What if the budget aimed for an unemployment rate below 3 per cent?

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What’s the boldest thing the Morrison government could do in next month’s budget?

It would be to forecast an unemployment rate below 4 per cent (a rate of three-point-something), then to pledge to go further, to two-point-something.

Neither have happened for half a century; not since the long Coalition reign of Robert Menzies and his successors from the 1950s to the early 1970s, when unemployment was between 2 and 3 per cent. Yet, astoundingly, both are now within reach.

Treasurer Josh Frydenberg couldn’t have done it until recently.

This time last year, the official budget strategy (its formal title is fiscal strategy) pledged to maintain economic support until the unemployment rate was “comfortably below 6 per cent”.

Frydenberg ditched that target on the ground it was unambitious in the May budget, replacing it with a commitment to spend until the recovery was “secure and the unemployment rate is back to pre-crisis levels or lower”.

But – even projecting forward all the way out to 2025 – Frydenberg couldn’t promise an unemployment rate below 4 per cent. There wasn’t the demand for workers to support it.

Suddenly, below 4 is possible

Even as late as December last year in the mid-year budget update, the best the Treasury could forecast was an unemployment rate of 4.25 per cent, which wouldn’t be reached until mid-2023 and wouldn’t be bettered in forecasts stretching out to mid-2025.

Credit: Source link

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