Question:

What will the interest rate cuts mean to you?

by  |  earlier

0 LIKES UnLike

The Australian Reserve Bank has made their first interest rate decrease in 7 years. What will that mean to you? Will it make a difference in your pocket or is it still going to be a struggle?

 Tags:

   Report

31 ANSWERS


  1. Interest rates on mortgages have been cut (0.25 %) what a joke. When they rise, credit card interest rates rise, overdrafts on bank accounts rise and personal loan interest rates rise. I can guarantee that the greedy financial institutions don't drop those rates


  2. The drop in interest rates almost certainly means that if I time it right I will get more for property I plan to sell soon. On the other hand my investment income will go down. It all balances out in the end.

    I won't be struggling because of my family background in business, which trained me to make the right investment choices as a young man. I bought the best house I could afford taking the mortgage payments, and potential fluctuations, into account when I was 23. You have to do this - housing loan rates hit 17% in the mid 1970s and in the late 1980s, under the Whitlam government and then under Keating. Commercial rates peaked when John Howard was Treasurer prior to the Whitlam government.

    Because my family have been in Real Estate since I was a child, I have had an interest in housing prices relative to average income, and have looked at figures right back into the 1950s. The relativity between house prices and average income has stayed pretty much the same. The only changes are that the average house today is further from the CBD and the average new house is larger and has more bathrooms and garaging. Both these factors make current houses look more expensive, but they are not if you adjust so you are comparing apples with apples

  3. Nothing to myself! I am still living with my parents, but it will mean alot to those struggling families. Whom barely survive. Even a couple dollars has to mean something. Be grateful for the decrease, rather than an increase.

  4. As we are a one income family with children, this interest rate decrease won't help much as children's needs and family supplies increase, so I would have to say that it will probably even out in the end, and will not help one bit, we need at least another ten decreases to help with most families these days, to survive and pay off our mortgages.

  5. I have four adult children, young, but trying to get a life in the adult world and these interest cuts will encourage them to keep trying for they own piece of land.  



  6. Unfortunetly nothing,like many I am renting . We tend to get forgotton ,as the interests rates go up so does the rent (recent $50 week increase) somehow I doubt if it will go down again. What with rate increases ,interest rates and body corporate fees .Renters are also very much affected. However like homeowners and investers our pay does not increase .So next time there is another cut or rise ,give thought to the tennant who is also affected and at the mercy of the landlord,banks etc .

  7. It means absolutely nothing at this point. We purchased our first home 1 year ago and have already been through 6 interest rate rises. Our bank has independantly increased rates over the reserve bank, inflating the interest we are currently paying.  The RBA would have to cut rates by at least 1 - 2% for it to make any real difference to homeowners on an average income.  

  8. virtually nothing as a pensioner no increase in budget and more rate rises once again the Labour party does what it is good at  destroying  Australia's economy  

  9. it means that i can put more onto the loan in regards to extra repayments.

    this will be huge in the long term hopefully and that there will be more cuts coming up.

    Think of the benefits people!!

  10. Means a few things to me.

    Firstly I can actually make some cash from my investment property (a few dollars a week, but hey, it's a start).

    And whats even better, as a person who owns a small business, my customers can start feeling a little better and spend some $$$$$.

    It's only a small % change, but its amazing how it can effect people.

  11. it means my savings are going to be getting less and less money, and seein as I am an 18 year old, the ramifications of this loss of money so early in my working life are going to stay with me forever.

    Thank-you RBA...

  12. Not much - I regularly pay above my monthly minimum anyway - & will continue as the rates drop - so it'll mean I'll either :-

    a/ pay the house off quicker

    or

    b/ have more to redraw in case there's an emergency.

    .

  13. It will make a tiny difference in a positive way, which is definitely welcome.  However, we've just gone through interest rate rises month after month after month after month, so the benefit is more like a chance to catch our breath for a month than a really significant difference.  Any chance to make an extra repayment without then being slogged 95% of it again in interest is great though.

  14. It would mean that I would be putting more money to the principal loan rather than give it to the Bank in the form of interest.  But then again, talk about the difference in my pocket, nothing really, unless my bank decides to lower down the amortization amount due to the decrease in the interest rate.  But I am not that hopeful, just before the rate cut, my bank increased the amortization amount. Tricky.  Other banks, I've heard, had a previous increase in interest rate before the announcement of the RB to cut the rate.  

