What is putting pressure on you?

The Consumer Price Index (CPI) rose 0.5 per cent in the December quarter of 2018.

There were significant price drops in the telecommunications and transport categories. Telecommunications saw the biggest fall (-1.3 per cent) while the smaller drop in transport costs (-0.7 per cent) was driven by cheaper automotive fuel as petrol prices fell from recent highs.

The big price increases were in alcohol and tobacco, recreation and food.

The extra cost in the alcohol and tobacco category was driven by additional tax on tobacco.

Recreation price rises were driven by increases in the cost of domestic holiday accommodation (+6.2 per cent).

The food and non-alcoholic beverages category was affected by price rises for fruit (+5 per cent) due to more expensive lemons, apples, bananas and strawberries. Also, meat costs continued to rise as a result of the drought.

The quarterly figures affected the tribes differently.

Affluent Couples and Constrained Couples experienced the smallest cost-of-living increases at 0.3 per cent each.

Affluent Singles experienced a 0.4 per cent increase, primarily due to rises in recreation costs, while a hike in food costs was the main reason for a 0.4 per cent rise for Constrained Singles.

Food costs were also the prime driver of increases for Cash-Strapped Couples and Singles (both at 0.5 per cent).

Overall, food costs had the biggest impact with falls in the price of transport offsetting rises for the Affluent and Constrained tribes.

Housing is still a pressure point for Cash-Strapped tribes, but much less so for Affluent and Constrained tribes.

In the past 12 months, the Cash-Strapped tribes and Constrained Couples were most affected by cost-of-living increases, mainly due to food and petrol price rises.

This article first appeared in the March 2019 Retirement Affordability Index.

Matt Grudnoff
Matt Grudnoffhttps://australiainstitute.org.au/expert/matt-grudnoff/
Senior economist at the Australia Institute, Matt is a regular contributor to YourLifeChoices and has extensive knowledge on retirement incomes, taxation and tax concessions, the federal Budget, poverty and inequality, free trade agreements, housing affordability, energy economics and climate change. He worked at the Australian Bureau of Statistics and the Department of Climate Change. Matt is the brains behind Australia's most accurate cost-of-retirement table, the YourLifeChoices Retirement Affordability Index™.
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