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Brett Warren
By Brett Warren
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What Australians are doing to deal with higher cost of living

Australians have experienced substantial increases in our cost of living over the past few months.

In fact, based on Roy Morgan's and Melbourne Institute's research, for most people, making ends meet can require changes to behaviour and finding ways to mitigate the impact of higher prices on their personal finances.

The survey recently asked Australians to indicate which of 14 possible strategies or steps they have taken to deal with the rising cost of living.

Food choices and depletion of savings are major strategies

Based on the survey results, about 56% of Australians state they bought cheaper food options, and just over half have reduced the frequency at which they dine out.

Strategies Australians Are Using Or Have Used To Deal With Higher Cost Of Living

Almost 38% of respondents are dipping into savings, and 37% are cutting back on home energy use.

Less than 10% have borrowed money from friends, relatives or financial institutions.

Single-parent households with children are struggling

Among single-parent households with children, just under half report using savings to cope with rising prices and almost 64% have sought out cheaper food options.

Cheaper Food Options

Worryingly, almost 15% have pawned or sold possessions, 24% have cancelled or deferred medical appointments, 34% deferred bills or negotiated payment plans and a quarter have borrowed from friends or relatives.

Although these strategies are also present among partnered households with children, the prevalence is much lower compared to single-parent households with children.

Strategies are very similar across income groups…but differ significantly by financial stress status

Though greater proportions of lower-income households dip into their savings or seek cheaper transport options compared to higher-income households, most income groups still report relatively similar proportions in their methods of adjusting to higher prices.

Figure 3 Savings

While cost-of-living pressures are experienced by individuals across all income groups, the use of the outlined measures is vastly different depending on reported financial stress status.

Figure 4 Financial Stress

Roughly 64% of people in financial stress are using their savings, compared to 30% of those not in financial stress.

Other measures most common among those in financial stress include:

  • pawning items (21%)
  • borrowing from friends or relatives (23%)
  • deferring bills or negotiating payment plans (32%)
  • cancelling or deferring medical appointments (33%)
  • cutting back on home energy use (53%) and on recreation (60%)
  • reducing dining out (74%) and buying cheaper food options (78%)

In many cases, these proportions are more than triple for those in financial stress compared to those not.

The bottom line

Australians are employing a range of strategies to deal with the widespread increases in prices of goods and services, particularly in decisions related to food and the use of existing savings to fund expenditure.

Higher living costs have undoubtedly increased levels of financial stress across all household income groups.

People in financial stress also report the highest proportions of more extreme steps taken to deal with higher prices such as using savings to fund current expenditure, which may have negative long-term consequences on their finances.

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

So, given that the point of raising interest rates was to reduce spending, is this "success"? It seems that the burden of higher cost of living has fallen disproportionately on those who were in or close to financial stress anyway. Were they the grou ...Read full version

1 reply

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