Australian workers get modest real wage gains in latest data – finally

Yesterday, the Reserve Bank of Australia finally lowered interest rates some months after it became clear the economy is slowing and the labour market is getting weaker. The RBA remain fixated on there claims that wages growth is too high. In yesterday’s – Statement by the Monetary Policy Board: Monetary Policy Decision ((August 12, 2025) – they claimed that the “labour market remains a little tight” and that “Measures of labour underutilisation nevertheless remain at low rates” – which must be them rehearsing for careers as comedians. Unemployment is rising quickly and the broad underutilisation rate was at 10.3 per cent. So for the RBA having 10.3 per cent of available labour not being used in one way or another is a ‘low rate’. Extraordinary. Anyway today (May 14, 2025), the Australian Bureau of Statistics released the latest – Wage Price Index, Australia – for the June-quarter 2025, which shows that the aggregate wage index rose by 3.4 per cent over the 12 months and is steady. The June-quarter 2025 nominal wage growth outpaced the standard inflationary measures. While most commentators will focus on the nominal wages growth relative to CPI movements, the more accurate estimate of the cost-of-living change is the Employee Selected Living Cost Index, which is still running well above the CPI change. Using that measure, purchasing power of the nominal wages grew modestly in the June-quarter after several quarters of zero or negative growth. However, there is no wages breakout evident. And while the RBA are fixated on low productivity, they fail to demand more investment from the business community which is the main reason for lagging productivity.

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