TL;DR: The nominal neutral rate of interest is around 4.6 per cent. Probably.
The cash rate is at 4.10 per cent. Half the commentary calls this restrictive, the other half calls it appropriate, and a vocal minority calls it inadequate. Almost everyone making these claims is implicitly comparing the current rate to neutral. Almost no one explains where their estimate of neutral comes from.
This post is an attempt to be honest about what we can and cannot say about neutral, using work I have done.
The short version. The post-GFC decade was unusual on multiple dimensions, including unusually low equilibrium real rates. The post-COVID period has seen a partial return to more familiar dynamics. Multiple methodologies, including a careful estimation I have built and tested, place the current cash rate within the range of plausible neutral estimates. The level is not extreme by historical standards, even though intuitions formed during the 2010s might suggest otherwise.