Jim Chalmers says inflation will go higher, but unions are right to push for higher wages
Jim Chalmers has warned of âsignificantly higherâ inflation and suggested a workersâ representative could soon be appointed to the Reserve Bank of Australia board.
The treasurer made the comments on ABCâs Insiders on Sunday, suggesting a more representative RBA board may follow a review of the central bank.
With the Reserve Bank tipping inflation to reach 7% by the end of the year, employers have responded to a $40-a-week increase in the minimum wage and union pay demands of more than 5% by warning Australia could enter an inflationary spiral.
The warnings have been rubbished by unions, who point out wages as a share of national income are shrinking, while corporate profits are up. Inflation is mainly being driven by supply-side pressures, including higher energy costs due to the war in Ukraine.
Related: What does the Reserve Bankâs 3.5% pay rise âanchorâ mean for Australian workers?
This week the RBA governor, Philip Lowe, said in the medium term wages should be around an anchor point of 3.5%, assuming the bank can get inflation back into the 2%-3% target range.
Chalmers told Insiders the government, unions and the RBA all wanted âstrong, sustainable wage growth, created by a better trained, more productive workforceâ.
With wages growing at just 2.4%, Chalmers said it was âuncontroversialâ for unions to note this was ânowhere near 3.5% and nowhere near headline inflationâ.
âPhil Lowe is making a similarly uncontroversial point, that if you let inflation out of control, that is damaging for peopleâs living standards.â
Chalmers said he would not endorse a specific figure for pay rises, but noted Australia had suffered a decade of âwage stagnationâ, which he attributed in part to Coalition policies to suppress wages.
Chalmers said he would deliver an economic statement towards the end of July, updating inflation forecasts âthat will show that inflation will get worse before it gets betterâ.
âThatâs a difficult situation we need to deal with before inflation moderates throughout the course of next year hopefully.â
Chalmers said the 7% figure âdoesnât seem to me to be wildly off the markâ.
âInflation will be significantly higher than what was expected in the last governmentâs most recent budget, what was expected at election time as well.
âCertainly higher than the 5.1% we saw in the March quarter. This inflation problem will get more difficult.â
Chalmers took credit for the Fair Work Commissionâs decision to increase the minimum wage by 5.2%, suggesting the governmentâs submission warning against real pay cuts had been âcompellingâ.
Asked if Lowe, whose term ends in September 2023, would be reappointed, Chalmers said he had a âmountain of respectâ for the RBA governor, but the decision would be taken later by cabinet.
Chalmers welcomed a conversation as part of the RBA review about whether its board âis broad enough, representative enough, whether itâs the right sizeâ.
He said that the terms of reference would include consideration of âboard representation, whether itâs broad enough, in geographic terms and gender and all the important considerations, but to also make sure that the right voices are represented around the table, that the board is of the right composition and sizeâ.
In response to calls to appoint from the Australian Council of Trade Unions secretary, Sally McManus, to appoint a workersâ representative to the board, Chalmers said it âwouldnât be unprecedentedâ.
Related: Workers and their wages are the collateral damage of the war on inflation | Greg Jericho
âI donât believe in standing positions on the board, but on a case-by-case basis I have an open mind to make sure that workers are represented.â
McManus has poured cold water on suggestions she wants the job herself.
I just saw Peter Dutton accuse me of acting because I âwant a job on the Reserve Bank boardâ! He doesnât understand that not everyone acts in grubby self-interest. Iâve already got a job thanks! #insiders
â Sally McManus (@sallymcmanus) June 25, 2022
On Friday finance department figures suggested that the budget deficit to 31 May had shrunk from $60.5bn to $33.4bn, despite warnings when Labor took office that the budget was in worse shape than previously thought.
Chalmers said the figures reflected âextraordinary prices weâre getting for commodities, and ⊠the relatively tight labour marketâ but did not reflect âvolatilityâ, citing a 12% fall in iron ore prices last week.
âThere are a range of pressures that were not accounted for in the former governmentâs most recent budget,â he said.
Those included increased hospital spending to fight Covid, and higher interest payments on debt.
âWe shouldnât assume that those budget improvements are an ongoing feature of the budget.â
Chalmers noted the proposal from the Liberal leader, Peter Dutton, to double the amount pensioners can earn without sacrificing the pension from $300 to $600 a fortnight.
âIf they thought this was a good idea, they would have done it in government,â he said, but promised to consider it at the September jobs summit.
âEven an idea like this, which appears to be modest, comes with a relatively hefty price tag.â