Household spending slows further in June: Australia

Household spending was 1.8 per cent higher compared to June last year, according to figures released today by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS).

Ben Dorber, ABS head of business indicators, said: “This was the smallest growth in household spending since February 2021.

“Spending on discretionary goods and services was down for the third straight month, falling 0.7 per cent over the year, as households adjust to cost of living pressures.

“Non-discretionary spending rose 4.2 per cent, however the growth rate has been slowing since January, when it reached 21.0 per cent.”

Household discretionary and non-discretionary spending, current price, calendar adjusted

Discretionary – Through the year change (%)Non Discretionary – Through the year change (%)
Jan-208.16.5
Feb-202.70.8
Mar-20-7.3-4.5
Apr-20-28.1-35.7
May-20-9.4-27.8
Jun-20-6.7-18.2
Jul-20-2.1-14.1
Aug-20-8.5-18.4
Sep-20-5.6-14.6
Oct-20-5.4-14.0
Nov-208.2-8.5
Dec-202.3-5.2
Jan-21-0.6-10.3
Feb-212.7-6.3
Mar-2116.92.6
Apr-2148.850.5
May-2119.034.9
Jun-2112.318.1
Jul-211.07.9
Aug-212.17.5
Sep-213.56.4
Oct-219.98.7
Nov-219.49.3
Dec-214.16.3
Jan-225.18.1
Feb-2211.912.0
Mar-2210.39.6
Apr-2213.710.9
May-2212.012.2
Jun-2213.817.2
Jul-2221.924.3
Aug-2228.229.7
Sep-2228.229.6
Oct-2218.824.9
Nov-227.919.5
Dec-228.017.3
Jan-2312.321.0
Feb-234.816.2
Mar-231.212.7
Apr-23-0.910.2
May-23-0.57.0
Jun-23-0.74.2

Goods spending saw its largest decline since July 2021 with a 1.2 per cent fall, while spending on Services rose 4.6 per cent.

The overall growth in household spending compared to June last year was driven by Miscellaneous goods and services (+8.4 per cent), which includes spending on child care, legal services and personal care. Health (+6.2 per cent) and Food (+5.0 per cent) had the next largest spending growth rates in June.

Household spending increased in most states and territories in June 2023 compared to June 2022, with only the Northern Territory seeing a fall in spending over this period.

South Australia recorded the largest increase in spending (+3.7 per cent), led by rises for Alcoholic beverages and tobacco (+11.2 per cent) and Miscellaneous goods and services (+9.7 per cent) compared to June 2022.

Spending growth rates were lower in all states and territories this month compared to last month. The ACT had the largest slow-down in spending compared to the same time last year, with growth dropping from 4.0 per cent in May to 1.3 per cent in June.

Household spending, current price, TTY % change, calendar adjusted, by state/territory

Apr-2023 (%)May-2023 (%)Jun-2023 (%)
NSW4.03.22.1
Vic.4.32.50.5
Qld4.33.61.9
SA6.63.83.7
WA7.74.82.9
Tas.2.01.91.7
NT1.90.8-1.3
ACT5.74.01.3

/ABS Public Release. View in full here.