2008 -2009 Commonwealth Budget

Posted on Tuesday, May 12, 2009 in Australia's Monetary Policy

Budget OverviewThe 2008 – 2009 Commonweal Budget is a responsible Budget that delivers for working families and invests in Australia’s future. It funds a substantial $55 billion Working Families Support Package; meets the Government’s commitments; and begins a new era of responsible long term investment to strengthen our economy, fight inflation, and meet our future challenges from a position of strength.

Go now to: Budget Overview 2008-09

Reserve Bank of Australia decided to leave the cash rate unchanged at 3.0 per cent

Posted on Tuesday, May 5, 2009 in Australia's Monetary Policy

Australia decided to leave the cash rate unchanged at 3.0 per cent

Statement by the Governor, Mr Glenn Stevens: Monetary Policy

The global economy contracted further during the first few months of this year. While the near-term outlook remains weak, there are further signs of stabilisation in several countries. The Chinese economy in particular has picked up speed in recent months and many commodity prices have firmed a little. The considerable economic policy stimulus in train in most countries should help contain the downturn and support an eventual recovery.

Conditions in global financial markets remain generally on a path of gradual improvement, with equity prices off their lows, term spreads declining and capital markets re -opening. Nonetheless, confidence remains fragile and balance sheets are under pressure from the effects of economic weakness on asset quality. Credit remains tight. Continued progress in restoring balance sheets remains essential to durable recovery. Read the rest »

The global economy is in recession

Posted on Tuesday, April 21, 2009 in Australia's Monetary Policy, Economic Crisis

The global economy is in recession By: Glenn Stevens Governor
Address to the Australian Institute of Company Directors
Directors Luncheon
Adelaide – 21 April 2009

The global economy is in recession. Virtually all of Australia’s trading partners are contracting. In fact almost every country with which we would normally make comparisons is in recession, and for many of them it is a bad one.

It is very rare for Australia to escape an international downturn and there is no precedent for avoiding one of this size. We, like most countries, have trade and financial linkages to the rest of the world. We are all aware of what happens abroad, and our own expectations and economic behaviour cannot but be affected by those events. Whether or not the next GDP statistic, due in early June, shows another decline, I think the reasonable person, looking at all the information available now, would come to the conclusion that the Australian economy, too, is in recession.

These are periods of hardship for significant parts of the community. People lose jobs, businesses fail, loans go bad, and plans are unfulfilled. As such, they are to be avoided if possible and at least ameliorated when they occur. It is for the latter reason that most countries today have extensive social safety nets, so that when recessions do occur, we can avoid the extent of outright misery seen in episodes like the 1930s. Read the rest »

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