Consumer confidence took a backwards step in March, dropping 0.7% to 99.5 from 100.2 in February, according to the latest Westpac Melbourne Institute Index of Consumer Sentiment.
Westpac senior economist Matthew Hassan said the index has now fallen 10.9% from its peak of 110.3 in November 2013, and is at its lowest level since May 2013.
โThe initial declines in December-January looked to be mainly the unwinding of the election-related sentiment boost,โ Hassan said.
โMore recent falls though have had a very clear theme centring on a sharp loss of confidence in the economic outlook and escalating job-loss fears.โ
He said that bad news around the motoring industry, Qantas job cuts, and manufacturing declines are โrattling consumersโ.
The Index found that over 66% of consumers thought that news relating to economic conditions was all negative.
However, HSBC chief economist Paul Bloxham told SmartCompany he didnโt think the consumer concern was reflective of the current state of the economy.
He says the economy is showing signs it is on the โroad to recoveryโ with โstrong domestic demandโ.
He agreed a recent flood of news stories relating to downsizing and company closures could be fuelling concern.
โThe figures are reflective of sentimentโฆ consumers are seeing bad news stories online and splashed on the papers about airline and car companies and manufacturing,โ he says.
Housing Industry Association of Australia economist Geordan Murray suggests that in the housing sector, the decline in consumer sentiment is โquite a distinct contrastโ from current economic realities.
He says there is currently a high level of activity in the housing market.
โImprovements in consumer sentiment can bring the perception that it is a good time to buy a house,โ he says. Murray says that a decline in consumer confidence is โdefinitely not goodโ for the housing sector.
The Westpac Index showed unemployment expectations rose by 5.5% for the month, to be 13.6% above its November level. The figure of 164.4, was reported by Westpac as an โextreme highโ not seen since the 2008-09 global financial crisis.
Murray says while consumers in the Westpac Index showed concern over job security, the Australian Bureau of Statistics results for February showed that unemployment was steady at around 6% and that there was a 47% participation rate.
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