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According to one of the many economics journos, todays reduction in the unemployment rate means we are more than likely to get another rate rise before Christmas, though the size of it is not stated,
From The Evil Murdoch press
The Policies of the RBA actively encouraged a massive housing bubble, and it is possible that the housing bubble may be pricked without reducing inflation, though even that may be overcome by events.
There is still a lot of money floating around the system, with pretty much every arm of government running expanded deficits, and a couple of state and fed governments handing out stimmy checks to people as election ploys to buy votes, its pretty hard to see where the contraction is going to come from.
Albo has promised another 10,000 homes for those who don't have them, so that will put a little more pressure on the lack of timber, steel, bathroom goods, furnishings and carpets as they compete with all the thousands of households devastated by flood waters.
Many people devastated by fires two years ago are still waiting to rebuild because of shortages of everything from sensible local councils to tradies.
Mick
From The Evil Murdoch press
With employment still growing, and the hours worked by those in employment still going up, it is hard to see where the expected slowdown from previous rate hikes is going to come from.Australians look destined to cop an eighth straight rate hike in the lead up to Christmas, after stronger-than-expected jobs figures showed unemployment dropped back to its 48-year low of 3.4 per cent in October.
Despite the Reserve Bank’s aggressive efforts to slow demand in order to tame this year’s inflationary surge, the number of workers climbed by 32,000 in the month – or twice what had been anticipated, according to the Australian Bureau of Statistics.
That helped push the key jobless measure down by 0.1 percentage points to 3.4 per cent, where it was in July and the lowest since 1974.
Underemployment – which measures those with jobs but who would like to work more hours but are unable to find them – inched lower to 5.9 per cent, from 6 per cent.
The labour force participation rate remained at 66.5 per cent, the seasonally adjusted figures revealed.
All up, the figures showed the jobs market remained tight as a drum, with a record number of people in work and hundreds of thousands fewer unemployed than prior to the pandemic.
The number of job vacancies essentially matches the number of people looking for a job.
The Policies of the RBA actively encouraged a massive housing bubble, and it is possible that the housing bubble may be pricked without reducing inflation, though even that may be overcome by events.
There is still a lot of money floating around the system, with pretty much every arm of government running expanded deficits, and a couple of state and fed governments handing out stimmy checks to people as election ploys to buy votes, its pretty hard to see where the contraction is going to come from.
Albo has promised another 10,000 homes for those who don't have them, so that will put a little more pressure on the lack of timber, steel, bathroom goods, furnishings and carpets as they compete with all the thousands of households devastated by flood waters.
Many people devastated by fires two years ago are still waiting to rebuild because of shortages of everything from sensible local councils to tradies.
Mick