- Reserve Bank cuts rates for first time since 2020
Australian borrowers have had their first official interest rate cut in more than four years.
The Reserve Bank has eased the cash rate by 25 basis points to 4.1 per cent, noting inflation had eased.
‘Some of the upside risks to inflation appear to have eased and there are signs that disinflation might be occurring a little more quickly than earlier expected,’ the board said on Tuesday afternoon.
This marked the first downward move since November 2020 and follows a run of 13 successive rises in 18 months to tackle inflation.
Treasurer Jim Chalmers declared the cut was ‘very welcome news for millions of Australians’ with an election due by May.
‘This is the rate relief Australians need and deserve,’ he said.
‘It won’t solve every problem in our economy or in household budgets but it will help.’
A borrower with an average $600,000 mortgage will see their monthly repayments fall by $92 a month or $1,104 a year as a result of the cut.
The Reserve Bank has eased the cash rate by 25 basis points to 4.1 per cent (pictured is RBA Governor Michele Bullock)
The average, owner-occupier variable rates offered by banks will fall to 6.07 per cent.
The major banks, however, are already offering three-year variable rates starting with a ‘five’, as the Commonwealth Bank and Westpac expect four cuts in 2025.
NAB sees four cuts this year followed by one more in early 2026.
The RBA move on Tuesday occurred only months out from an election, and despite underlying inflation, at 3.2 per cent, still being above the Reserve Bank’s 2 to 3 per cent target.
Headline inflation, however, is lower at 2.4 per cent, based on temporary $300 electricity rebates.
The Reserve Bank said it was still mindful of cutting rates too quickly, with new forecasts released on Tuesday having inflation climbing up to 3.7 per cent by December 2025 after electricity rebates end.
‘If monetary policy is eased too much too soon, disinflation could stall, and inflation would settle above the midpoint of the target range,’ it said.
‘In removing a little of the policy restrictiveness in its decision today, the board acknowledges that progress has been made but is cautious about the outlook.’
This marked the first relief for home borrowers since November 2020
Australia’s latest 4.1 per cent cash rate is the lowest since early November 2023, but it is still higher than Canada’s equivalent policy rate of 3 per cent, following six cuts there since June.
It is now lower than New Zealand’s 4.25 per cent level, following three cuts since August.