A day after the budget, the Reserve Bank's attention turned elsewhere.
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The jump in inflation from 6.1 per cent to 7.3 per cent revealed last Wednesday as Treasurer Jim Chalmers was preparing to deliver his post-budget press club address made it clear that, even after six consecutive interest rate hikes, inflation was further away from the bank's target band than it had ever been.
The target band of 2-3 per cent was introduced in the early 1990s at a time when that's where inflation was. With one brief exception during the introduction of the goods and services tax at the start of the 2000s, inflation has never since been far away from the band, until now.
Inflation detached
What's worrying the Reserve Bank, and why it increased interest rates for a record seventh consecutive month on Melbourne Cup Tuesday, is that inflation seems to become completely detached from the band.
Pushing up interest rates isn't something the Reserve Bank does lightly.
For a borrower with a $500,000 mortgage, the increase in payments amounts to $800 per month. For a borrower on a fixed-rate loan of 2 per cent that's about to expire, the burden will be even greater.
So the Reserve Bank wants to be sure the jump in inflation to 7.3 per cent is the real thing.
There are reasons to believe it's not completely the real thing, but (regrettably) reasons to be worried about worse come.
Not quite the real thing
The first thing to say is that 7.3 per cent is almost the real thing. The bureau collects information on millions of prices per week, at times by going into stores in eight cities and noting down what's written on price tags, at times by direct feeds from supermarkets, petrol stations and electricity suppliers, and at times by "scraping" prices quoted on the web for things such as home deliveries.
The next thing to say is that the bureau categorises the things it prices as either essential or non-essential (its words are "non-discretionary" and "discretionary").
When it does, it finds the prices of essential items (those we generally have to buy) climbed by more than 7.3 per cent in the year to September - by an extraordinary 8.4 per cent - whereas the prices of things we generally don't need climbed 5.5 per cent.
Among those essential items were food, where prices are being pushed up by floods and labour shortages, and something else that isn't really essential and arguably shouldn't account for much of the consumer price index at all.
One single item - "new dwelling purchase by owner-occupiers" - makes up more of the consumer price index than anything else.
It's a purchase we rarely make, and some of us never make, but buying a home is so expensive compared to the other things we buy (such as bread and milk) that it accounts for almost 9 per cent of the index.
Worse still, being classified as essential, it makes up almost 15 per cent of the "essentials" index, even though for most of us in any given year buying a home is optional.
In most years this anomaly doesn't matter much. The price of a new home (what's priced is only the construction of the home, not the land) climbs pretty much in line with everything else.
But building material shortages, COVID-induced labour shortages, and an explosion in demand for building fed by the government's HomeBuilder grant have pushed up the price of new dwellings by an astonishing 20.7 per cent in the past year, enough to add an awful lot to the reported rate of inflation.
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Cost of living probably up 6 per cent
A rough calculation suggests Australia's inflation rate would be 6 per cent instead of 7.3 per cent if the price of new homes didn't have such an outsized influence.
We will know more mid-Wednesday. The bureau actually produces separate living cost indexes a week after the consumer price index that substitute mortgage payments for the cost of home-building and have lately been pointing to increases 1 to 2 percentage points below the official rate of inflation.
Another peculiarity, for some, is that the rent increases recorded in the consumer price index are so far below those we are hearing about. The bureau says in the year to September average capital city rents climbed just 2.8 per cent, compared to the figures of 10 per cent, and in some suburbs, 20 per cent, quoted by real estate analysts.
Rents growing slowly, for most
In part, this is because the bureau only reports capital city rents, but more importantly it is because the bureau does its job better.
It collects data on not only the rents that are advertised (that are climbing strongly) but also on the hundreds of thousands of rents paid by continuing renters that either aren't climbing at all or aren't climbing as strongly.
The bureau compares the two by describing a bathtub of water.
The water in the tub represents all rents being paid by households, while the water entering the tub from the tap represents new rental agreements. The consumer price index is measuring the overall temperature of the bathtub whereas an advertised rents series measures the temperature of the water flowing into the tub.
Perhaps surprisingly, the bureau finds the average retail price of electricity only climbed 3.2 per cent in the year to September, and the price of gas by only 16.6 per cent, much less than the 56 per cent and 44 per cent mentioned in the budget.
Worse in store
But the budget numbers were predictions of what'll happen over the next two years unless the government provides relief. The bureau was telling us what has happened.
Which is why the Reserve Bank is worried. While gas and electricity prices will subside eventually, inflation is likely to climb even higher before it falls - the ban and the way back to anything like the bank's 2-3 per cent target band is anything but clear.
- Peter Martin is a former economics editor of The Canberra Times. This article was first published in The Conversation.