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New Roy Morgan study identifies a major 'Confidence Gap’ - Employed vs. Unemployed
and finds Western Australians most confident and Tasmanians least confident


Article No. 937 - This monthly Roy Morgan Consumer Confidence rating is based on 4,180 face-to-face interviews conducted Australia-wide with men and women aged 14 and over during the month of August 2009.: September 17, 2009

Click here to purchase the latest detailed "Roy Morgan Consumer Confidence Monthly Report"

For the month of August, Western Australians top the list for Consumer Confidence, at 125.4 — 4.1 points higher than the national average, while Tasmanians are the least confident at 115.0 — 6.4 points lower than the national average according to a new Roy Morgan Detailed Report on Consumer Confidence.

Second most confident State is NSW at 122.6, ahead of Victoria at 120.6, Queensland at 119.7 and South Australia at 119.6.

Source: Roy Morgan Research: 4,180 face-to-face interviews conducted with Australians aged 14+ Australia-wide during the month of August 2009.

 

Michele Levine says:

“Consumer Confidence is the key indicator of how people are likely to respond to events in terms of their expenditure and its role in generating economic activity.

“We have long known that Consumer Confidence, or how people respond to events such as share market crashes, petrol price increases, interest rate increases and other economic threats, is more important than the events themselves, and that different people or groups of people are affected and respond differently.

“Since October 2008 Roy Morgan Research has been surveying Consumer Confidence every week (previously monthly). This means as well as having a very quick read on Consumer Confidence, there is enough data generated on a monthly basis (over 4,000 interviews) to enable detailed analysis of subgroups.

“The first in a series of detailed monthly reports shows clearly the ‘gap’ in consumer confidence between employed and unemployed Australians — with full time employed people at 128.4 compared to 110.0 among those looking for work, and substantial differences by age — with younger people generally more confident than older people, and more affluent people more confident than those who are less affluent.

“The Roy Morgan Report also provides time series data and shows for instance that after the global financial crisis the largest decrease in Consumer Confidence was among those in the top socio economic quintile — so that in the last Quarter on 2008 there was very little difference in the confidence of Australians based on their socio-economic situation.”

 

This monthly Roy Morgan Consumer Confidence rating is based on 4,180 face-to-face interviews conducted Australia-wide with men and women aged 14 and over during the month of August 2009.

The latest Roy Morgan Consumer Confidence Monthly Report is now available on the Roy Morgan Online Store.
http://www.roymorganonlinestore.com/Browse/Australia/Australia-Morgan-Poll/Consumer-Confidence.aspx

The latest Roy Morgan Consumer Confidence Monthly Report provides detailed demographic breakdowns for Age, Sex, State, Region (Capital Cities/ Country), Generations, Lifecycle, Socio-Economic Scale, Work Status, Occupation, Home Ownership, Voting Intention, Roy Morgan Value Segments and more.

 

For further information:

Gary Morgan:         Office + 61 3 9224 5213        Mobile + 61 411 129 094

Michele Levine:       Office + 61 3 9224 5215        Mobile + 61 411 129 093

Margin of Error

The margin of error to be allowed for in any estimate depends mainly on the number of interviews on which it is based. The following table gives indications of the likely range within which estimates would be 95% likely to fall, expressed as the number of percentage points above or below the actual estimate. The figures are approximate and for general guidance only, and assume a simple random sample.  Allowance for design effects (such as stratification and weighting) should be made as appropriate.

Sample Size

Percentage Estimate

 

40%-60%

25% or 75%

10% or 90%

5% or 95%

1,000

±3.2

±2.7

±1.9

±1.4

4,000

±1.5

±1.3

±0.9

±0.7

 

2009 Weekly Roy Morgan Consumer Confidence Rating Figures

 

January

February

March

April

3/4

10/11

17/18

24/25 31/1 7/8 14/15 21/22 28/1

7/8

14/15

21/22

4/5

11/12

18/19

25/26

104.1

107.2 101.1 92.0 93.4 94.1 96.2 95.8 95.2 97.3 93.5 97.2 102.6 103.4 102.6

 99.6

 

January (Avg. - 1973 - 2009)

February (Avg. - 1973 - 2009)

March (Avg. - 1973 - 2009)

April (Avg. - 1973 - 2009)

111.2

111.1

108.6

107.8

 

