Descriptions of Graphs for Speech by Malcolm Edey, Assistant Governor (Economic)

Graph 1: World GDP Growth

The graph has columns showing annual world Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth from 1974 to 2004 as well as the February Consensus forecast for 2005. It also has a line showing the 30-year average for world GDP growth, which is around 3½ per cent. The graph shows that world GDP growth in 2004 was estimated to be around 5 per cent, which is the fastest rate of growth since 1976. Growth is expected to slow in 2005, but remain above trend at around 4¼ per cent.

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Graph 2: United States – GDP

The graph shows real Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth in the US since 1990. There is a line showing the year-ended percentage change in real GDP and columns showing the quarterly percentage change in real GDP.

The graph shows that real GDP in the US has been growing since the 2001 recession. Growth was initially slow, but has since accelerated, and was just under 4 per cent over 2004.

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Graph 3: China – GDP

The graph shows real Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth in China since 1996. There is a line showing the year-ended percentage change in real GDP and columns showing the RBA's estimates of quarterly growth.

The graph shows that growth in China remains very strongly, at just under 10 per cent in the year to the December quarter.

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Graph 4: Trade Prices

This graph shows Australian export and import prices and Australia's terms of trade since the mid 1970s. Export and import prices are implicit price deflators, converted to SDRs and indexed to equal 100 in 1999. The terms of trade is also indexed to equal 100 in 1999. The graph shows that Australia's terms of trade has risen sharply over recent years, to levels last seen in the mid 1970s, with export prices rising sharply and import prices broadly flat in SDR terms.

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Graph 5: Output and Demand

This graph shows year-ended percentage changes in output, as measured by GDP, and in domestic demand, as measured by GNE, from 1994 to 2004. It shows that growth in domestic demand has been running ahead of growth in output since the start of 2002.

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Graph 6: Business Conditions

This graph shows business conditions from the NAB survey on a quarterly basis from March 1992 to December 2004. This series is a net balance statistic and is shown as a deviation from its long-run average. The graph shows that after reaching a trough at well below the long-run average level in the June quarter 2001, business conditions have risen significantly and are well above the long-run average level.

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Graph 7: Consumer Sentiment

This graph shows the Westpac-Melbourne Institute Consumer Sentiment Index on a monthly basis from January 1992 to February 2005. It shows that sentiment rose strongly during mid 2003 to be around the levels of previous peaks, and then stepped up a little further in mid 2004. In early 2005, consumer sentiment rose again, to be at the highest levels in the history of the series except for the record level reached in June 1994.

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Graph 8: Unemployment Rate

This graph shows the unemployment rate, on a monthly basis, from January 1980 to January 2005. It shows that the unemployment rate has moderated significantly from its local peak of 7.2 per cent in October 2001, and at 5.1 per cent is currently at its lowest level in the period shown. The data are sourced from the ABS.

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Graph 9: Export Volumes

This graph shows the volume of Australia's exports (excluding RBA gold sales and exports of frigates) since 1990. It shows that export volumes have been broadly flat since 2000, after increasing solidly through the 1990s.

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Graph 10: Difficulty Finding Suitable Labour

This graph shows the ACCI-Westpac and NAB business survey indicators of firms' difficulty finding suitable labour, on a quarterly basis, from March 1979 to December 2004. It shows that both indicators have picked up sharply since their troughs in late 2001. The NAB survey measure is at its highest level on record, and the ACCI-Westpac measure is close to its highest level in the period shown.

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