Australian household spending rose by 1.3% in May, defying headwinds from cost-of-living pressures, RBA rate hikes and weak sentiment. That was well above expectations for a 0.5% rise; however, spending was boosted by travel-related refunds as the effects of the Middle East conflict continued to impact the data. Meanwhile, the halving of the federal excise tax continued to drive petrol prices down.
The household spending indicator rose by 1.3% in May, a continuation of the volatile profile in recent months following the conflict in the Middle East. This was after spending rose by 1.7% in March - driven by the fuel price shock - only to fall by 1.1% in April, weighed by refunds for travel due to mass flight cancellations in response to the conflict. In May, spending in all categories contributed to the headline increase, reflected in the chart below.
Notably, discretionary spending performed to post its strongest rise (2.1%) in well over two years going back to January 2024. This included strength in clothing and footwear (2.7%), boosted by early end-of-financial-year sales, while hotels, cafes and restaurants (1.9%) lifted alongside major sporting and cultural events.
Transport-related spending, currently the most volatile category, rose 1.4% in May. That was a rebound from the sizeable fall in April (-4.7%), due to travel refunds returning to more normal levels. The ABS's release noted that if airfares and refunds were removed, household spending would have only risen by 0.6% month-on-month. Meanwhile, the volume of fuel sales was estimated to have declined 0.4% month-on-month.























