ShowBiz & Sports Lifestyle

Hot

Australia lifts minimum wage to match increases in inflation

Australia lifts minimum wage to match increases in inflation

ReutersTue, June 2, 2026 at 1:20 AM UTC

0

People cross the street in the Sydney Central Business District, in Sydney, Australia, May 14, 2024. REUTERS/Jaimi Joy

SYDNEY, June 2 (Reuters) - Australia's independent wage-setting body said on Tuesday that the country's lowest-paid workers will get a 4.75% pay rise from ‌July, roughly in line with an expected rise in inflation projected ‌by the central bank.

It was, however, lower than increases of 5-6% sought by trade unions.

The Fair ​Work Commission said the minimum wage for a week's work will rise to A$1,004.90 ($719), or A$26.44 per hour from July 1, a decision affecting around 3 million workers.

The commission said tighter monetary policy by the Reserve Bank of Australia will "undoubtedly" slow ‌the economy in the year ⁠ahead, and noted that inflation has accelerated due to the Iran war disrupting oil supplies.

"Taking into account all of these ⁠matters, we have concluded, regrettably, that it would not be practicable or responsible in the current uncertain circumstances to award a real wage increase for employees," it said.

"However, ​we consider ​that we should at least ensure ... employees ​generally are not worse off ‌in real terms than they were as at 1 July 2025 and that we should also take additional measures to protect the position of the very lowest-paid workers," it added.

Advertisement

Consumer price inflation was 4.1% in the first quarter and is seen peaking at 4.8% in the June quarter, well above the central bank's ‌2%–3% target band.

The central bank has raised ​interest rates three times this year to 4.35%, ​reversing last year's easing due to ​soaring energy prices.

Rate‑sensitive data has shown consumer demand cooling, with ‌April household spending falling, home prices ​flattening, and unemployment edging ​higher.

Currently, swap markets imply just a 6% chance of a fourth rate hike from the RBA next month, while pricing in a total of ​21 basis points of ‌tightening for this year, equivalent to less than a one-quarter-point increase.

($1 = ​1.3966 Australian dollars)

(Reporting by Renju Jose and Stella Qiu in Sydney; ​Editing by Himani Sarkar and Edwina Gibbs)

Original Article on Source

Source: “AOL Breaking”

We do not use cookies and do not collect personal data. Just news.