May

June

July

August

2/3

9/10

16/17

23/24

30/31

6/7

13/14

20/21

4/5

11/12

18/19 25/26

1/2

8/9

15/16

22/23

29/30

97.3 104.5 101.2 104.2 104.7 110.8 108.8 113.9 113.5 114.0 114.4 117.8 116.2 123.0 122.6 123.7 121.9
 

May (Avg. - 1973 - 2009)

June (Avg. - 1973 - 2009)

July (Avg. - 1973 - 2009)

August (Avg. - 1973 - 2009)

108.5

105.5

105.2

108.8

 

September

October

November

December

5/6

12/13

19/20

3/4

10/11

17/18

24/25

31/1

7/8

14/15

21/22

28/29

5/6

12/13

19/20

123.5 121.2                          
       

September (Avg. - 1973 - 2009)

October (Avg. - 1973 - 2008)

November (Avg. - 1973 - 2008)

December (Avg. - 1973 - 2008)

105.4

106.5

104.9

106.0

 

Weekly Roy Morgan Consumer Confidence 2009 Average:

106.6

 

Overall Roy Morgan Consumer Confidence Average (1973 — 2009):

107.5

 

 

1973 - 2009 Monthly Roy Morgan Consumer Confidence Rating Figures

Year

Jan

Feb

Mar

Apr

May

Jun

Jul

Aug

Sep

Oct

Nov

Dec

Yearly
Average

1973

 

 

119.2

 

 

117.0

 

 

108.4

 

 

103.8

112.1

1974

 

 

103.2

 

 

95.6

 

 

90.6

 

 

92.2

95.4

1975

 

 

114.0

 

 

104.2

 

 

100.8

 

 

103.0

105.5

1976

113.6

 

107.0

110.2

 

107.0

105.6

 

108.0

108.8

101.2

 

107.7

1977

104.2

 

98.6

101.6

 

103.8

99.4

 

105.0

104.4

109.4

 

103.3

1978

119.2

 

114.8

110.8

 

109.6

101.6

 

91.2

104.4

103.6

 

106.9

1979

110.2

 

106.2

109.4

 

92.6

90.2

 

99.4

97.6

98.8

 

100.6

1980

98.8

 

100.8

97.4

 

101.6

98.2

 

104.4

109.8

106.4

 

102.2

1981

113.4

 

111.8

101.8

 

100.8

95.0

 

92.4

98.2

98.0

 

101.4

1982

92.4

 

91.8

93.6

 

92.2

80.4

 

84.6

81.2

75.2

 

86.4

1983

87.8

 

97.4

96.0

 

95.4

98.2

 

100.6

106.4

113.2

 

99.4

1984

124.6

 

120.8

120.8

 

115.6

116.6

 

118.2

117.8

114.6

 

118.6

1985

114.8

 

110.2

99.4

 

98.0

100.8

 

106.8

107.8

94.8

 

104.1

1986

105.4

 

