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The good news? Household living standards are on the rise. The bad news? Just about everything else | Greg Jericho

3 days ago
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There were early signs that the March GDP figures were not going to be good,To start with, the Bureau of Statistics’ new measure of household spending that covers about two-thirds of all household spending had already revealed that spending for the quarter was flat compared with a 1,6% jump in December quarter last year,So household spending was worse,Then last week the private capital expenditure figures revealed a 0.

1% fall in investment in buildings and engineering, compared with a 0,2% rise in the December 2024 quarter,So private investment was worse,On Tuesday, the balance of payments revealed that trade in the first three months of this year was expected to “detract 0,1%pts from the March quarter” compared with adding 0.

2%pts in December.So trade was worse.Just to top it off, on Tuesday the figures for government spending and investment showed that public demand fell in the March quarter and would also detract 0.1%pts from GDP growth compared with it adding 0.2%pts to GDP growth last December.

So the impact of the public sector was worse,To be honest, once you take away households, private investment, trade and government spending, you really are not left with much,So it came to be,In the March quarter of this year, GDP growth was just 0,2%, down from 0.

6% in the December quarter.The only good news is the March quarter last year was pretty dire as well, so all up it meant annual growth remained steady at a still extremely weak 1.3%.If the graph does not display click hereThis weak growth meant that per capita GDP fell again – the ninth quarter out of the past 11.This is not a good state of affairs, and certainly does not accord with the views of the Reserve Bank back in April when it looked at the first three months of this year and suggested that “the limited information available about activity in early 2025 suggested that the pick-up in GDP growth had been sustained”.

Ahh well, at least they can say they were not wrong for long?Well no.In the minutes of the May board meeting released this week the RBA now suggested that “GDP growth had increased in the December quarter 2024 and year-ended growth looked to have picked up a little further in the March quarter”.Going from 1.3% growth in December to 1.3% growth in March is hardly “picked up”.

The May Statement on Monetary Policy also predicted annual GDP growth in June of 1.8%.To get to that level, the economy would need to grow in April, May and June by 0.7% – the strongest quarter growth for three years.Here’s hoping …So what drove the growth that was there?Households were the biggest contributor to growth – although as in all things the context is key.

Their contribution to the growth of the economy in the March quarter was about half what you would normally expect.If the graph does not display click hereAnd a big reason for the increase in consumption was a jump in spending on electricity, gas and other fuels – due to the ending of some of the state government energy rebates (which also had an impact on inflation).That is not the type of spending you want to see driving households.All up the level of household consumption is well down on what would have been expected before the pandemic.The Reserve Bank’s interest rate rises did their job – they snuffed out spending.

Clearly more rate cuts are needed to undo that damage and it is quite extraordinary that the RBA is so sanguine about it all:If the graph does not display click hereSign up to Afternoon UpdateOur Australian afternoon update breaks down the key stories of the day, telling you what’s happening and why it mattersafter newsletter promotionThe overall level of household spending and private-sector investment quickly rules out the use of the phrase “strong” when searching for a term to describe what is going on:If the graph does not display click hereAnd that’s not surprising because while home loan rates have come down, the average discounted rate is still more than 300 basis point higher than it was at the start of 2022,But for small business owners taking out an overdraft loan, things are even worse – the rate is 400 basis point higher:If the graph does not display click hereBut let us not be too negative,One very good piece of news is that household living standards are on the rise,After two years, finally household disposable income per capita is above the level it was in March 2020:If the graph does not display click hereOne reason for this was there was a very slight decline in the level of mortgage repayments, due to the rate cut in February,This cut actually helped increased living standards in the first three months of this year.

But that was a very small repair, given since March 2022 mortgage repayments have contributed about 63% of the fall in living standards:If the graph does not display click hereThat’s a sizeable chunk and it reinforces the damage that is done when the RBA so badly misreads the economy as it has.These figures highlight that not only should the Reserve Bank have cut rates in April but having made that error it compounded it by not cutting rates by at least 50 basis points last month.So far this year the RBA has kept misreading the economic situation and erred on the side of caution.Let us hope these weak figures spur it to cut rates when it meets next month and not suggest it still needs more time to see what is going on.Greg Jericho is a Guardian columnist and policy director at the Centre for Future Work
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Amazon promises fake reviews crackdown after investigation by UK watchdog

