Australia news live: new laws to crack down on property underquoting in NSW; inflation could reach ‘high fours’, Chalmers says

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Labor to blame for inflation problem, Canavan says

The new Nationals leader, Matt Canavan, says Treasury forecasts suggesting inflation could reach as high as 4.5% this year proves Labor has not done enough to carefully manage the economy.

Canavan told Sky on Sunday government spending had made the situation worse, even before the outbreak of war in the Middle East.

“This government, because they couldn’t control their own budget, has put Australia in a much weaker position to withstand the shocks of these kind of crises,” he said.

The government has not been saving for a rainy day, and a rainy day has arrived, and we don’t really have a roof over our head.

Canavan says Australia should do whatever it can to help bring about peace, including through support to the United States.

Jim Chalmers has confirmed Treasury modelling suggests the war and other economic conditions could push inflation in Australia to the “mid- to high fours”.

Labor has been battling sticking inflation, but economic shocks from the Middle East will make the task much harder, putting extra pressure on the Reserve Bank to lift interest rates.

Inflation is currently at 3.8%.

Private forecasts already suggest inflation will be in the high 4% range.

We’ve run a couple of scenarios which make it clear on some realistic assumptions about global oil prices and how that would potentially flow through to inflation, and for how long you know, if we were putting pencils down on those forecasts today, we’d have inflation peaking somewhere between the mid- to high fours.

Chalmers says the 12 May budget will be “difficult” but will include reforms, likely to include changes to the capital gains tax discount and other tax settings.

Fuel shortages not expected, Chalmers says

Jim Chalmers has told Sky the government does not expect Australia to run out of fuel amid the ongoing war in Iran. About a fifth of the world’s oil supplies travel through the Strait of Hormuz and the growing conflict has already played havoc with international prices.

“We’ve got big stockpiles of fuel, whether it’s petrol or diesel or jet fuel, and we work around the clock to make sure that Australia doesn’t run out. We’re certainly not expecting that we will,” Chalmers said.

Asked if petrol prices could go beyond $3 a litre in Australia, Chalmers says it depends on the scale of the war.

We don’t have a model that has petrol prices going that high, but there’s a lot of volatility and a lot of unpredictability in the global oil market.

Chalmers says the government is working with the competition watchdog to make sure retailers are not price gouging.

Treasurer praises officials involved with Iranian soccer team

Jim Chalmers has praised officials who assisted members of the Iranian soccer team as they considered aslyum requests in Australia.

The government confirmed on Sunday that three more members of the squad had decided to return to Iran after initially seeking protection here.

Chalmers told Sky that officials from the Department of Home Affairs had worked to assist the team in extraordinarily difficult conditions.

“They are absolutely top shelf, and they’ve been working around the clock on these issues,” he said.

The way these things unfold is ultimately a matter for those officials to determine they’ve done the absolute best they can by these Iranian women under extreme and extraordinary pressure, and often that requires some pretty dramatic and unusual steps, like those which you’ve described.

Welcome to Guardian Australia’s Sunday live news blog. My name is Ima Caldwell, I’ll be bringing you the latest news today.

First up this morning, the home affairs minister, Tony Burke, confirmed three more members of the Iranian women’s football squad have left Australia. The decision means just three of the seven squad members will remain in Australia on specially granted protection visas.

In NSW, the Minns government is introducing legislation to combat property underquoting by significantly increasing penalties. More on that soon.

And on the federal politics front, we’re expecting to hear from Jim Chalmers and Barnaby Joyce on TV interviews this morning.

Stay tuned for all of that and more.

Disclaimer : This story is auto aggregated by a computer programme and has not been created or edited by DOWNTHENEWS. Publisher: theguardian.com