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Reserve Bank chief slammed for suggesting Aussies getting haircuts are to blame for inflation

A.Davis3 months ago
The Reserve Bank's new governor Michele Bullock has been slammed for suggesting Australians getting haircuts are to blame for high inflation .

With inflation still high at 5.4 per cent, Ms Bullock said domestic demand for services was now the key driver of high prices.

'Inflation is being driven by domestic demand is that it is increasingly underpinned by services,' she told an Australian Business Economists dinner in Sydney on Wednesday.

'Hairdressers and dentists, dining out, sporting and other recreational activities – the prices of all these services are rising strongly.'

Tony Windsor, a former independent member of federal Parliament, joked that bald men like himself were leading the fight against inflation.

'Breaking...Bald people to lead the fight against inflation,' he told his X followers on Thursday morning.

The Reserve Bank's new governor Michele Bullock has been slammed for suggesting Australians getting haircuts are to blame for high inflation

One follower joked those without much hair on top could avoid paying a tax on their company car.

'Also a good way to avoid the fringe benefits tax,' he said.

Ms Bullock said high inflation was now a problem beyond surging petrol and electricity prices.

'So inflation is much broader than just rising prices for petrol, electricity and rents – prices are rising strongly for the majority of the goods and services we all consume,' she said.

With inflation still high at 5.4 per cent, Ms Bullock said domestic demand for services was now the key driver of high prices (pictured is a stock image of a barber)

The Reserve Bank of Australia this month raised interest rates for the 13th time in 18 months, taking the cash rate to a 12-year high of 4.35 per cent.

Inflation is now expected to take longer to moderate, with the RBA forecasting a return to the top of the two to three per cent target in late 2025 instead of mid-2025, as predicted as recently as August.

Spending data from the Commonwealth Bank backs up the RBA's observation about service spending driving inflation.

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