Australia’s Cost-of-Living Crisis: 6401.0 CPI Review

Niyas Thekkath (4128965)

1. Introduction

Australia’s CPI surged post‑pandemic, then moderated—yet some components remain elevated.
This presentation identifies which categories are holding inflation above the RBA’s target.

2. Data Source & Scope

  • ABS Catalogue 6401.0 – Consumer Price Index (2011 = 100), quarterly
  • Sheet: “Data6” (Index series)
  • Period: 2011 Q1 – 2025 Q%q
  • Licence: CC BY 4.0

3. Methodology

  1. Parse Excel: extract descriptive labels, skip metadata.
  2. Tidy with pivot_longer().
  3. Compute Year‑on‑Year % (lag‑4).
  4. Core CPI proxy: 2‑quarter rolling mean.
  5. Visuals via ggplot2 and Plotly.

4. Headline CPI vs. RBA Bands

5. Core vs. Headline CPI (2‑Qtr MA)

6. Top YoY Movers (Latest Quarter)

7. Five‑Year Heat‑Map

8. Rent vs. Household Utilities Inflation

9. Key Insights

  • Core CPI remains above the RBA’s 2–3 % bands despite headline cooling.
  • Rents are the single largest upward driver; Utilities have peaked and are decelerating.
  • Policy relief requires easing housing supply constraints and managing wage growth.

10. Ethics & Reflections

  • Data are open, verifiable, and fully reproducible.
  • Core CPI proxy is transparent but not an official RBA measure.
  • Visuals use consistent scales and colourblind‑safe palettes.
  • Inflation impacts low‑income renters most; an equity lens is essential.

References

Australian Bureau of Statistics. (2025, April 30). Consumer Price Index, Australia: March quarter 2025 (Cat. No. 6401.0).
Reserve Bank of Australia. (2025, May). Statement on Monetary Policy – May 2025.
R Core Team. (2024). R: A language & environment for statistical computing.
Wickham, H. et al. (2019). Welcome to the tidyverse. JOSS, 4(43).