PoliticsFederalFederal budgetPrint articleNo real pay rises expected for years: TreasuryMatthew CranstonUnited States correspondentMay 11, 2021 – 7.31pmSaveLog in or Subscribe to save articleShareCopy linkCopiedEmailLinkedInTwitterFacebookCopy linkCopiedShare via...Gift this articleSubscribe to gift this articleGift 5 articles to anyone you choose each month when you subscribe.Subscribe nowAlready a subscriber? LoginWorkers should not expect a real wage increase for up to four years under Treasury’s forecasts as inflation edges higher than wage growth, despite predictions that unemployment will fall below 5 per cent.The forecasts will be seen as a justification for the Reserve Bank’s decision to keep interest rates at a record low 0.1 per cent until at least 2024.Loading...Matthew Cranston was The Australian Financial Review’s United States correspondent.SaveLog in or Subscribe to save articleShareCopy linkCopiedEmailLinkedInTwitterFacebookCopy linkCopiedShare via...Gift this articleSubscribe to gift this articleGift 5 articles to anyone you choose each month when you subscribe.Subscribe nowAlready a subscriber? LoginLicense articleIntroducing your NewsfeedFollow the topics, people and companies that matter to you.Find out moreRead MoreFederal budgetWage growthEmploymentPayRBAInflationConsumer spendingLatest In FederalFetching latest articlesMost Viewed In PoliticsThe Australian Financial Review Magazine‘We don’t want to die wondering’: Jo Horgan on Mecca’s biggest bet yetLauren SamsThis Brisbane restaurant deserves a Michelin starHow Ozempic and other GLP-1s are transforming much more than just waistlinesBOSS Financial ReviewCan you take an extended career break and not hurt your career?Hannah TattersallGen Z doesn’t do water cooler chat. Here’s what bosses should doHow skateboarding helps this director switch offLife & LeisureWarning: Viewing Samsung’s latest OLED TV may cost you dearlyJohn DavidsonA $23m facelift has made NZ’s most famous holiday lodge even more luxeSkis, surfboards and opulent trains: luxury escapes to get you movingRich ListLaurence Escalante gets real deep on Instagram benderHannah WoottonBillionaire furniture mogul’s $12m hinterland retreat smashes recordApartment prices in record jump to $19,000 per square metre