IMF warns of Australian inflation worry

Australia’s outlook is steady on growth but sticky on inflation, as the IMF flags a wider global risk if AI-driven sharemarket gains unwind.

20 January 2026

Supermarket checkout with groceries. Credit: AAP

Key points

  • IMF kept Australia GDP forecasts at 2.1% this year and 2.2% in 2027. 
  • Inflation is expected to stay above the RBA’s 2–3% band for longer. 
  • IMF warns an AI “bubble” bursting could trigger a broader sharemarket correction led by a few tech giants.

Australia is set for longer, higher inflation, an influential global economic body has reported, as it warns of a "prolonged correction" if the AI bubble bursts.

The International Monetary Fund's forecast for Australia's economic growth was unchanged in its latest World Economic Outlook update, released on Monday night.

GDP, inflation set to grow

The Brussels-based organisation still expects Australia's gross domestic product to grow by 2.1 per cent this calendar year and 2.2 per cent in 2027, but noted it is "projected to see some drawn-out persistence in above-target inflation".

Australia's headline inflation rate is currently 3.4 per cent - above the Reserve Bank's 2 to 3 per cent target band - and Treasury estimates it will remain above target until at least June.

"The global economy is incredibly uncertain, with persistently high inflation still a challenge for many countries around the world, and that's reflected in this report," Treasurer Jim Chalmers said.

Growth to remain resilient

Despite the challenges of persistent inflation, global growth has shown notable resilience to US President Donald Trump's tariffs, IMF economists Tobias Adrian and Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas said.

But that resilience could be put to the test if AI optimism is pierced by disappointing outcomes, "and a more prolonged correction in stock market valuations - which have increasingly been lifted by only a few technology firms - could ensue".

That would trigger a costly reallocation of capital and labour and a decline in business dynamism, the report said.

Negative wealth effects would weigh on private consumption and investment. Spillovers would radiate to the rest of the world through tighter global financial conditions.

Governments on watch for volatility

"Volatility in the global economy was a key feature of my discussions with international counterparts last week and it will continue to weigh heavily on Australia in the months and years ahead," Dr Chalmers said.

"These global challenges put a premium on the type of responsible economic management that has been a hallmark of the Albanese government from day one."

Lower energy costs would help boost investment in critical minerals, while more needed to be done to direct exports towards the fast-growing Indian and Southeast Asian economies, he said.

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