Economy June 24, 2026 02:36 AM

RBA deputy: Inflation remains too high despite recent progress, oil outlook offers potential relief

Andrew Hauser says the central bank moved early this year as demand outpaced supply, but lower oil from a Middle East resolution is not guaranteed

By Avery Klein
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Reserve Bank of Australia Deputy Governor Andrew Hauser told an audience in Sydney that the bank still needs to bring inflation down, explaining how the Phillips curve influenced the board’s decision to begin lifting rates in February. While lower global oil prices tied to a possible resolution of the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran would help, Hauser warned that such an outcome is uncertain and that inflation in Australia remains ‘‘far too high.’’

RBA deputy: Inflation remains too high despite recent progress, oil outlook offers potential relief
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Key Points

  • RBA Deputy Governor Andrew Hauser said the board started raising rates in February because demand exceeded supply and was generating inflation, moving the economy up the steeper part of the Phillips curve.
  • The RBA has increased interest rates three times this year to counter a war-driven energy shock and to reverse prior policy easing; headline inflation slowed to 4.0% in May while the trimmed mean rose to 3.6%, above the 2% to 3% target.
  • A possible resolution to the Middle East conflict could push global oil prices lower and help reduce inflationary pressures, but Hauser emphasised such an outcome is not assured.

Australia’s central bank continues to face work to reduce inflation, the Reserve Bank of Australias deputy governor said, even as officials take note of favourable moves in global energy markets that could ease price pressures.

Speaking on the Phillips curve - the framework linking inflation and unemployment - Deputy Governor Andrew Hauser explained how that relationship informed the boards policy choices this year. He said the board chose to commence tightening monetary policy in February because it judged that demand in the economy was outstripping supply by more than expected, pushing inflation into the steeper portion of the Phillips curve and warranting higher interest rates to cool prices over time.

Hauser said this steeper portion of the curve offers a potential benefit: timely policy steps can lower inflationary pressures while producing a relatively smaller rise in unemployment. "But this is where being on the steeper part of the Phillips curve has a potential silver lining," he said. "It also implies that timely policy steps to reduce inflationary pressures, of the kind we have taken, should also have a proportionally smaller unemployment cost."

The RBA has implemented three rate increases this year, moves the bank said were intended to head off a war-driven energy shock and that fully reversed the amount of policy easing from 2025. Recent inflation data show headline consumer price inflation slowed to 4.0% in May, while the trimmed mean measure- a preferred gauge of underlying inflation- rose to 3.6%, remaining above the RBAs target band of 2% to 3%.

Labour-market signals are beginning to soften, Hauser noted, with the unemployment rate edging up to 4.5% in April, a 4-1/2-year high. That trend provides some indication of cooling but, in Hausers view, is not sufficient on its own to declare the inflation problem solved.

Since May there have been additional economic developments that could influence the outlook. In particular, Hauser pointed to the prospect of a possible resolution to the Middle East conflict. He said lower global oil prices tied to a potential resolution of the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran would be a welcome development because they could help lower and flatten the Phillips curve. "By itself, lower global oil prices would be a welcome development, helping to lower and flatten the Phillips curve somewhat," Hauser said.

He was careful to stress the uncertainty surrounding that scenario: "But a full resolution is not yet assured and we still have work to do to reduce inflation here in Australia, which remains far too high." The central banks stance, as outlined by Hauser, is that continued policy focus will be needed until inflation is firmly on a path back to the 2% to 3% target band.


Contextual notes

  • The RBA began raising rates in February after concluding demand pressures were stronger than expected.
  • Headline inflation fell to 4.0% in May; the trimmed mean rose to 3.6%.
  • Unemployment increased to 4.5% in April, marking a 4-1/2-year high.

Risks

  • Uncertainty over a full resolution of the Middle East conflict - if it does not materialise, oil-related price pressures could persist and impede disinflation; this most directly affects energy and inflation-sensitive sectors.
  • Underlying inflation remains elevated with the trimmed mean at 3.6% - risks to consumer prices could influence monetary policy and financial markets.
  • Labour market cooling is only beginning, with unemployment at 4.5% in April; further labour dynamics could affect consumption and wage-driven inflation pressures, influencing household-focused sectors.

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