Search: year-ended growth
RBA Glossary definition for year-ended growth
year-ended growth – The rate of change between the period and the equivalent period in the previous year, where the period is typically a month or a quarter. For example 'year-ended growth June 2012' means the percentage change between June 2011 and June 2012. It can also be referred to as 'growth over the year' or 'through-the-year growth'.
Search Results
Twenty-five Years of Inflation Targeting in Australia | Conference – 2018
12 Apr 2018
Conferences
In the year following the onset of the crisis, Australia's exports to the region declined by nearly 20 per cent, directly subtracting around 1 percentage point from aggregate growth. ... Hence inflation as measured by the CPI was boosted, in a year-ended
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2018/debelle.html
The Transmission of Monetary Policy through Banks' Balance Sheets | Conference – 2018
12 Apr 2018
Conferences
a 5-year interest rate that does not fully adjust because expected future cash rates do not change does not indicate incomplete monetary policy pass-through). ... We assume banks hedge these deposits into a variable interest rate exposure by entering
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2018/brassil-cheshire-muscatello.html
Twenty-five Years of Inflation Targeting in Australia: Are There Better Alternatives for the Next Twenty-five Years? | Conference – 2018
12 Apr 2018
Conferences
While the introduction of inflation targeting has witnessed a substantial containment in inflationary pressure, with year-ended inflation averaging under 3 per cent since 1993 (Figure 1), the theoretical debate about ... Under a nominal income target,
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2018/mckibbin-panton.html
Restructuring and Reform: China 2016 | Conference – 2016
18 Mar 2016
Conferences
However, since 2011, nominal GDP growth has fallen steadily, while credit growth has remained roughly constant around 15 per cent in year-ended terms, even accelerating somewhat from its low point ... Credit growth at the end of 2014 was running at 13.6
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2016/naughton.html
The Evolving Structure of the Australian Financial System | Conference – 1996
9 Jul 1996
Conferences
A second example, on the lending side, was the growth of merchant banking. ... The third and more recent example of specialist competition is the growth of mortgage managers.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/1996/edey-gray.html
Introduction | Conference – 2011
16 Aug 2011
Conferences
anything, the growth of supply had slowed relative to estimates of underlying demand. ... Footnote. For example, only two OECD countries, Australia and Poland, avoided a sustained contraction in GDP with year-ended GDP growth turning negative in all
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2011/intro-2011.html
The Australian Labour Market in the 2000s: The Quiet Decade | Conference – 2011
24 Jul 2000
Conferences
Growth in real earnings was generally positively related to position in the earnings distribution. ... Table 6: Employment Growth by Industry. Share of total employment growth, per cent.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2011/borland.html
It Takes More Than a Bubble to Become Japan | Conference – 2003
18 Aug 2003
Conferences
The second criterion uses a threshold of whether M3 (or appropriate broad money measure by country) year-ended growth exceeds the average rate by one standard deviation of that aggregate's ... For Japan in 1987–1991, output was 2 per cent a year above
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2003/posen.html
International Business Cycle Co-movements through Time | Conference – 2005
11 Jul 2005
Conferences
Correlation of real GDP. (year-ended growth rates). Correlation of GDP cycles. ... Figure 1 shows the growth cycles of real GDP for Australia and the US over the past 45 years.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2005/andrews-kohler.html
The Case for Inflation Targeting in East Asian Countries | Conference – 2001
24 Jul 2001
Conferences
The Bank of Korea Act requires that the price stability target be set each year in consultation with the Government. ... the adjustment is taken in the form of lower growth, but the primary focus is on returning inflation to the target.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2001/debelle.html