Australian household spending rose by a very modest 0.1% in August, below expectations for a 0.3% increase. Annual growth eased from 5.3% to 5%. At Tuesday's RBA meeting, Governor Bullock cited the recovery in household spending as a factor in the decision to leave the cash rate on hold. Wealth effects from increasing asset prices, rising real incomes and 75bps of RBA rate cuts were all supporting household spending according to Governor Bullock. Improving sentiment is likely to also be a contributing factor.
Household spending rose for the 4th straight month lifting by 0.1% in August. This followed earlier gains in this run of 0.4% in July (revised from 0.5%), 0.5% in June and 1% in May. The headline increase in spending for August was underpinned by areas including transport (0.8%) and hotels, cafes and restaurants (0.3%), helping to offset declines in recreation and culture (-0.9%) and alcoholic beverages (-0.9%).
Taking a broader perspective, growth in household spending continues to be weighted towards services over goods. Services spending lifted a further 0.5% in August to be up 8.1% over the year. By contrast, goods spending declined for the second month running, down 0.2% after a 0.5% fall in July. Annual growth for goods is tracking at 2.5%.