The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) raised its cash rate by 25 basis points to 4.10%, citing elevated inflation, widespread capacity pressures, and a tight labor market as reasons for near-term monetary tightening, according to the minutes of the committee's March monetary policy meeting released on Tuesday.
RBA's latest decision reflects its response to persistent above-target inflation, as the economy continues to absorb gradual tightening despite higher interest rates, strong credit growth, early mortgage repayments, and financial conditions that are less restrictive than previously thought.
Members observed that domestic economic data largely matched February forecasts, although some signs indicated slightly higher capacity pressures.
Members noted that the labor market remains tight with stable unemployment, longer working hours, rising job ads, and stronger wages, while December 2025 quarter gross domestic product outpaced potential on strong exports, inventories accumulation, and business investment despite weak household consumption.
RBA warned that global events, notably the Middle East conflict, create uncertainty, as rising energy prices may raise inflation and affect Australian growth through higher fuel costs reducing spending and liquefied natural gas exports boosting revenue, leaving the net impact unclear.
RBA stated that Australia's financial system is resilient, supported by well-capitalized banks, strong liquidity, and effective regulation, with domestic housing and business lending risks contained and non-bank lending posing limited threat, while global financial risks, market repricing, geopolitical tensions, and the large superannuation sector require ongoing monitoring.
The minutes revealed that, although some members favored keeping the cash rate unchanged amid domestic and global uncertainties, the majority supported a 25-basis-point increase to signal the RBA's commitment to returning inflation to target, emphasizing that future policy will require careful balancing given the ongoing uncertainty.
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