Fears of a recession have fallen away, with economists saying that Australia is set to safely navigate the biggest global oil supply shock in history even as they warn of sub-standard growth in the year ahead.
The de-escalation of the Middle East conflict has been accompanied by a major retreat in global oil prices back to prewar levels, essentially removing the worst-case scenarios contemplated before Donald Trump’s wobbly ceasefire with Iran was announced in mid-June.
Belinda Allen, CBA’s head of Australian economics, said she had never thought a recession was likely, but that “the impact of the war on energy markets and the economy were less severe than we had anticipated”.
“Oil prices did not rise as much, and the cut to the excise tax blunted the impact on households.”
Sign up for the Breaking News Australia emailAfter spiking as high as $US120 a barrel, global oil prices have now steadied at about $US72 a barrel, and CBA analysts see them dropping to $US60 by the end of this year – even as they recognise the high risk that the war flares up and again strangles traffic through the strait of Hormuz.
While high inflation remains a major threat, it is falling – and at about 4% is well down on the May budget’s forecast peak of 5%. Unemployment is up only slightly over the past three months at 4.4%.
“We think no more [Reserve Bank] interest rate hikes are needed, but we still see some lingering risks there,” Allen said.
A major downturn may have been averted, but Tim Robinson, an associate professor at the Melbourne Institute of Applied Economic and Social Research, warned GDP per person was set to contract for two straight quarters.
“Growth is likely to be quite weak for the rest of the year, and because of that, a per capita recession is likely,” Robinson said.
“They [per capita recessions] are not as severe as a conventional recession – the changes in unemployment tend to be far less severe – but they do constitute a decline in living standards.”
Stephen Smith, a partner at Deloitte Access Economics, said his firm had rarely had such a pessimistic outlook for the country’s near term economic trajectory.
That pessimism is mirrored among households, where consumer confidence is at around a 50-year low as many Australians struggle to cope with substantially higher prices after years of above-average inflation.
“At the same time, the three interest rate increases so far in 2026 mean that households with an average-sized mortgage have needed to find an additional $350 per month to meet higher repayments,” Smith said – warning the RBA could hike again next month.
Falling house prices in some parts of the country, most notably Sydney and Melbourne, are also weighing on sentiment and making Australians less likely to spend.
While Allen also sees weak growth this year, “the good news is that 2027 looks a little better”, she said – in no small part due to an expected two interest rate cuts and the ongoing boom in the construction of datacentres.
“Clearly that [datacentre building] is being constrained by capacity and energy demand requirements, but it will still add to the economy next year and the year after.”
Beyond that, the threats and opportunities of artificial intelligence loom as a gamechanger for the Australian economy from late 2028, said Allen, who was hopeful the technology could prove the antidote to Australia’s weak productivity.
“By the time we get to 2028 we start to see these really interesting structural shifts. There’s a lot of defence investment to come, but also NDIS cuts and a lot of uncertainty whether the two largely offset each other.”