103.8

94.6

94.8

91.6

79.8

79.8

78.8

89.8

85.6

88.8

90.3

1987

90.4

88.0

86.8

90.8

91.8

93.4

98.6

96.4

94.8

104.0

87.2

93.0

92.9

1988

100.4

98.8

103.6

106.2

104.0

104.0

107.6

108.2

112.4

108.8

104.2

105.8

105.3

1989

105.0

94.6

88.4

88.4

87.4

72.8

73.0

78.8

82.0

79.0

81.0

80.0

84.2

1990

101.6

95.6

83.4

88.3

84.7

83.1

79.6

83.9

75.6

71.4

73.1

71.3

82.6

1991

78.5

85.4

85.0

87.2

87.7

88.6

98.1

95.2

93.3

95.8

91.1

83.0

89.1

1992

93.6

95.9

96.2

105.4

101.6

97.7

95.4

96.9

96.8

101.2

93.6

92.9

97.3

1993

100.8

100.4

105.9

102.3

102.2

96.2

96.6

100.8

90.2

103.5

111.9

108.5

101.6

1994

120.5

127.5

125.7

127.7

125.2

128.0

127.6

123.8

123.6

124.6

118.1

118.0

124.2

1995

112.3

112.4

113.9

114.7

112.0

112.4

110.2

115.5

111.7

116.2

114.3

111.9

113.1

1996

116.7

119.1

123.7

121.5

118.8

117.8

112.3

114.4

113.2

111.3

113.4

113.2

116.3

1997

119.2

115.1

116.2

112.5

114.2

115.5

110.7

111.7

112.4

112.8

111.6

110.6

113.5

1998

117.8

116.0

114.9

110.2

114.4

109.8

107.6

111.1

111.0

113.9

114.2

114.7

112.8

1999

122.1

121.8

122.5

119.6

122.5

122.2

118.2

122.8

122.3

119.6

122.8

122.2

121.6

2000

122.3

119.9

112.9

116.6

112.0

108.7

114.8

119.1

115.8

115.6

110.3

112.3

115.0

2001

119.9

109.5

106.2

103.6

107.4

108.6

115.3

116.4

120.9*

106.8

109.4

113.3

111.4

2002

124.8

123.0

122.3

123.2

124.0

116.4

123.4

119.9

122.1

117.2

114.0

109.6

120.0

2003

122.5

113.4

109.9

120.8

127.0

122.4

123.2

122.4

123.2

121.2

124.2

120.4

120.9

2004 126.0 126.8 130.4 124.4 125.0 125.6 128.9

127.6

126

128.9

124.8 125.5

126.7

2005 133.2 132.0 121.5 119.4 119.5 118.8 116.8

120.6

114.3

105.4

110.6 117.7

119.2

2006 124.3

124.5

124.4 120.1 106.8 115.1 118.1

103.7^

108.6

115.8

111.5 117.4

115.9

2007 123.9 123.8 120.7 124.3 122.5 122.3 126.8

125.2

118.2

126.2

124.9 126.8

123.8

Year

Jan

Feb

Mar

Apr

May

Jun

Jul

Aug

Sep

Oct

Nov

Dec

Yearly

Average

2008 118.6 115.8 109.5 100.1 97.1 90.7 92.0 94.7 101.2 90.4 93.1 99.8

100.2

2009 101.1 94.9 95.8 102.0 101.8 109.6 114.9 121.4 122.2?       107.1

* The Roy Morgan Consumer Confidence Rating for September 15/16, 2001, conducted by telephone, was 102.3.

^ 84 of the 107 Western Australian interviews were conducted by telephone on August 9/10 due to a recent Southern WA Cyclone

#The Roy Morgan Consumer Confidence Rating for August 2008 includes interviewing on August 2/3 (90.1) & 30/31 (99.3).

Since October 2008, the Roy Morgan Consumer Confidence Rating has been conducted on a weekly basis,

with the monthly Roy Morgan Consumer Confidence Rating compiled from results on all four weekends.

?The latest monthly figure in this table is an indicative figure, the average of the completed weeks so far in the latest month.

Results for the weekly Roy Morgan Consumer Confidence Rating*
for the component questions over the more recent surveys are as follows:

2009 (July - September) - Weekly

July August September
4/5 11/12 18/19 25/26 1/2 8/9 15/16 22/23 29/30 5/6 12/13 19/20

Interviews

1,466 1,018 1,130 1,008 1,155 1,050 1,045 1,035 1,050 928 1,095  

Q1 Would you say you and your family are better-off financially or worse off than you were at this time last year?

Over the past year

better off

26 27 25 25 25 30 29 27 30 29 30  

 

worse off

38 34 35 33 33 31 29 31 33 30 31  

QUESTION 1 difference

-12 -7 -10 -8 -8 -1 0 -4 -3 -1 -1  

Q2 This time next year, do you and your family expect to be better-off financially or worse off than you are now?

 

better off

42 40 41 43 41 46 43 42 42 44 41  

 

worse off

16 13 15 13 13 10 11 13 13 12 13  

QUESTION 2 difference

26 27 26 30 28 36 32 29 29 32 28  

Q3 Thinking of economic conditions in Australia as a whole. In the next 12 months, do you expect we'll
have good times financially, bad times or some good and some bad?

 

good times

29 25 28 31 32 36 39 40 40 43 39  

 

bad times

34 31 30 29 24 23 23 22 24 20 20  

QUESTION 3 difference

-54 -6 -2 2 8 13 16 18 16 23 19  

Q4 Looking ahead, what would you say is more likely, that in Australia as a whole, we'll have continuous good times
during the next five years of so - or we'll have bad times - or some good and some bad?

 

good times

47 43 45 46 44 50 51 55 52 46 48  

 

bad times

15 15 13 13 13 11 12 10 12 11 12  

QUESTION 4 difference

32 28 32 33 31 39 39 45 40 35 36  

Q5 Generally, do you think now is a good time - or a bad time - for people to buy major household items?

