Annual wages growth reaches 3.1 pct

Disclosure: Lifestyle Wealth Partners Pty Ltd and its advisers are authorised representatives of Fortnum Private Wealth Ltd ABN 54 139 889 535 AFSL 357306. General Advice Warning: Any information on this website is general advice and does not take into account any person's objectives, financial situation or needs. Please consider your own circumstances and consider whether the advice is right for you before making a decision. Always obtain a Product Disclosure Statement (If applicable) to understand the full implications and risks relating to the product and consider the Statement before making any decision about whether to acquire the financial product.

Wages have lifted for the fourth quarter in a row, growing 3.1 per cent annually in the September quarter.

But the increase is still being far outstripped by inflation as Australians’ real wage growth sits deep in negative territory.

The national statistics bureau’s wage price index lifted one per cent over the three months.

“This is the highest quarterly growth in hourly wages recorded since March quarter 2012,” Australian Bureau of Statistics program manager of prices Michelle Marquardt said.

She said surging pays were largely driven by the private sector, where wages were growing at twice the rate of those in the public sector.

In the June quarter, wages grew 0.7 per cent in three months and 2.6 per cent over the year.

This followed a 0.7 per cent lift in the March quarter and 0.7 per cent growth in the final quarter of 2021.

But the rising cost of living continues to outstrip wages growth as headline inflation hit 7.3 per cent in the September quarter.

Fierce competition for skilled workers has been putting upwards pressure on wages.

Australia’s employment levels remain robust and the jobless rate is hovering around record lows.

Economists expected to see wages keep ticking up in the September quarter.

CommSec tipped a 0.9 per cent lift over the three months, while St George economists anticipated a 1.1 per cent lift in quarterly growth – the equal fastest quarterly rate on record – to take annual growth to 3.2 per cent.

Chief economist Besa Deda said this level of growth was still below the 3.5 per cent level the Reserve Bank of Australia labelled the “normal” or “steady state”.

In June, RBA governor Philip Lowe said it was okay to have short bursts in wage growth but prolonged increases in the four to five per cent range would make it harder to rein in inflation.

Ms Deda also said the index was likely undershooting wage pressures in the economy because it does not capture one-off retention and sign-on bonuses.

 

Poppy Johnston
(Australian Associated Press)

0

Like This

Categories: Finance