Australia Inflation Expectations Little Changed in May

2025-05-15 01:26 By Farida Husna 1 min. read

Consumer inflation expectations in Australia stood at 4.1% in May 2025, barely changed from 4.2% in the previous month.

The latest reading suggested that global policy uncertainty may weigh on domestic growth, though its impact on inflation remains uncertain.

Reserve Banks Governor Michele Bullock recently acknowledged that inflation is still a key challenge, with the central bank aiming to return it to the midpoint of the 2%–3% target band.

She added that cost-of-living pressures remain a concern for many households.

Australia’s monthly CPI rose 2.4% year-on-year in March, unchanged from February and at its lowest since November.

Similarly, annual inflation held steady at 2.4% in Q1 2025, matching Q4 2024 and marking a four-year low.

However, the trimmed-mean CPI — which reflects core inflation — rose 2.9%, the lowest since Q4 2021 but still above the RBA’s target.

At its April meeting, the RBA left the cash rate unchanged at 4.35% for the tenth straight time, as widely expected.



News Stream
Australia Inflation Expectations Highest in Near 3 Years
Australia’s consumer inflation expectations rose to 5.2% in March 2026 from 5.0% in the previous month, marking the highest level since July 2023, ahead of the Reserve Bank of Australia’s policy meeting on March 17. The increase followed the central bank’s 25bp rate hike to 3.85% in February. Policymakers acknowledged that price pressures picked up in the second half of 2025 and remain too high. While officials expect part of the recent surge in inflation to fade over time, they warned that a meaningful share reflects underlying pressures that could persist without further policy tightening. The board also noted that price increases have been broad-based across CPI components. As a result, the RBA signaled inflation will likely stay above its 2–3% target band for an extended period, with both headline and core measures still elevated. Current projections suggest inflation may not return to the target range until mid-2027.
2026-03-12
Australia Inflation Expectations Climb to 8-Month High
Australia’s consumer inflation expectations rose to 5.0% in February 2026 from 4.6% in the previous month, marking the highest level since last June. The jump followed the Reserve Bank of Australia’s decision to lift the cash rate by 25bps to 3.85% at its first policy meeting of the year, the first rate hike since November 2023. Policymakers pointed to renewed cost pressures that intensified in late 2025, driven by elevated service expenses and a tight labor market. The central bank signaled inflation will remain above its 2–3% target band for an extended period, with both headline and core readings exceeding target and policymakers indicating it will take further action to curb inflation. Projections suggest inflation in Australia may not return within the band until mid-2027.
2026-02-12
Australia Inflation Expectations Stay Elevated
Australia’s consumer inflation expectations stood at 4.6% in January 2026, little changed from 4.7% in the previous month, signaling households still foresee heightened price pressures. The latest reading followed the Reserve Bank of Australia’s decision to leave the cash rate unchanged at 3.6% for a third straight meeting in December. During the gathering, policymakers noted inflation has eased sharply from its 2022 peak, though recent data show renewed momentum. Headline CPI slowed to 3.4% yoy in November, the lowest since August, but remained above the RBA’s 2–3% target. Trimmed mean CPI also moderated to 3.2% from October’s eight-month high of 3.3%. Governor Michele Bullock recently highlighted that September-quarter inflation was slightly stronger than expected, with temporary factors at play but signs of persistence across components. The board judged risks to inflation have tilted modestly upward, while downside risks, particularly from overseas, have eased.
2026-01-15