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Communication ‘failure’ flagged as borrowers get RBA apology

By Fabian Cotter
30 November 2022 | 11 minute read
Philip Lowe reb

RBA governor Philip Lowe has issued an apology to borrowers who “acted on what we’d said and now regret what they had done”.

Australians who took out mortgages in the belief that interest rates wouldn’t rise until 2024, and who are now faced with several months of potentially more interest rate rises, have received an apology, of sorts, from Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) governor Philip Lowe.

Fronting, for his first time, the Senate economics legislation committee (additional budget estimates) meeting in Canberra on Monday (28 November), Mr Lowe gave a frank apology for the central bank’s “caveated” forward guidance that may have been interpreted by borrowers at the time that it was unlikely rates would rise until 2024.

The “regret” came though in the context the forward guidance “at the time” was fashioned around various domestic issues — namely the COVID response and “huge amount” of stimulus injected into the economy.

Asked by Tasmanian Senator Nick McKim if the governor’s media-reported statement at the time — granted it was caveated — had the effect of inducing many Australians to take out mortgages in the belief that interest rates wouldn’t rise until 2024, and were those affected borrowers deserving an apology, Mr Lowe replied: “Well, I’m certainly sorry if people listened to what we’d said and then acted on what we’d said and now regret what they had done. So that’s regrettable.”

“I’m sorry that that happened — but if I can just take you back to the situation we were facing in 2020 and 2021 …” governor Lowe reminded.

“It was … dire. The country was in a dire situation. And the Reserve Bank, we wanted to do everything we could to help the country get through that.

“We also had a strong insurance mindset. We were thinking, ‘well, what could go wrong here?’ And the thing that could [go] wrong was really, really bad.

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“We’re talking about 15 per cent unemployment, a generation of young kids not being able to find jobs. People not being able to go to school and university — it was, was dire times,” he explained.

Mr Lowe said the RBA board decided it would do everything it could to help, which included the term funding facility and the bond purchase program, among other strategies.

“We also thought that given the dire outlook, it was unlikely that inflation would pick up quickly, and we would want to send a message that interest rates were going to stay low for a long period of time.

“At the time, I thought that was the right thing to do.

“Exposed? The economy recovered much more quickly than anyone expected, and we’ve had to raise interest rates more quickly, and people [whp] have borrowed in those two years are now finding it much more difficult, but … I’m sorry that people listened to what we’d said and acted on that and now find themselves in a position they don’t want to be in,” he conceded.

He re-iterated that, at the time, the RBA board thought it was “the right thing to do”.

“And I think, looking back, [we] would have chosen different language.

“You’re right,” he agreed, “people did not hear the caveats in what we said; my language was always caveated.

“I thought it was clear, but from the central bank kind of perspective — but the community didn’t think it was clear …

“That’s a failure on our part,” he acknowledged.

“We didn’t communicate the caveats clearly enough, and we’ve certainly learned from that — and if you’ve had a look at the review for forward guidance, we’re changing our approach.

“We didn’t get across the caveats clearly enough — and the community [just] heard 2024! They didn’t hear the conditionality. That’s partly our fault.

“We weren’t clear enough, I agree.”

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