Wednesday, June 3

Q1 2026 GDP: A Soft Quarter, an Above-Potential Year

The headline reads as solid for the year but weak for the quarter. The AI/data centre investment boom is largely discounted because the equipment was imported rather than produced in Australia. Once the imported equipment is netted out, the boom adds nothing to GDP. What remains is an economy still running above its annual speed limit, inflation that has mostly returned to the band but is not all the way home, and a productivity trend that continues to disappoint.

The quarter itself was quite soft. GDP rose just 0.27% in the March quarter, well below the 0.87% of the quarter before and below my own nowcast of around 0.5%. A single quarter's figure is an unreliable guide at the best of times. The through-the-year figure is the one that usually matters, and at 2.52% it sits uncomfortably above the RBA's potential growth estimate of roughly 2%. And that 2% is itself flattered by strong population growth feeding the labour input in the production function, with productivity adding almost nothing. The economy is running hot in the least healthy way: adding bodies and hours rather than output per hour. The fear is that another weak quarter will see a substantial reduction in the through the year figure because of base effects (when the 1pp contribution from Q2 in 2025 drops off).