wealth plunges as shares and property slide

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    Wealth plunges as shares and property slide

    By David Uren
    August 04, 2008 07:55am
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    TUMBLING share markets and sliding property prices have produced the biggest six-month fall in wealth since the 1982-83 recession, The Australian reports.

    The fall in wealth comes as income growth has stagnated and is expected to cause consumer spending to remain weak into next year.

    Don't panic

    However, Finance Minister Lindsay Tanner called on people tipping a recession to take a reality check, saying the economy was still in good shape, even though it was slowing. "It's crucial that we don't get spooked by one or two bad sets of figures,'' he said, ahead of the Reserve Bank board meeting tomorrow.

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    NEWS.com.au, 21 Jul 2008 He said the budget tax cuts and the continuing resources boom would keep the economy "ticking along''.

    "Yes, the economy is slowing, yes, we need to take the steam out of inflation, but people talking recession are getting way ahead of the facts.''

    However, economists say there is a growing number of indicators showing the economy is in danger of contracting.

    Hip pockets hit

    Investment bank ABN-Amro estimates that average wealth fell by 5 per cent in the first half of this year.

    The bank's chief economist, Kieran Davies, said declines in wealth were unusual, with the decline in the early 1980s the only time since World War II when wealth dropped more rapidly than in the past six months: "The rapid decline in wealth is another series that can be added to the already long list of indicators that are behaving as if the economy is on the edge of, or in, recession.''

    The value of household financial assets fell by 6.6 per cent in the March quarter as share prices plummeted and by a further 1.25 to 1.5 per cent in the June quarter.

    Housing accounts for about two-thirds of household wealth and is also slipping in value.

    Preliminary estimates suggest that housing prices fell by about 2 per cent in the second quarter.

    Mr Davies said the fall in wealth this year contrasts with the 11 per cent growth in the value of household assets last year.

    Households traditionally spend a portion of increases in wealth, and cut back when it falls.

    Mr Davies said there was a possibility spending could decline by 1 per cent.

    He said rising interest rates and inflation had also brought growth in disposable income to a halt, after rising at a rate of 8 per cent last year.

    He said this year's tax cuts should lift income by about 1 per cent, but the underlying trend showed no growth.

    Read the full report in The Australian.
 
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