    Some banks are even going to delay the decrease in rate for up to a month. Gosh, but when the RB announce rate increase they are on it the very next day. That is unfair.

    Unless the RB regulates the interest rate increases by the banks, nothing will be done to alleviate the condition of the common masses. Banks would still one way or another be able to find a way so that their bottom line figure is not affected.  Something must be done about it.

  15. Some savings, but the rate will go further down. The reasons? Industrial Laws caused big profit in the stock market. The stock market was the main reason - not firstly inflation - for the banks pushing on Reserve Bank for an increase of the interest rate. The RB could do that because the FG at that time was leading the "network" with no resistance. Any excuse was good at that time to push up the interest rate but the real cause was the stock market combined with Industrial Laws. The prosperity of many pushed prices up, combined with cost of fuel, which could have been better controlled with Hydro/NG conversion and not only LPG.

    Because the wealthy could afford to pay more for "bananas" they said monthly that we spend too much, but in fact families could buy less bananas and wealthy more Mercedes... and at the end there was too much spending and inflation with consequential more excuses to increase interest rates. The Reserve Bank knew it all and disagreed on real causes, then somebody prayed to hit the stock market to brake the vicious circle... and here we are. There was no need for pulling down the prosperity of Australia. Justice and Fairness are the golden rules to rebuilt a balanced prosperity still in trouble. Banks and lobbies should check the dusty book of business ethics in order to enjoy real and stable economic prosperity and stop paying millions to executives otherwise skilled.  

  16. I think the .3% drop in interest rates is a positive and whilst this one will present with little to no evidence in the size of my purse; it promises much in terms of future prosperty, the fruit of which will be felt with the next two drops. :-)

  17. When I bought my first house in Melbourne in 1972 the interest rate was 16%.  There was a credit squeeze on so most banks were not giving housing loans unless you had a big deposit - say 30%. Our first house cost $A25,000 and I earnt $A 2,500 per YEAR.  We had $A8,000 deposit. I think houses are reasonable now, for what they are.  It is just that newly married couple want everything when they move in to a huge 5 bedroom, two bathroom, double story house - big TV, modern furniture etc.  on top of the house cost.  I know I sound like an old foaggy but I am a bit tired of young couples saying how hard it is.

  18. Not going to make a difference to us at all as we are on a fixed rate. For us to get out of our fixed option, the rates would have to drop more substantially for it to be worth it for us.

    And nofret - no, not all first home owners want the big mansion then whine about not being able to afford it. My partner and i purchased our first home at the start of this year, its a basic three bedroom timber home - nothing fancy, but we have to start somewhere. It really bugs me when the older generations say that all the young ones are only struggling because they want the best and dearest of everything - thats simply not true.  

  19. It is a psychological relief. Last 4 years that I have had the loan, the story has been like I kept paying back more and more principal but the interest figures never came down. Now I am waiting to see that petty decrease of a few dollars to convince myself that it is better than a rise.

  20. It means nothing RAMS & the rest jacked their rates over the reserve rate several times but gutless Rudd & Swann wont make them come down, after all Rudd & Swann get 10% gst on the increases. if you change lenders Rudd & Swann get another go at 10%gst of your refinanced home loan.Plus they get the 10% gst on the refinance fee RAMS jacked their fee from $250.00 to $2500.00. 10%gst of $2500.00 is a lot better than 10%gst of $250.00.Hence Swann telling everyone to shop around for a better deal & swap lenders,did you see the smile on his face getting another 10%gst. Rudd & Swan dont care what happens they get  10%gst no matter what.The banks claim they lost money in the so called sub prime lending they didnt, the US Government dropped the interest rates all our rip off lenders did deals to get the cheaper rate for them but did NOT pass it on for us.

  21. So Many People have been harpering about the 7? Interest raises, over the yrs of the Howard Government.

    Firstly, everyone appears to be blaming Howard, do they shoot the messenger who tells them their Great Auntie, twice removed, has had a mild case of Indigestion ?????????????

    2nd, Has everyone forgotten the number and %, of Rate rises that were implemented under the Keating Labor Government.

    My Bank Statements are still SCREAMING in TERROR ! ! !

