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Feeling gloomy about the economy? The ‘vibecession’ has arrived in Australia – but experts are less worried

about 13 hours ago
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Australian households were already on edge before the bombs started falling in Iran.The cost of living was high and inflation was accelerating again, forcing the Reserve Bank to start ratcheting up interest rates.It’s clear that this is a time of deep uncertainty and anxiety.Nevertheless, it is striking that more than six in 10 Australians reckon the country is either already in a recession, or will be in the next 12 months, according to a poll conducted for the Nine newspapers.Just 15% thought the country would avoid a deep downturn, while 22% said they were unsure.

These results – alongside collapsing consumer confidence – reflect a deep and abiding pessimism in the community about the state of the economy,But the experts do not share this degree of pessimism,Economists, on average, believe there is a 20% chance of recession in the next 12 months, according to a Bloomberg survey,That’s not zero, but it’s only up from 15% leading into the Iran war,Gareth Spence, the head of Australian economics at National Australia Bank, said the Iran war had doubled the chance of a recession to 20%.

That’s a significant increase, but Spence says “the way I am thinking about it is that we could have a bit of a downturn, but not a recession”.At the moment, the NAB forecast is for growth to slow to 1.5%, from the prewar estimate of 2.2%.That’s a “material downgrade”, Spence says.

Unemployment will rise from 4,3% to 4,8%, he reckons,Again, a meaningful increase, but not much different from where they thought it would be earlier in the year,Belinda Allen, the head of Australian economics at the Commonwealth Bank, has been tracking the weekly card spending data from the bank’s millions of customers.

So far the figures show that, even after accounting for an unwelcome spike in fuel costs, that spending is holding up and even showing some growth.There are “pockets” of weakness, Allen says, especially in travel and accommodation as more holidaymakers stayed home through the Easter holidays, and the impact is more evident in regional areas than in the cities.Allen says the chance of a recession, at least for now, is “negligible”.“In the aggregate sense, the economy as a whole is holding up.”It may be that we have only just seen the edge of the oil shock, and the panglossian view of the experts is about to be shattered.

As Spence says, “the worst case is you end up with significant rationing because that is the bit we can’t predict”,“Obviously prices would be higher, but the physical disruption to sectors like agriculture and transport and then how that flows through is hard to estimate, and could be exponential,”Hard to estimate, but that hasn’t prevented economists at EY from giving it a go,They modelled a worst-case scenario where a prolonged closure of the strait of Hormuz leads to physical shortages of fuel and fertiliser,This scenario delivers a $42bn blow to the economy, concentrated in the transport and construction sectors, and knocks a huge 1.

5 percentage points off GDP, putting 160,000 people out of a job.Cherelle Murphy, EY’s chief economist, says even in this grim scenario the economy as a whole limps along with half a percentage point of growth without outright shrinking in any quarter.“We don’t quite get there” to a recession, Murphy says.At this point it’s worth noting that recession is just a word, and the outlook looks bad enough without putting a dramatic label on it.The term “vibecession” was coined in 2022 in the US to articulate the persistent gap between how Americans said they were experiencing the economy and what the data was saying.

“There has been a shift,” Allen says.“We get asked a lot of questions around intergenerational equity and wealth transfers.Those big issues are adding up more and adding to this more fractured global environment as well.”Consumer confidence has never really recovered from the Covid pandemic, here and around the world.It’s worth keeping this phenomenon in mind.

Not as a way to diminish or dismiss the real stresses felt by Australians, but to highlight that there is a degree of catastrophising about the economy that could prove counterproductive.As the American baseball player Yogi Berra once said: it’s tough to make predictions, especially about the future.For now, economists predict Australia will struggle through, and Murphy says she and her team will of course be rethinking their scenarios as the year goes on.“But at the moment let’s manage this.Let’s not think this is the end of, you know, growth as we know it in 2026.

