Levine said how the ALP responded to these issues would be critical.

“The rising focus on cost-of-living pressures – spanning day-to-day expenses, interest rates, and housing affordability – reflects a growing urgency among voters to address financial strain, making it the defining issue of this election cycle,” she said.

“If the Albanese government fails to realign with these changing voter concerns, they may not be re-elected.”

Markets are tipping the Wednesday data to show headline inflation for December to drop within the 2-3% target range of the RBA, but the central bank’s preferred underlying inflation measure to stay high at 3.3%.

Ray White Economics’ chief economist Nerida Conisbee said a higher than inspected inflation reading had the potential to “push back interest rate cuts”.

Mr Albanese told Sky News on Monday he believed his government had done “all we can” to reduce inflation and create a climate that could pave the way for the Reserve Bank to cut to the cash rate.

Treasurer Jim Chalmers has remained characteristically tight-lipped about his views on interest rate cuts. Picture: News Corp Australia

But he also clarified that he didn’t believe Labor’s chances of re-election hinged on a rate cut, noting that average unemployment was the “lowest of any government in the last 50 years”.

Speaking to reporters ahead of the inflation release, treasurer Jim Chalmers shied away from pre-empting how the RBA would interpret the data.

“They will weigh up all of the data in our economy, the inflation numbers this week, the job numbers and other data, and they’ll come to a decision independently without any free advice from me,” he said.

“I’m focused on my job which is getting inflation down, getting wages up, keeping unemployment low, getting the budget in much better nick at the same time as we roll out this cost of living help.”

This article first appeared on realestate.com.au and has been republished with permission.

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