Paul Murray: Concerning figures add up to an economic nightmare for a lacklustre Federal Government

A key piece of economic information became public last month that provided an international rating for the severity of Australia’s cost-of-living crisis, but it strangely became a one-day wonder.

It was surprising because it distils the Albanese Government’s culpability for the economy-wide crisis that is hurting even more Australians than the mess it has made of industrial relations law or the release of criminal detainees.

The Australian Financial Review on November 9 published an analysis of information collected by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development demonstrating that in the 12 months to June, our household incomes slumped 5.1 per cent.

It was the sharpest fall recorded across the 38 developed nations that make up the OECD, which had an average increase of 2.6 per cent.

Just let that sink in.

Over the first full financial year of the new Labor Government, elected on a promise to improve our standard of living, Australian family incomes fell at the fastest rate of any of the countries against which we usually measure our wealth and progress.

Figures released by the OECD showed “real household gross disposable income per capita” growing in these comparable countries: Spain (6 per cent), USA (3.5), United Kingdom (2.2), France (1.6).

But we topped the negative side of the ledger along with those Scandinavian economic pin-ups of the Left, Norway (-4.4) and Sweden (-3.1) and muddled-headed Justin Trudeau’s Canada (-1.4).

Like Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, until he fell over a public opinion cliff very recently, Treasurer Jim Chalmers has had a dream run in the media, facing little scrutiny over his performance.

Most absent has been any focus on the Government’s apparent strategy to allow the Reserve Bank to do all the heavy lifting in the fight against inflation — a key component of the cost-of-living crisis — while continuing to boost it through excessive spending.

However, Chalmers was caught out in October in a precursor to the damaging OECD figures when he came under criticism for his claim that Australian workers were substantially better off under Labor.

Albanese says the record influx is because of lower levels of migration during the pandemic.
Camera IconAlbanese says the record influx is because of lower levels of migration during the pandemic. Credit: MICK TSIKAS/ MICK TSIKAS

“We said that we’d get wages moving again, and we are,” he told the House of Representatives on September 11. “An average full-time worker was $3700 better off in the first year of the Albanese Government.”

But an RMIT Fact Check published a month later came to the verdict that Chalmers’ statement was “misleading”.

Why? Well essentially because it ignored the impact of inflation, which outstripped the growth in earnings by 6 percentage points as measured by the consumer price index.

The inflation it let others fight.

“In real terms, full-time total average weekly earnings fell by 2 per cent over the year to May 2023,” the Fact Check concluded. “Rather than employees being ‘better off’, average full-time wages actually fell in real terms by $2051.92 over Labor’s first year in office.”

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