$565 per month rise in payments since 2002

Newspapers this week have been telling us how much more we?ll be paying on our property loans compared with last month, thanks to the latest interest rate rise.

But a much more meaningful figure has been provided by The Courier-Mail in Brisbane: how much more the typical loan costs compared with 2002 - when the Reserve Bank first got the idea that if they put up interest rates, inflation would come down. It hasn?t worked, but six years and a dozen rate rises later they?re sticking steadfastly to their theory (one definition of madness is: when someone keeps making the same mistake but expecting a different result).

So, if you have a $300,000 mortgage, your payments in 2002 would have been $1,942. Now the repayments on the same loan are $2,507, thanks to all those interest rate rises.

That?s a $565 per month increase - almost $7,000 per year. Think what the average family could do with a spare $7,000.


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