 

good time to buy

52 51 49 54 47 49 51 51 52 50 48  

 

bad time to buy

24 23 24 22 24 21 24 21 24 22 23  

QUESTION 5 difference

28 28 25 32 23 28 27 30 28 28 25  

 

Weekly Roy Morgan Consumer Confidence Rating

113.5 114.0 114.4 117.8 116.2 123.0 122.6 123.7 121.9 123.5 121.2  

 

* The Roy Morgan Consumer Confidence Rating is 100.0 plus the simple unweighted average of the difference between the percentage of respondents who give a favourable and those who give unfavourable answers to five key questions.

Results for the weekly Roy Morgan Consumer Confidence Rating*
for the component questions over the more recent surveys are as follows:

2009 (April - June) - Weekly

April May June
4/5 11/12 18/19

25/26

2/3

9/10

16/17

23/24

30/31

6/7

13/14

20/21

Interviews

1,486 987 1,145 1,051 1,106 1,032 1,122 1,065 1,082 1,083 1,010 997

Q1 Would you say you and your family are better-off financially or worse off than you were at this time last year?

Over the past year

better off

30 27 25 29 25 26 25 25 27 26 24 25

 

worse off

32 33 37 35 35 35 34 35 35 34 36 32

QUESTION 1 difference

-2 -6 -12 -6 -10 -9 -9 -10 -8 -8 -12 -7

Q2 This time next year, do you and your family expect to be better-off financially or worse off than you are now?

 

better off

39 37 38 33 33 38 36 38 38 40 39 39

 

worse off

16 17 16 20 22 17 19 18 19 15 18 15

QUESTION 2 difference

23 20 22 13 11 21 17 20 19 25 21 24

Q3 Thinking of economic conditions in Australia as a whole. In the next 12 months, do you expect we'll
have good times financially, bad times or some good and some bad?

 

good times

15 17 18 15 12 19 16 19 19 22 24 27

 

bad times

55 52 50 53 58 46 51 45 48 34 43 31

QUESTION 3 difference

-40 -35 -32 -38 -46 -27 -35 -26 -29 -12 -19 -4

Q4 Looking ahead, what would you say is more likely, that in Australia as a whole, we'll have continuous good times
during the next five years of so - or we'll have bad times - or some good and some bad?

 

good times

35 37 39 35 35 39 36 39 38 40 47 44

 

bad times

21 17 18 21 21 19 22 19 20 16 18 13

QUESTION 4 difference

14 20 21 14 14 20 14 20 18 24 29 31

Q5 Generally, do you think now is a good time - or a bad time - for people to buy major household items?

 

good time to buy

46 45 44 45 46 46 47 45 49 49 51 50

 

bad time to buy

27 28 29 30 29 28 28 27 25 24 27 25

QUESTION 5 difference

19 17 15 15 17 18 19 18 24 25 24 25

 

Weekly Roy Morgan Consumer Confidence Rating

102.6 103.4 102.6 99.6 97.3 104.5 101.2 104.2 104.7 110.8 108.8 113.9

 

* The Roy Morgan Consumer Confidence Rating is 100.0 plus the simple unweighted average of the difference between the percentage of respondents who give a favourable and those who give unfavourable answers to five key questions.

Results for the weekly Roy Morgan Consumer Confidence Rating*
for the component questions over the more recent surveys are as follows:

2009 (January - March) - Weekly

Jan

Feb

Mar

3/4 10/11 17/18 24/25 31/1(Feb) 7/8 14/15 21/22 28/1(Mar) 7/8 14/15 21/22

Interviews

981 1,053 1,023 1,129 927 993 916 1,145 1,016 1,133 1,046 1,042

Q1 Would you say you and your family are better-off financially or worse off than you were at this time last year?

Over the past year

better off

28 33 29 26 26 30 25 26 25 28 26 27

 

worse off

31 32 34 37 37 36 37 37 37 34 37 36

QUESTION 1 difference

-3 1 -5 -11 -11 -6 -12 -11 -12 -6 -11 -9

Q2 This time next year, do you and your family expect to be better-off financially or worse off than you are now?

 

better off

36 42 36 32 36 37 32 34 33 34 32 32

 

worse off

20 17 19 25 21 21 21 21 22 19 23 21

QUESTION 2 difference

16 25 17 7 15 16 11 13 11 15 9 11

Q3 Thinking of economic conditions in Australia as a whole. In the next 12 months, do you expect we'll
have good times financially, bad times or some good and some bad?

