Real wages growth at weakest pace in two years with public servants enjoying largest salary increases
Public servants enjoyed big wage rises over the past year that could stop the Reserve Bank of Australia from cutting interest rates again while private sector workers effectively received no pay increases because of an inflation surge.
The 3.2 per cent increase in private sector wages in the year ended September 30 was equal to inflation for the same period, new government figures today showed, which meant those in jobs not funded by the taxpayer effectively had no wage increases.
Government employees, including NDIS and other non-market economy contractors, saw their wages grow 3.8 per cent.
Sign up to The Nightly's newsletters.
Get the first look at the digital newspaper, curated daily stories and breaking headlines delivered to your inbox.
By continuing you agree to our Terms and Privacy Policy.The average wage increase across the economy was 3.4 per cent, the same as the year to June.
Adjusted for inflation, wages grew 0.2 per cent over the year, the weakest growth since December 2023, after the Reserve Bank of Australia increased interest rates for the 13th time to combat the worst inflation since 1990.
Private sector workers have also had the worst real wages growth in almost two years as government-funded workers saw their pay increases outpace private enterprise for the third consecutive quarter.
“Australia’s economy is slowly sinking as the private sector is being outpaced by public spending— and public spending is just debt spending that is driving up inflation,” said Tim Wilson, the shadow minister for industrial relations, employment and small business.
KPMG chief economist Brendan Rynne said high public sector wages growth would make the RBA reluctant to cut interest rates.
“Because of this, the RBA’s handbrake is well and truly on and is unlikely to lift until well into next year if at all,” he said.
EY senior economist Paula Gadsby said State Government enterprise agreements had led to the spike in public sector pay during a time of weak productivity growth across the economy.
“As the economy looks to be close to its supply capacity, we remain of the view that the Reserve Bank cannot cut the cash rate much further, if at all, without generating inflation,” she said.
Wages lagged inflation from the June quarter, 2021, to the September quarter, 2023, coinciding with COVID lockdowns and Russia’s Ukraine invasion, which led to higher crude oil prices and $2.20 a litre prices for unleaded petrol in Australia.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, as Opposition leader in 2021, had chastised the Coalition for presiding over stagnant wages.
“People have endured eight long years of stagnant wages, growing job insecurity and pressure on family costs like childcare, rent, petrol and groceries,” he said then.
But on Wednesday, Treasurer Jim Chalmers emphasised how real wages for all workers had still been growing for eight consecutive quarters.
“This is now the longest period of consecutive annual real wage growth in almost a decade,” he said.