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societySee all
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The Preston model is not likely to unravel just yet | Letters

“Were Reform to capture the council … the Preston model might quickly unravel,” writes Andy Beckett (The UK’s radical ‘Preston model’ faces an uncertain future with local elections looming, 20 April). He is worrying unnecessarily. Reform UK at present has just one seat on Preston city council. Councillors are elected by thirds, meaning 16 of the 48 seats – including the one held by Reform – are up for grabs in May. So in theory Reform could win 16 seats, which would hardly constitute capturing the council

1 day ago
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Doing a Mandelson when you’re caught short | Letter

Let me reassure Melanie Jones (Letters, 21 April) that my sympathy for Peter Mandelson’s plight, when he was caught short late one evening, would extend to women in the same circumstance. If you’ve got to go, you’ve got to go. The serious side to this is that there are people who rarely venture from home owing to bladder problems. So, instead of criticising or sniggering, perhaps we should demand that basic toilet facilities are provided on more of our streets. And we should avoid having a fit of the vapours if, on rare occasions, we see someone (of any gender or age) going to the edge of the pavement and “doing a Mandelson” into a drain

1 day ago
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Three men guilty of repeatedly raping woman on Brighton beach in ‘predatory, callous’ attack

Three men have been found guilty of repeatedly raping a woman on Brighton beach in a “cynical, predatory and callous” attack after she became separated from her friends on a night out.The woman was targeted by the men as she was incapacitated in the early hours of 4 October last year, the trial at Hove crown court was told.Two of the men took her behind a beach hut where they raped her and the other went to the location moments later and filmed it.On Thursday, Ibrahim Alshafe, 25, an Egyptian national, and Abdulla Ahmadi, 26, an Iranian national, were found guilty of two counts of rape.Karin Al-Danasurt, 20, an Egyptian national, was also found guilty of all four counts of rape as a secondary party by encouraging and filming the ordeal

1 day ago
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‘On his own terms’: James Valentine chose assisted dying but barriers remain for Australians wanting to access it

When the beloved broadcaster and saxophonist James Valentine died this week it was on his terms – he was at home, surrounded by his family, after making the choice to use voluntary assisted dying (VAD).“Throughout his illness, James did it his way, which lasted all the way until the end,” his wife, Joanne, and two children, Ruby and Roy, said in a statement.“Both he and his family are grateful he was given the option to go out on his own terms.”As tributes flow for Valentine, advocates for VAD hope his loss will encourage the federal government to address structural barriers to accessing the end-of-life care that are preventing some Australians from doing the same.Every Australian jurisdiction excluding the Northern Territory has legalised VAD, which represents about 2% of all deaths, or 5% of cancer deaths

1 day ago
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Nine in 10 UK voters across parties support right to abortion, poll finds

New polling has found that whatever their party political leanings, an overwhelming majority of people support the right to access an abortion – although young people, in particular, fear reproductive rights may be reduced.The YouGov polling, commissioned by MSI Reproductive Choices to mark its 50th anniversary, found nine in 10 people support the right to access an abortion.This was the case with 94% of Labour voters, 91% of Conservative voters, 95% of Green voters and 86% of Reform voters, pointing to one of the clearest indicators of cross-party political consensus in the UK.The survey also found almost one in five people think abortion access could be reduced, rising to more than a quarter of 18- to 25-year-olds. Respondents cited developments in the US and the rise of the far right as factors

1 day ago
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Breast reductions in UK overtake enlargements for first time, data shows

Breast reductions and implant removals have overtaken enlargements for the first time, data shows, as experts link the shift to more active lifestyles.The latest annual audit from the British Association of Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons (BAAPS) shows there were 4,761 breast enlargement procedures in 2025, down 8% on the previous year.There were also 4,673 breast reduction procedures and 847 implant removals, with surgeons saying the trend reflects a growing shift toward comfort and more active lifestyles, alongside the rise of form-fitting “athleisure” clothing.They also noted an increase in procedures for the face, including facelifts and eyelid surgery. One of the fastest-growing procedures is the brow lift, which has surged 27% overall

1 day ago
politicsSee all
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Britain should seek to rejoin EU, says civil servant who led Brexit department

about 10 hours ago
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Who is ‘cravat man’? Neckwear steals the show in Olly Robbins parliamentary grilling

about 10 hours ago
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McSweeney denies bullying civil servants into appointing Mandelson

about 10 hours ago
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‘Toxic’ views of Reform UK candidates raise questions about party’s vetting

about 13 hours ago
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‘This election is all to play for’: Can the Scottish Labour leader defy political gravity in May?

about 17 hours ago
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‘It’s Andy or bust’: MPs could keep Starmer in place to give Burnham time to return

about 17 hours ago