Governor Glenn Stevens and his board left the overnight cash-rate target at 4.25 percent, the Reserve Bank of Australia said in a statement in Sydney Tuesday. The decision was predicted by three of 27 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. The other 24 forecast a quarter percentage-point reduction.
Stevens’s decision reflects confidence the U.S. and Chinese economies will withstand a European recession and domestic unemployment stay close to 5 percent as A$456 billion ($488 billion) in resource projects boost hiring. Australia’s services industry expanded in January, snapping three straight months of declines, and manufacturing advanced for a second consecutive month.
“The global risks are a little lower than at the time of the December rate cut,” Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. economists Craig Michaels and Katie Dean, who predicted a pause, said in a research report before Tuesday’s decision. “The domestic data flow since the last RBA board meeting indicates that economic conditions are broadly unchanged.”
The Australian dollar, the world’s fifth-most traded currency, has strengthened about 5 percent this year. The currency touched a six-month high of $1.0794 on Feb. 3 after reports showed employment in the U.S. topped forecasts, sending its jobless rate to a three-year low, and global manufacturing is strengthening.
Stevens lowered the nation’s benchmark interest rate by a quarter percentage point to 4.5 percent on Nov. 1 and to 4.25 percent Dec. 6 to help revive household demand and hiring. (Bloomberg)
The RBA expects that Chinese demand for the nation’s commodities will help propel the domestic economy even as a global expansion slows.
Australia’s trade surplus soared to a record in 2011 on coal and iron ore shipments, a Feb. 2 government report showed, as exports outpaced imports by A$19.3 billion.
Demand for Australian resources and interest rates that were 2.25 percentage points higher than any other developed nation spurred the Australian dollar to $1.1081 on July 27, the highest level since it was freely floated in 1983. (Bloomberg)
caption; Glenn Stevens, governor of the Reserve Bank of Australia Bloomberg
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Articles by Korea Herald