 

good times

17 20 15 13 11 11 13 13 13 12 12 16

 

bad times

48 47 51 61 60 62 54 54 59 57 60 56

QUESTION 3 difference

-31 -27 -36 -48 -49 -51 -41 -41 -46 -45 -48 -40

Q4 Looking ahead, what would you say is more likely, that in Australia as a whole, we'll have continuous good times
during the next five years of so - or we'll have bad times - or some good and some bad?

 

good times

35 37 32 28 29 28 32 30 31 33 32 33

 

bad times

19 20 22 27 25 27 26 26 24 23 27 22

QUESTION 4 difference

16 17 10 1 4 1 6 4 7 10 5 11

Q5 Generally, do you think now is a good time - or a bad time - for people to buy major household items?

 

good time to buy

48 48 45 43 43 43 46 43 45 44 44 44

 

bad time to buy

25 29 26 33 35 32 30 30 30 31 31 31

QUESTION 5 difference

23 19 19 10 8 11 16 13 15 13 13 13

 

Weekly Roy Morgan Consumer Confidence Rating

104.1 107.2 101.1 92.0 93.4 94.1 96.2 95.8 95.2 97.3 93.5 97.2

 

* The Roy Morgan Consumer Confidence Rating is 100.0 plus the simple unweighted average of the difference between the percentage of respondents who give a favourable and those who give unfavourable answers to five key questions.

Results for the weekly Roy Morgan Consumer Confidence Rating*
for the component questions over the more recent surveys are as follows:

2008 (October - December) - Weekly

Oct

Nov

Dec

4/5 11/12 18/19 25/26 1/2 8/9 15/16 22/23 29/30 6/7 13/14 20/21

Interviews

1,183 981 1,064 1,072 1,060 1,100 1,045 989 1,140 1,109 1,016 988

Q1 Would you say you and your family are better-off financially or worse off than you were at this time last year?

Over the past year

better off

25 26 27 25 26 28 23 26 27 27 29 31

 

worse off

38 41 37 42 40 36 37 37 36 36 35 34

QUESTION 1 difference

-13 -15 -10 -17 -14 -8 -14 -11 -9 -9 -6 -3

Q2 This time next year, do you and your family expect to be better-off financially or worse off than you are now?

 

better off

38 34 34 32 34 37 32 37 36 34 38 37

 

worse off

22 23 24 27 25 20 23 23 20 20 19 20

QUESTION 2 difference

16 11 10 5 9 17 9 14 16 14 19 17

Q3 Thinking of economic conditions in Australia as a whole. In the next 12 months, do you expect we'll
have good times financially, bad times or some good and some bad?

 

good times

19 14 15 14 14 19 16 17 18 18 16 16

 

bad times

44 49 48 54 51 49 50 49 47 46 46 48

QUESTION 3 difference

-25 -35 -33 -40 -37 -33 -34 -32 -29 -28 -30 -32

Q4 Looking ahead, what would you say is more likely, that in Australia as a whole, we'll have continuous good times
during the next five years of so - or we'll have bad times - or some good and some bad?

 

good times

28 28 27 28 30 30 26 30 31 29 30 33

 

bad times

22 26 26 28 25 21 26 22 23 22 22 19

QUESTION 4 difference

6 2 1 0 5 9 0 8 8 7 8 14

Q5 Generally, do you think now is a good time - or a bad time - for people to buy major household items?

 

good time to buy

29 26 30 28 31 33 33 33 39 40 43 46

 

bad time to buy

40 43 45 40 43 39 37 37 36 33 34 26

QUESTION 5 difference

-11 -17 -15 -12 -12 -6 -4 -4 3 7 9 20

 

Weekly Roy Morgan Consumer Confidence Rating

94.2 89.5 90.7 87.3 90.3 95.8 91.2 94.9 97.8 98.4 99.9 103.0

 

* The Roy Morgan Consumer Confidence Rating is 100.0 plus the simple unweighted average of the difference between the percentage of respondents who give a favourable and those who give unfavourable answers to five key questions.

Results for the Roy Morgan Consumer Confidence Rating*
for the component questions over the more recent surveys are as follows:

2008 (January - September) - Monthly

Jan

Feb

Mar

Apr

May

June

July

Aug

Sep

2/3 30/31

Interviews

1,027 994 1,176 1,121 1,186 1,081 999 1,075 1,042 1,057

Q1 Would you say you and your family are better-off financially or worse off than you were at this time last year?

