MEDIA RELEASE
No: 1999-11
Date: 3 November 1999
Embargo: For Immediate Release
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STATEMENT BY THE GOVERNOR, MR IAN MACFARLANE
MONETARY POLICY
Following a decision by the Board at yesterday's meeting, the Bank will
be acting in the money market this morning to increase the cash rate by
25 basis points, to 5.0 per cent.
The international economic environment has improved considerably since
last December, when the previous adjustment to monetary policy was made.
At that time, world growth was expected to be weak, global inflation was
tending to fall and international interest rates were declining. The likelihood
of some decline in Australia's growth and the continuing very low inflation
allowed scope for monetary policy to move in the expansionary direction.
As things have turned out, global growth this year has been a good deal
stronger than expected, and a further strengthening appears likely in
2000. Most of Australia's Asian trading partners are in recovery, and
global disinflationary forces have abated. The Australian economy is growing
faster than the Bank or most other forecasters had expected.
At the same time, inflation has now returned to the 2-3 per cent target
zone, after a lengthy period of being below target. The CPI increased
by 1.7 per cent over the year to the September quarter. This figure was
held down by the effects of the health care rebate; abstracting from this,
the CPI increase was a little over 2 per cent over the year. Some of the
increase in inflation has come from higher oil prices, but core or underlying
measures of inflation, which exclude oil prices, have also run at about
2 per cent over the past year. Some further gradual increase in inflation
is likely over the next two or three quarters.
The stance of monetary policy has been expansionary over the past couple
of years. Interest rates in real and nominal terms for virtually all borrowers
have been below the low points reached in the early 1990s, and credit
growth has been strong. This was the appropriate setting of policy through
the period when the forces affecting the economy from abroad were contractionary.
The need for such an expansionary setting has now passed, and accordingly,
the Board has decided to increase cash rates modestly, so as to take policy
to a less expansionary setting.
This adjustment will not bring to an end the current expansion, now in
its ninth year, nor is it designed to do so. On the contrary, it is designed
to keep the setting of policy attuned to the economy's changing needs,
so as to maintain inflation of 2-3 per cent over the medium term. This
will prolong the expansion, and a long, steady expansion offers the best
chance to achieve further progress in reducing unemployment.
Enquiries:
Mr G.R. Stevens
Assistant Governor
(Economic)
(02) 9551 8800
Mr R. Battellino
Assistant Governor
(Financial Markets)
(02) 9551 8200
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