MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — Australia’s central bank on Tuesday reduced its benchmark interest rate by a quarter percentage point for a third time this year to 3.6%, with inflation tamed and economic growth stalling.
The Reserve Bank of Australia reduced its cash rate from 3.85%. The rate was cut from 4.1% in May. The reduction from 4.35% at its February board meeting
was Australia’s first rate cut since October 2020.The new rate is the lowest since March 2023 and the cut was widely anticipated as inflation
continues to fall.
The bank adjusts interest rates to steer inflation toward a target band of between 2% and 3%. In May, annual inflation fell to 2.1% from 2.4% a month earlier.
The trimmed mean — a gauge of underlying inflation that is the bank’s preferred measure — fell from 2.8% in April to 2.4%.
Inflation has gradually declined since it peaked at 7.8% in the last quarter of 2022.
The bank was widely expected to cut the rate at its last board meeting in July. But directors voted 6-to-3 to wait to see inflation data for the June quarter.
That data revealed that trimmed mean inflation was 2.7% in the three months through June, down from 2.9% in the March quarter.
The economic boost of a rate cut comes after growth slowed to a sluggish 0.2% in the three months through March and 1.3% for the year. The economy grew 0.6% in the preceding December quarter.
The bank has attempted to gradually rein in inflation without tipping the economy into recession or causing large-scale job losses.
Unemployment rose to 4.3% in June from 4.1% where it had held steady since February. The jobless rate was at 4.0% in January.