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Posted: 2022-11-22 08:38:42

Don't expect much of a pay rise, even as inflation soars and reduces what you can buy with your wages.

That's the grim message for workers from Reserve Bank Governor Philip Lowe.

"If we all buy into the idea that wages have to go up to compensate people for inflation it will be painful, so best avoid that" he told a meeting in Melbourne on Tuesday night.

Dr Lowe is concerned about the potential for a spiral in the rate of wages as workers demand more money to deal with a cost-of-living crisis, with the price of essentials like housing, fuel and food soaring more than 8 per cent in the past year.

"The issue that many central banks have been worried about – and I include us in this – is this period of high inflation leads the workforce to say: 'Well, inflation's high — I need full compensation for that'," he said.

Dr Lowe argued that compensating workers by the amount of the current inflation rate – the broad consumer price index (CPI) is above 7 per cent – will only create bigger problems.

"If that were to happen, what do you think inflation would be at next year? Seven per cent, plus or minus (a bit). And then we've got to get compensated for that? Seven per cent… and this is what happened in the '70s and '80s. It turned out to be a disaster".

The governor of our central bank – who received more than $1 million in wages and benefits this year – said he sympathised with workers who can't accept their wages are falling behind.

"People experience a decline in real wages: that's tough," Dr Lowe said. "The alternative though is more difficult"

The silver lining, Dr Lowe promised, is that if we can "ride through this period" with wages barely rising and the problem of rising prices getting "resolved", then inflation will come down.

"It can be painless," he said. "Relatively."

After nearly three decades of low and stable inflation that generally remained within the Reserve Bank's target range of 2-3 per cent, central bankers were caught off-guard by the prices surge during the past year-and-a-half.

"An inflation rate of 7 or 8 per cent was something that was widely thought to be consigned to the history books," Dr Lowe said. 

"So the current bout of high inflation has come as quite a shock."

Mr Lowe again warned that it was important for inflation to be tamed quickly, before expectations of higher prices set in, otherwise it would be much harder and more economically damaging to do so, as was the case in the 1980s and early '90s.

"Bringing inflation back down required high interest rates and was associated with a deep recession and a rise in the unemployment rate of at least 5 percentage points," he observed.

"The high unemployment then persisted for years and left deep scars in the labour market and damaged our communities. It was very costly."

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