Banks shouldn't raise rates: Swan
Federal Treasurer Wayne Swan says banks could not justify raising rates above the official cash rate if the Reserve Bank of Australia increases its rates when it meets on Tuesday.
On September 21, the RBA kept its benchmark cash rate on hold at 4.5 per cent since the most recent increase in May.
The last rise capped off a series of six that began in October last year when cash was at a multi-decade low of 3.0 per cent.
But economists are predicting a rise when the bank meets at 1430 AEDT on Tuesday.
Mr Swan said there were issues on the long-term funding profile of banks but it still didn't justify hitting customers with higher interest rates than those of the RBA.
"I don't think there is any justification whatsoever for any bank to move above the official cash rate decision of the Reserve Bank," Mr Swan told ABC Radio.
"Banks are making healthy profits at the moment, their net interest margins are back above what they were before the global financial crisis."
HSBC's chief economist Paul Bloxham expects the RBA 25 basis points this year, putting the brakes on an economy fuelled by China's insatiable demand for resources.
Mr Bloxham says that if the central bank does not raise official interest rates at its meeting on Tuesday, it is likely to do so before the end of the year.
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