Australia PM considers extra inflation relief as families struggle
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Mr Anthony Albanese also said steps were being taken to remove all trade impediments with China.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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SYDNEY - Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said on Jan 3 that his centre-left government would consider new cost-of-living relief measures ahead of the May budget, but without stoking inflation.
Australian households are under broad financial pressure from high inflation, which spiked as high as 7.8 per cent in December 2022, before slowing to 5.4 per cent in the third quarter.
“We’ve asked Treasury and Finance, as we did in the lead-up to the last budget, we asked them to give consideration to what are the measures that can take pressure off families on cost-of-living without putting pressure on inflation,” Mr Albanese said in a press briefing in Sydney.
“That’s the key issue here. If you were just to distribute additional cash to people, you potentially make inflation worse, and therefore don’t help to solve the problem.”
The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) has had to lift interest rates to a 12-year high of 4.35 per cent to try to bring inflation to within its target band of 2 per cent to 3 per cent. RBA has jacked up interest rates by a whopping 425 basis points since May 2023.
The Albanese-led Labor government in May 2023 announced A$23 billion (S$20.63 billion) in targeted cost-of-living relief
Mr Albanese said steps were being taken to remove all trade impediments with China, Australia's largest trading partner.
His government has taken credit for patching up ties with China since coming to office in May 2022.
China has lifted most trade blocks imposed amid a 2020 diplomatic dispute, after Australia called for an inquiry into the origins of Covid-19
Mr Albanese’s approval ratings dipped in 2023 as families grapple with high living costs.
Two polls released in December showed he was in negative territory, with his disapproval ratings outstripping his approval numbers.
When asked if there would be a federal election in 2024, Mr Albanese said the next one “is due in May 2025”, adding that the three-year electoral cycle in Australia was “too short”, and suggested four-year terms, in line with Australian states. REUTERS

