Australia exits first recession in almost 30 years

block
AFP, Sydney :
Australia has exited its first recession in almost 30 years, after official figures released Wednesday showed the economy grew 3.3 percent in July-September compared with the previous quarter.
With local transmission of Covid-19 largely under control, official data showed businesses have begun to rebound and consumer spending has surged.
The Australian Bureau of Statistics said household spending largely drove the economic bounce, rising 7.9 percent compared with the previous quarter.
However, central bank governor Philip Lowe warned that positive economic indicators masked lingering difficulties.
“These figures… cannot hide the reality that the recovery will be uneven and bumpy and that it will be drawn out. Some parts of the economy are doing quite well, but others are in considerable difficulty,” he told lawmakers on Wednesday.
Australia’s central bank has predicted the country’s economy will not return to pre-pandemic levels until the end of 2021.
The economy has yet to fully recover from the coronavirus-fuelled recession, recording a 3.8 percent slump for the year to September. The return to economic growth followed a record seven percent decline in the June quarter and a 0.3 percent dip in the first quarter of 2020.
A recession is defined as two successive quarters of negative economic growth.
The positive growth comes despite Victoria state – which accounts for about 25 percent of Australia’s economic output – spending much of the September quarter in one of the world’s strictest lockdown, curtailing economic activity there.
In a pattern repeated across the globe, economic shutdowns to curb the spread of the coronavirus sent Australia tumbling into recession as whole industries ground to a halt. Around a million people lost their jobs and many more were forced to take pay cuts or saw their hours slashed.
In response, the government and the central bank have embarked on a vast stimulus spending programme, pumping billions into the economy to avert a full-blown depression.
block