Last month the RBA hardened its language on the Australian dollar, saying the currency was high relative to fundamental value. Today it said the recent exchange rate decline reflected a stronger US dollar. But the bank warned the Australian dollar remained high by historical standards, particularly since there had been further commodity price falls. The Australian dollar was "offering less assistance than would normally be expected in achieving balanced growth in the economy," governor Glenn Stevens said.
Most data was consistent with moderate growth in the Australian economy and the RBA said overall it expected growth to be a little below trend for the next several quarters. There had been a pick up in volatility in some financial markets in recent weeks and while commodity prices remained high in historical terms, some of those important to Australia had declined further in recent months, the RBA said.
The Australian dollar traded at 87.46 US cents at 5pm in Wellington from 87.53 cents immediately before the release. The New Zealand dollar traded at 89.12 Australian cents at 5pm in Wellington from 89.09 cents immediately before the release.
On the labour front, Stevens said high unemployment was unlikely to decline for some time yet with the labour market having a degree of "spare capacity".
"Growth in wages has declined noticeably and is expected to remain relatively modest over the period ahead, which should keep inflation consistent with the target even with lower levels of the exchange rate." he said.
He repeated that inflation was expected to be consistent with the 2-3 per cent target over the next two years.