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This was published 2 years ago

One is not like the other – RBA not re-living 2007 campaign rise

By Shane Wright
Updated

The last time a Reserve Bank board lifted official interest rates in an election campaign, John Howard was facing off against Kevin Rudd.

On November 7, 2007, then RBA governor Glenn Stevens announced the official interest rate would be increased a quarter of a percentage point to 6.75 per cent.

The last time the RBA lifted rates in an election campaign, John Howard (left) was facing Kevin Rudd. As Scott Morrison (right) and Anthony Albanese head to the polls, markets again expect the RBA to move.

The last time the RBA lifted rates in an election campaign, John Howard (left) was facing Kevin Rudd. As Scott Morrison (right) and Anthony Albanese head to the polls, markets again expect the RBA to move.Credit: Fairfax Media

Accurately predicting inflation was likely to be north of 3 per cent by early 2008, Stevens said the bank’s board had “judged that a further increase in the cash rate was needed now in order to contain inflation in the medium term”.

Just over two weeks later, voters got rid of the Howard government (and Bennelong voters of John Howard).

Jump forward to this week and, after the worst inflation report in 22 years, financial markets believe the RBA board headed by Philip Lowe will follow Stevens and deliver an election campaign interest rate rise next week.

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But aside from the pre-election timing, there are substantial differences between the actions of Stevens’ RBA and the likely move by the current bank board.

The most glaring is the cash rate. A cash rate of 6.75 per cent (which translated into mortgage rates around the 8-9 per cent mark) is light years away from today’s record-low 0.1 per cent.

The average new mortgage in November 2007 was $275,000 in Victoria and a touch under $325,000 in NSW, and the quarter percentage point increase added about $56 to average monthly repayments.

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Today, the average new mortgage is $760,400 in NSW and $624,500 in Victoria. If the RBA takes rates up by 0.15 percentage points to 0.25 per cent, the increase in repayments will be less than in 2007.

If Australians cannot withstand a 0.15 percentage point lift in interest rates, serious questions have to be asked about the banking sector and the nation’s financial regulators.

Of course, homebuyers in 2007 were used to rate rises. They had been gradually increasing since May 2002. Today, there are about 1.2 million people with mortgages who have never experienced a rate increase.

Wages were growing at 4.2 per cent (and inflation was around 3 per cent) in 2007, meaning people could absorb a rate rise. But Australians today are, on average, in an even stronger position, sitting on $250 billion in extra savings and about 21 months ahead in their mortgage repayments.

The biggest shock of 2007 was that the RBA was prepared to act.

Howard, in his book Lazarus Rising, made clear his impression that the RBA had crossed a line by moving.

“The bank had ignored the implied understanding which had existed between the government and the bank, since full RBA independence in 1996, that the RBA saw to it that it kept out of the crossfire during election campaigns,” he wrote.

Howard claimed the bank would not be compromising its independence if it sent some “smoke signals” that it would start lifting rates in early 2008.

To this day, there is anger within elements of the Coalition towards Stevens and the banks’ actions 15 years ago.

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Always forgotten are two issues.

If the RBA is truly independent of government, then it has to make a call on monetary policy based on the evidence before it – not adjust to the political events of the time.

The second is that while it was a huge moment in the campaign, the Howard government was already on its way out.

There was a 5.4 per cent swing against an 11-year old government that was tired, lacking a policy agenda and through its own actions (recycling hundreds of billions of dollars in surging commodity prices back into the economy through tax cuts and handouts) had contributed to the inflation pressures the RBA was trying to address.

The rate rise may have been the final dagger to the heart of the Howard government, but it was already in the coffin and struggling for breath.

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Original URL: https://www.theage.com.au/link/follow-20170101-p5agrv