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RBA tipped to cut interest rates by 25 basis points
RBA tipped to cut interest rates by 25 basis points

News.com.au

time20-05-2025

  • Business
  • News.com.au

RBA tipped to cut interest rates by 25 basis points

KPMG Chief Economist Brendan Rynne has weighed in ahead of the Reserve Bank's anticipated interest rate decision, forecasting a 25 basis point cut. 'We generally think that it will only be a 0.25 per cent interest rate cut today," Mr Rynne told Sky News Australia. 'It really depends on whether they are particularly concerned about the state of the Australian economy in terms of the weakness that we've seen for quite some time now within the private side of the economy. 'If those concerns outweigh any future concerns they have about an uptick in inflation, then they could do a double jump, but our expectation is only a 25-basis point cut today.'

RBA tipped to cut interest rates by 25 basis points
RBA tipped to cut interest rates by 25 basis points

Sky News AU

time20-05-2025

  • Business
  • Sky News AU

RBA tipped to cut interest rates by 25 basis points

KPMG Chief Economist Brendan Rynne has weighed in ahead of the Reserve Bank's anticipated interest rate decision, forecasting a 25 basis point cut. 'We generally think that it will only be a 0.25 per cent interest rate cut today," Mr Rynne told Sky News Australia. 'It really depends on whether they are particularly concerned about the state of the Australian economy in terms of the weakness that we've seen for quite some time now within the private side of the economy. 'If those concerns outweigh any future concerns they have about an uptick in inflation, then they could do a double jump, but our expectation is only a 25-basis point cut today.'

Trump's tariffs could deliver a $27bn blow to Australia – and the cost of a global trade war would be far higher
Trump's tariffs could deliver a $27bn blow to Australia – and the cost of a global trade war would be far higher

The Guardian

time03-04-2025

  • Business
  • The Guardian

Trump's tariffs could deliver a $27bn blow to Australia – and the cost of a global trade war would be far higher

Liberation days signal the end of a war, not the start of one. So it is with rich irony that the US president, Donald Trump, has declared victory even as he massively escalates his attack on the global trading system. As Trump attempted to recast the world's richest nation as a victim of 'perfidious' foreigners who have been taking advantage of the superpower for too long, he unveiled sweeping 10% tariffs on goods imported from Australia. Notably, pharmaceuticals – one of Australia's top exports to the US – escaped tariffs, as did critical minerals that are not mined in the US. The treasurer, Jim Chalmers, nevertheless declared it 'a dark day in the global economy' as he promised to release updated Treasury modelling of how bad the tariffs will be for Australia. 'These escalating trade tensions, these tariffs announced by the Trump administration in Washington DC, are self-defeating, they are self-sabotaging,' Chalmers said. The US only buys about 5% of what Australian businesses sell overseas, but economists say the entire world, and especially trade-exposed nations like Australia, would lose from America raising its protectionist walls to the highest levels since 1909. The chief economist at KPMG, Brendan Rynne, estimates that the average tax rate on US imports is set to soar by more than 18 percentage points. In Rynne's model, the world economy as a result would shrink by about 0.4%. And as a country that has depended on trade to drive prosperity, he estimates the new tariffs will deliver a $27bn blow to Australia's economy, or as much as 1% of GDP. Sign up for the Afternoon Update: Election 2025 email newsletter With tariffs on US imports from China – our largest trading partner – jumping over 50%, even that estimate may prove too optimistic, he says. 'We're a medium-sized, open economy that is dependent on world trade for our economic prosperity. In essence this is shaking up world trade, and how this all plays out will be difficult to say.' Australian consumers could also face a brief lift in prices. 'We get an inflation pulse of about 1%, but it comes and goes very quickly,' Rynne says. Experts agree that the prognosis for America's economy and its consumers is potentially much more severe. But with Trump having signalled he plans to use higher tariff revenue to pay for big tax cuts, it's an open question whether his trade aggression will hurt the president's popularity at home and his determination to use tariff policy as a tool to 'make America great again'. 'We are in a big experiment where we are judging rhetoric against logic – and we will find out soon enough which one's the winner,' Rynne says. Soon after the announcement in the White House Rose Garden, the US treasury secretary, Scott Bessent, warned other nations against hitting back with tariffs of their own. 'This is the high end of the number barring retaliation. As far as negotiations go – we'll see,' Bessent told Bloomberg. Australia has escaped relatively lightly with no additional 'reciprocal' levies, as other putative allies have been treated substantially worse. Japan and the EU were hit with across-the-board imposts of 20% and 24%, respectively. Meanwhile, taxes on Chinese imports will rise by 34 percentage points to 54% in the latest announcement, according to Bloomberg. China has since vowed to respond in an unspecified way. Sign up to Afternoon Update: Election 2025 Our Australian afternoon update breaks down the key election campaign stories of the day, telling you what's happening and why it matters after newsletter promotion What this means for China – which buys the lion's share of Australia's total exports – matters hugely for how the Australian economy weathers this storm. While Treasury officials have estimated a relatively minor hit to growth at home from higher US tariffs, they have emphasised that the indirect hit to the economy from the knock-on effects of a possible global trade war could be far higher. The chief economist of AMP, Shane Oliver, says his initial calculation is that US levies as a percentage of its total imports would jump from under 5% to nearly 25%. Oliver estimates the risk of a US recession is now 40%, and that global growth would drop from 3% towards 2% 'depending on how significant retaliation is and how countries like China respond with policy stimulus'. Preliminary modelling by another economist, who spoke to Guardian Australia but was unwilling to go on the record, showed the US slumping into recession for the rest of 2025 as inflation shot higher and consumer spending collapsed. Countries around the world are grappling with how to respond to Trump, cobbling together policies mixed with diplomacy and flattery to reduce the likelihood of becoming a target. Some, including China, have devised retaliatory packages to demonstrate they are capable of causing the US pain, while others are seeking to give concessions that are domestically palatable. Wesley Widmaier, a professor of international relations at the Australian National University, says Australia has historically been successful in playing the long game. 'Australia can keep the powder dry and play the transactional game that it's always been very smart in playing by letting other countries kick up more dust,' Widmaier says. Trump in his opening speech suggested that Australian beef would be banned, but this proved to be a rhetorical flourish and the 10% levy will apply to our largest export to the US. Australia accounts for about a quarter of US beef imports, and the additional levy comes at a time when American beef buyers have become increasingly reliant on overseas sellers. Thanks to drought, American cattle numbers have dropped to multi-decade lows, and local producers can't keep up with a rise in demand. No surprise, then, that Australian imports have reached record levels in 2025 – up 30% so far compared with last year. Prices are 16% higher than a year earlier. It appears that Canadian and Mexican exporters have escaped additional levies, but still face higher tariffs under a previous round. And America's need for imported beef will probably only rise this year as US farmers rebuild their stock numbers. Dennis Voznesenski, an agricultural economist at CBA, says these factors suggest beef prices would hold up through 2025 and American buyers will bear the burden of higher taxes on imported meat. 'While the tariffs are unquestionably a negative (for Australian producers), the constrained state of US cattle availability and possible herd rebuild will mean that the tariff burden will likely be spread between both exporters and the US until the US can rebalance its domestic cattle supply,' Voznesenski says. Patrick Commins is economics editor and Jonathan Barrett is business editor of Guardian Australia

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