  22. I will be out of pocket by 10's of thousands $ because I have so many investment properties in Iraq.

  23. The only difference it will make to me is perhaps shortening the time it takes to pay it off, that's about all.

  24. Nothing!! I have one up on the banks, I fixed a few years ago at 7% so while everybody id paying 9% I am only paying 7%...so I consider that a win for the small fish. I do feel for the people struggling

  25. no struggle here, wasn't one of the many idiots to push myself to the edge and then whinge about it...meanwhile most of the whingers are living in mansions and driving $40,000 cars....deal with it!

  26. this quetion is wrong ,because the banks has started raise the interest from 2002 and all of thoses increases has caused all the strugels in family budgets ,so how can only one small deduction on the intrest rate can help ,I think the number of reduction on intrest rate should be the same time as they have raised ,if the number match like every monthes for ... then every one will go back to feel comfortable again .

    this one time is nothing really .

  27. Can I just say that an interest rate decrease means nothing to mee due to the BANK! increasing my rates when there was NO increase from the reserve bank.....when I phoned them and questioned the increase they told mee it was a "buisness decision".........Well excuse mee but I would like to make a buisness decision in my house hold and not to pay the extra .02% and be able to put that money towards my kids education which is alot better in the long run!.......how much profit did the banks make this year????

  28. Nothing -  One interest drop makes no difference compared to the nine previous increases. One does not have to be a genius to work out that what the banks give with one hand they take with the other. Less interest income usually means more bank fees !

  29. little to nil TEMPORARY relief.lending agencies will just have to create or increase other fees ,lay off employees or  make executive staff take a pay cut (lmao) to maintain their profit forecast.whatever it takes to keep the lowly worker in his/her place without affecting their own place in the market.the only real difference would come if the r.b.a. had no increases for the next seven years.nothing to get excited about,after all, the r.b.a. did us few favours recently,let's see what happens next time they sit....

  30. The Reserve Bank has put us in a tight bind instead of managing the economy properly. It has raised the interest rates twelve times in order to slow what it claims to be an over heated economy. Prices were very largely forced up by John Howard's' tax cuts and increased oil/peterol prices although most voters didn't realise this and kept voting for him and the interest increases kept coming.

    The interest rate rises slowed the building of new houses. Hence we have a shortage of new houses and flats and land lords are charging high rents.  These will not go down until we get more housing which will not be in the short term.

    The interest rate reductions will need to be significant - at least one or two percent or 100 or 200 basis points, before they start to have a real effect of the economy. The world economy is slowing with England in recession and some major European countries, Germany and France heading that way. Some more interest rate cuts should be on the way.

    The people who will suffer from interest rate cuts are self - funded retirees and pensioners who depend either wholly or in part on interest income for their living. This will make it more difficult for them. They will either have to ask the government for more pension or seek other sources of investment income as many of them can't return to work. Some may have to use up their reserves and go on the pension.

    The interest rate cut is also good for farmers who have debt. Their repayments will not be so great. It will be good for home owners who have to make repayments. It will be good for small to medium business owners carrying debt as they also will not have to make such large repayments.

    However, if the economy slows too much, farmers and small businesses will have to put off employees. This will mean that the employees will not be able to pay their mortgages. Also some of these small businesses and farms have already and will continue to fold. This in turn will put people out of work. This is an arguement for further interest rate cuts. It helps to encourage investment in the economy to restart business and get people back to work so that they can start paying their mortgages where they have managed to hang onto their houses. This is why it is a good idea to pay off your house as quickly as possible. You do not leave yourself at the mercy of economic change.

    Hope this helps to clear the air on interest rate changes. REserve bank manipulation of interest rates is Monetary policy. Government spending is Fiscal policy. Wage setting by what used to be the concilliation and arbitration court is wages policy. These three sets of policy are what govern our economy.

    Cheers!!!

  31. a 0.25% decrease in the interest rate indicates that the rates are not getting up any more, many people are under high pressure and they expext at the end at least a 1% drop, that would  start helping the people. A quater drop means not so much really but still takes of the pressure for thinking of even higher rates!

    thanks for participating

    Stuart

Question Stats

Latest activity: earlier.
This question has 31 answers.

BECOME A GUIDE

Share your knowledge and help people by answering questions.
Unanswered Questions