Over the past year

better off

33 35 30 29 27 22 28 25 27 28

 

worse off

25 25 30 34 35 45 40 43 39 39

QUESTION 1 difference

8 10 0 -5 -8 -23 -12 -18 -12 -11

Q2 This time next year, do you and your family expect to be better-off financially or worse off than you are now?

 

better off

39 40 39 37 32 31 35 35 36 38

 

worse off

16 17 17 22 27 31 29 25 22 22

QUESTION 2 difference

23 23 22 15 5 0 6 10 14 16

Q3 Thinking of economic conditions in Australia as a whole. In the next 12 months, do you expect we'll
have good times financially, bad times or some good and some bad?

 

good times

38 36 32 25 26 22 19 18 24 25

 

bad times

25 30 30 37 39 39 48 48 37 38

QUESTION 3 difference

13 6 2 -12 -13 -17 -29 -30 -13 -13

Q4 Looking ahead, what would you say is more likely, that in Australia as a whole, we'll have continuous good times
during the next five years of so - or we'll have bad times - or some good and some bad?

 

good times

35 37 33 29 29 26 26 25 31 30

 

bad times

18 20 20 24 26 26 33 28 23 21

QUESTION 4 difference

17 17 13 5 3 0 -7 -3 8 9

Q5 Generally, do you think now is a good time - or a bad time - for people to buy major household items?

 

good time to buy

52 46 39 33 34 33 36 32 32 35

 

bad time to buy

20 23 29 35 36 38 32 40 32 30

QUESTION 5 difference

32 23 10 -2 -2 -5 4 -8 0 5

 

Roy Morgan Consumer Confidence Rating

118.6 115.8 109.5 100.1 97.1 90.7 92.0 90.1 99.3 101.2

 

* The Roy Morgan Consumer Confidence Rating is 100.0 plus the simple unweighted average of the difference between the percentage of respondents who give a favourable and those who give unfavourable answers to five key questions.

Results for the Roy Morgan Consumer Confidence Rating*
for the component questions over the more recent surveys are as follows:

2007 (January - December) - Monthly

Jan

Feb

Mar

Apr

May

June

July

Aug

Sep

Oct

Nov

Dec

Interviews

1,077 1,251 1,115 1,150 1,215 1,016 937 929 1,053 1,084 1,077 1,006

Q1 Would you say you and your family are better-off financially or worse off than you were at this time last year?

Over the past year

better off

36 34 35 36 34 34 37 40 33 40 37 38

 

worse off

25 26 26 24 27 25 27 23 27 21 24 20

QUESTION 1 difference

11 8 9 12 7 9 10 17 6 19 13 18

Q2 This time next year, do you and your family expect to be better-off financially or worse off than you are now?

 

better off

41 46 39 42 41 39 44 44 39 45 42 44

 

worse off

16 15 15 13 14 16 14 13 15 12 12 12

QUESTION 2 difference

25 31 24 29 27 23 30 31 24 33 30 32

Q3 Thinking of economic conditions in Australia as a whole. In the next 12 months, do you expect we'll
have good times financially, bad times or some good and some bad?

 

good times

44 44 41 43 46 45 48 43 40 44 45 47

 

bad times

21 21 21 19 19 19 17 20 23 16 16 13

QUESTION 3 difference

23 23 20 24 27 26 31 23 17 28 29 34

Q4 Looking ahead, what would you say is more likely, that in Australia as a whole, we'll have continuous good times
during the next five years of so - or we'll have bad times - or some good and some bad?

 

good times

37 37 36 37 35 34 38 38 34 37 39 39

 

bad times

17 20 21 19 19 19 16 16 20 16 16 14

QUESTION 4 difference

20 17 15 18 16 15 22 22 14 21 23 25

Q5 Generally, do you think now is a good time - or a bad time - for people to buy major household items?

 

good time to buy

57 56 52 53 52 54 58 51 50 49 50 47

 

bad time to buy

17 16 16 15 17 16 17 18 20 19 21 22

QUESTION 5 difference

40 40 36 38 35 38 41 33 30 30 29 25

 

Roy Morgan Consumer Confidence Rating

123.9 123.8 120.7 124.3 122.5 122.3 126.8 125.2 118.2 126.2 124.9 126.8

 

* The Roy Morgan Consumer Confidence Rating is 100.0 plus the simple unweighted average of the difference between the percentage of respondents who give a favourable and those who give unfavourable answers to five key questions.


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