AustraliaBusinessFinancial

Good News: We’re Spending Less on Avocado Toast! Bad News: That’s ‘Cause We’re Broke

Australia’s March 2025 GDP growth was a weak 0.2%, with households barely lifting the numbers. While living standards improved slightly, nearly every other economic indicator took a nosedive.

When the Only Economic Growth Is in Your Electricity Bill

Well, isn’t this a classic Aussie yarn. Imagine being told the economy’s growing—then finding out it’s doing so with all the enthusiasm of a kangaroo in a headlock.

According to the latest numbers from the ABS, the March quarter GDP rose just 0.2%, down from 0.6% in December. That’s like giving someone a handshake and pretending it’s a hug. And to add a bit more sting, that tiny bump didn’t even shift annual growth—still stuck at a sad 1.3%.

So, who’s to blame? Everyone, really. Households, businesses, trade, even the government—no one’s pulling their economic weight.

Aussie Economy: Breakdown of What’s Broken

Economic SectorMarch 2025 PerformanceCompared to Dec 2024Contribution to GDP
Household SpendingFlat (0.0%)↓ from +1.6%Weak lift
Private Investment-0.1% in buildings/engineering↓ from +0.2%Negative
Net Trade-0.1 percentage points from GDP↓ from +0.2pptNegative
Government SpendingFell, detracted -0.1ppt from growth↓ from +0.2pptNegative
Overall GDP+0.2% Q/Q↓ from +0.6%Weak
GDP per CapitaFell for 9 of last 11 quartersThat’s a recession, mateNegative

What’s Driving the Slight Growth?

Would you believe it—electricity bills. With state rebates ending, power bills shot up, and so did energy-related household spending. That’s technically “growth,” but it’s the kind of win that makes your wallet cry.

And mortgage holders finally caught a tiny break with a February rate cut that slightly reduced repayments. Enough to boost household disposable income per capita back above where it was in March 2020.

“It’s the first real improvement in living standards in years,” Greg Jericho says. But don’t pop the bubbly yet—this tiny bump comes after 63% of the living standard drop since 2022 was tied to mortgage hikes.

Custom Chart: GDP Contributors in the March 2025 Quarter

SectorContribution to GDP (%)Trend vs. Dec 2024
Household Consumption+0.1%Down
Government Expenditure-0.1%Down
Net Exports (Trade)-0.1%Down
Private Capital Investment-0.1%Down
Total GDP Growth+0.2%Down

Meanwhile at the RBA…

Let’s just say the RBA’s forecasts haven’t exactly been spot on. Back in April they said growth had “picked up.” Nope. In May, they reckoned it was picking up “a little further.” Not unless you count 1.3% as sprinting.

To hit the RBA’s June forecast of 1.8% annual growth, we’d need a 0.7% Q2 GDP surge—the biggest quarterly jump in three years. Mate, even Skippy wouldn’t bet on that.

“The RBA needs to stop staring at outdated spreadsheets and cut rates like yesterday,” says Jericho.

Aussie Humor, Served with Economic Reality

❝If this economy were a meat pie, it’s mostly air and the sauce leaked out.❞

So what we’ve got is a technically rising standard of living but only because interest payments eased slightly, and households forked out more for power. Every other part of the economy? On a smoko.

Source
The Guardian

Conor Gallagher

Hi there, I’m Conor Gallagher, with a deep appreciation for clear messaging and meaningful stories. At PRW - Press Release Writing, I contribute press releases and feature pieces across a variety of niches including business, tech, lifestyle, health, education, and social impact. With a background in journalism and content strategy, I bring a sharp editorial eye and a love for storytelling to every release I craft. My goal is simple - to help brands, businesses, and voices from all sectors share their news with confidence, clarity, and impact.

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