An update to my December 2025 Economic Outlook
Introduction
Every national accounts release contains both good and bad news, and Q4 2025 is no exception.
GDP per capita is improving. Labour productivity is moving in the right direction. Real wages have reached a new high. These are genuine improvements, not statistical noise, and they deserve acknowledgement.
But the balance of this release tilts toward concern rather than celebration. Domestic inflation remains stubbornly above target. Unit labour costs are still too high. Government spending continues to crowd out private activity. And the RBA is now reversing rate cuts it should not have made.
This is not a crisis. It is not the end of the world. But the list of issues requiring attention is longer than the list of developments deserving applause.
The Headline: GDP Growing above Inflationary Speed Limit
GDP growth has lifted from the anaemic sub-1.5% rates seen through much of 2024. But 2.56% annual growth is not a recovery – it is the economy running above its compressed speed limit of roughly 2%. Australia’s potential has fallen over the past decade as productivity stagnation has lowered the economy’s supply capacity.
The December outlook argued that near-2% growth reflects supply constraints rather than demand deficiency. The Q4 data confirms this: growth has accelerated and domestic inflation remains elevated. That combination only occurs when an economy is at/above capacity. There is no spare room here.