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Australians cash reserves hit almost $40,000 in August - featured image
Brett Warren
By Brett Warren
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Australians cash reserves hit almost $40,000 in August

Are you one of the many Australians who are madly saving money to stave off the rising cost of living?

According to the new research by Finder, the average Australian has $39,439 in savings in August.

That’s a 75% increase from six months earlier – up from $22,565 in March – and a record high since Finder began tracking in May 2019.

Average Amount In Savings Over Time

Cash is king in a downturn

The amount of savings Aussies have stashed away has been trending up after four successive cash rate rises from the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA).

Sarah Megginson, money expert at Finder explains:

“Australians are drastically increasing how much cash they have stashed to offset the spiralling cost of living.

Consumers are concerned that high levels of inflation and increasing interest rates will leave them vulnerable and where possible, they’re stockpiling cash to weather the storm."

The research also shows men have much bigger cash reserves than women.

The average woman has $26,132 saved in August compared to $52,786 for men.

Ms Megginson further said boosting savings is a good goal to strive towards:

“Saving a little is better than saving nothing – the habit of saving is most important of all.

Now is a great time to have excess cash in the bank with high-interest savings accounts offering rates of more than 3.10% a year, and term deposits are even higher.

While the RBA lifting the cash rate to 1.85% is bad news for borrowers, it’s good news for savers."

Finally, research shows the average Aussie could afford to live off their savings for 19 weeks if they lost their job today – up from 14 weeks in March.

Brett Warren
About Brett Warren Brett Warren is National Director of Metropole Properties and uses his two decades of property investment experience to advise clients how to grow, protect and pass on their wealth through strategic property advice.
2 comments

If this doesn't tell the RBA that Aussies are spending less and thus actually reducing demand then nothing will. Past research has shown that changes in interest rates take 18 months to have the full desired effect. Consecutive interest rate rises ...Read full version

1 reply

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