RBA says interest rates are 'normalising'
15/10/2009
Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) governor Glenn Stevens has defended last week's
interest rate hike, saying the recovering economy stood to benefit from "a more
normal" rate.
Speaking at a breakfast function held in Perth on Thursday, Stevens said that
barring another serious international setback, the Australian economy was
likely to continue on a path of gradual expansion during 2010.
Stevens continued, "Very low interest rate settings were designed for a weaker
economy than we are in fact facing. Plainly, the downside risks to which the
Board was responding earlier have not materialised."
Stevens argued that the risk-management approach, which led to the reductions in
interest rates, required policy to be recalibrated as circumstances change. He
continued, "If we were prepared to cut rates rapidly, to a very low level, in
response to a threat but then were too timid to lessen that stimulus in a
timely way when the threat had passed, we would have a bias in our monetary
policy framework."
Stevens admitted that the hike, which lifted the cash rate to 3.25% from 3%, was
the first step in a longer term plan to increase rates further in line with
improvements in the economy. He added, "None of this is to say that the economy
is, at this moment, 'too strong'. It isn't."
Stevens also commented on Australian house prices, describing them as "very
high". However, he argued that in his view the matter was more of a social
issue than a monetary policy issue.
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