Amazon has promised to do a better job policing fake reviews and to crack down on sellers using them to boost product ratings after an investigation by the UK competition watchdog.Ending the scourge of fake reviews is a priority for the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) due to the influence they have over consumers.About 90% of UK shoppers rely on reviews, with an estimated £23bn a year of spending influenced by crowd-sourced information. Since April, fake reviews have been explicitly banned.Sarah Cardell, the CMA’s chief executive, said the undertakings secured from Amazon meant shoppers could now “make decisions with greater confidence”

1 day ago
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23andMe back on the auction block after former CEO makes 11th-hour bid

The DNA testing company 23andMe is back up for sale, throwing a purchase agreement reached last month into chaos, court filings show.The board of directors of 23andMe, which filed for bankruptcy in March, had agreed to sell the company and its assets to the pharmaceutical firm Regeneron for $256m after conducting an auction in April. However, the founder and former CEO of the genetics company, Anne Wojcicki, put in a $305m bid through a newly formed non-profit, TTAM Research Institute, after the auction ended and pushed the bankruptcy court to reopen the sale process. She tried to buy the company multiple times during its long decline and bankruptcy but was rejected by the board.TTAM’s offer of $305m will serve as a starting price for the secondary sale process, and Regeneron will be permitted to submit a competing bid that is at least $10m more

1 day ago
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UK sales of new Tesla cars slump by more than a third amid Musk backlash

Sales of new Tesla cars slumped by more than a third in the UK last month as the electric carmaker lost ground to China’s BYD and other rivals, amid a political backlash against its billionaire boss, Elon Musk.Tesla sold 2,016 vehicles in the UK in May, down from 3,152 in May 2024 – a 36% drop, according to the monthly snapshot from the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT).The Chinese carmaker BYD’s sales in the UK jumped by 407%, from 596 in May last year to 3,025 last month. It sells hybrids as well as pure electric cars. BYD first overtook Tesla in January

1 day ago
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Amazon ‘testing humanoid robots to deliver packages’

Amazon is reportedly developing software for humanoid robots that could perform the role of delivery workers and “spring out” of its vans.The $2tn (£1.47tn) technology company is building a “humanoid park” in the US to test the robots, said the tech news site the Information, citing a person who had been involved in the project.The Information reported that the robots could eventually take the jobs of delivery workers. It is developing the artificial intelligence software that would power the robots but will use hardware developed by other companies

2 days ago
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English-speaking countries more nervous about rise of AI, polls suggest

People in English-speaking countries including the UK, US, Australia and Canada are more nervous about the rise of artificial intelligence than those in the largest EU economies, where excitement over its spread is higher, new research suggests.A global split over what has been dubbed “the wonder and worry” of AI appears to correlate with widely divergent levels of trust in governments to regulate the fast-developing technology.The polling of 23,000 adults in 30 countries, shared exclusively with the Guardian by Ipsos Mori, also showed a quarter of people globally still do not have a good understanding of what AI is, despite it being widely described as the most transformative technology in decades.On Wednesday, Abba’s Björn Ulvaeus revealed he was writing a musical with the assistance of AI, describing it as “like having another songwriter in the room with a huge reference frame”.Britons appear to be among the world’s most worried people about the rise of AI, with two-thirds of people in Great Britain saying they are nervous about the technology being deployed in products and services, and less than half trusting the UK government to regulate AI responsibly

2 days ago
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Trump family disown debut of crypto wallet: ‘I know nothing about this project!’

A splashy website featuring an illustration of Donald Trump, looking buff and pumping his fist in the air, appeared online on Tuesday. The image is the logo of one of Trump’s digital currencies, and the website claims to be the “Official $Trump Wallet”, hawking a product that would allow customers to buy and sell cryptocurrencies, primarily the president’s own.The website prominently features the name of Trump’s coin, $Trump, and invites people to join the waitlist to use the digital wallet. It was first noticed by the crypto newsletter Citation Needed. Magic Eden, an established cryptocurrency marketplace, said on the website that it had partnered with Trump’s official digital coin team to create the wallet

2 days ago
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How to turn mango pit and skin into fruit coulis – recipe | Waste not

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Australian supermarket garlic bread taste test: ‘A vampire would burst into flames just smelling it’

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Which dips are OK to buy, and which should I make? | Kitchen aide

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Georgina Hayden’s recipe for spring meatballs with pasta and peas

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Sweet, seedless citrus: Australia’s best-value fruit and veg for June

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Rukmini Iyer’s quick and easy recipe for smoked trout and crisp potato cakes with capers, caraway and dill | Quick and easy

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