Labor shifts more income from the wealthiest to the poorest

Labor shifts more income from the wealthiest to the poorest

Independent Australia
09 Jun 2025, 03:30 GMT+

The March quarter national accounts confirm the Albanese Government is achieving its economic goals, asAlan Austinreports.

THERE WAS good news and bad news in last Wednesdays quarterlyreporton the economy from the Bureau of Statistics (ABS). Positive news overwhelmingly outweighed the negative, despite newsrooms desperately trying to claim the opposite.

Growth in gross domestic product (GDP) for the quarter was 0.21%, which was below expectations and slightly below the average for the last five quarters of difficult adjustment after years of disastrous mismanagement by the Coalition.

Annual GDP growth was 1.34%, also below target, but the strongest since the December quarter in 2023.

Jobs, inflation and luxury spending all keep setting records

While MPs take a welcome break after the fire and fury of the May election campaign, the economy is ticking over nicely.

Most of Australias growth was achieved in the private sector rather than via government spending, fulfilling one of TreasurerJim Chalmersobjectives.

The total income Australians have to spend, referred to as gross disposable income, hit a record high of $424.9 billion. Thats up 6.9% on last years March quarter and 13.2% higher than March 2023 and marks eight straight quarters of expansion.

Real net disposable income for each Australian resident increased this quarter to $18,423, confirming living standards have been restored for the majority.

That these outcomes were highly positive was confirmed when the ASX indicessurgedto all-time highs.

Australia leads the world

Significantly, Australia has recorded 14 consecutive quarters of positivequarterly growthand 17 straight quarters ofannual growththe only economy in the 38-memberOECDto have achieved that status.

The dismal March quarter outcomes in most comparable countries underscore the global challenges, with war in Europe and international trade destabilised by the destructivestupidityof the Trump White House.

Countries with negative GDP growth were Sweden, Denmark, Norway, Japan, South Korea, Portugal, Luxembourg, Estonia, Latvia, Slovenia and, unsurprisingly, the USA.

Ten OECD members are now in negative annual GDP growth, including South Korea and Slovenia, which went backwards for the first time in more than four years.

After lagging badly through the Coalition years, Australia is now among the leaders on nearly all indicators of sound economic management.

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Share of national income pie going to workers

As mentioned above, net national disposable income per person has increased slightly, but remains below levels recorded during and after the COVID conniptions from 2020 to 2022.

This does not mean all incomes are lower now than when this measure was higher. As explainedherein April, the top deciles have taken a haircut while the vast majority of workers, retirees and pensioners are now much richer.

This is clear from data on the share of national income going to workers, contrasted with that going to company profits. This is found in table 7 of thenational accounts, ABS file 5206. See chart below.

(Data source:ABS)

In the dying days of the failedMorrisonGovernment, workers were allocated less than 50% of the nations total income. That was down from above 60% in earlier periods.That percentage has increased steadily since the 2022 change of government, reaching a nine-year high of 53.71% in the March quarter.

Conversely, the share going to company profits surged under the previous Coalition and is now being restored to fairer levels.

The significance of this chart is that it explains graphically how it is that the vast majority of Australians are now enjoying a remarkable consumer spendingboom, while the national income per capita is not surging, but remains steady.

Productivity reassessed

All critics of theAlbaneseGovernment routinely lament productivity, which has stalled between 98 and 101 index points since 2016, except for a brief spurt during the COVID disruptions.

Treasurer Chalmers acknowledged this in his firstinterviewafter Labors extraordinary election victory last month:

Complicating the productivity debate is the reality that Australia has greatly expanded its provision of care for people with disabilities and illnesses, both at home by family members and in external facilities. Much of this is highly valuable work that greatly improves lives and extends life expectancy. But when no money changes hands, it is not measured by the national accounts.

The Bureau of Statistics hasannouncedit will publish estimates of labour productivity for the total non-market sector, starting in September.

Newsrooms cry misery, but facts support spending boom

Most Australians are enjoying increasing wealth and income as Labors reforms come to fruition.

The ABS said:

Indeed. We shall soon see if this shifts the discussion significantly.

Media continues to manipulate and mislead

The latest attempt by the Australian Financial Review (AFR) to attack the Government unfairly was in last Thursdaysessayby a senior writer titled, Were told Australias economy is world-beating. The data shows its not.

It claims:

In fact, Chalmers is entirely correct. The AFR failed to identify any country matching Australias outcomes.

The AFR focused primarily on real GDP per person, which it claimed is a proxy for living standards and which fell 0.5 per cent last year:

Two problems here. First, as explained above andelsewhere, although overall GDP per person declined slightly, the majority enjoyed higher living standards by virtue of the substantial shift in incomes from the very rich to the middle and the poor.

Second, that is only one of multiple key variables.

How much better-informed, happier and more confident would Australians be without the AFR? And how much more productive?

Alan Austinis an Independent Australia columnist and freelance journalist. You can follow him@alanaustin001.

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