The benefits of being RBA boss: How Philip Lowe enjoys a $1M salary and some VERY generous perks while raising YOUR interest rates and making a series of WRONG predictions hurting everyday Aussies
- Reserve Bank of Australia governor Philip Lowe is paid $119,760 a year in super
- That made up 13 per cent of $924,434 base salary in the 2020-21 financial year
- RBA in August raised rates for the fourth straight month – steepest since 1994
- Dr Lowe this week changed his mind on inflation revising a recent June forecast
Australia’s most powerful banker in charge of setting interest rates receives $120,000-a-year in super as he inflicts the most severe pain on borrowers in three decades.
Reserve Bank governor Philip Lowe’s $1,076,209 remuneration makes him among an elite group of just half a dozen bureaucrats earning seven figures a year.
The economist who last year repeatedly promised interest rates would stay on hold at a record-low of 0.1 per cent – until 2024 ‘at the earliest’ – has this week changed his mind on inflation, revising a forecast he made just two months ago.
The central bank chief and his board on Tuesday raised the cash rate by yet another half a percentage point, marking the fourth monthly rate rise in a row.
His total package is significantly higher than the average Australian mortgage of $600,000, as borrowers cop the most severe mortgage increases since 1994.
Two of Australia’s big four banks – ANZ and Westpac – are now expecting the RBA to keep raising rates to a 10-year high of 3.35 per cent, up sharply from the new six-year high of 1.85 per cent.
Dr Lowe’s superannuation of $119,760 made up 13 per cent of his base salary of $924,434.
His employer superannuation contribution was significantly higher than the compulsory level of 9.5 per cent in the 2020-21 financial year, which has since increased to 10.5 per cent.
The retirement savings he made in one year was also higher than Australia’s average full-time salary of $90,917.
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Reserve Bank governor Philip Lowe’s $1,076,209 remuneration makes him among an elite group of just half a dozen bureaucrats earning seven figures a year
On top of that, Dr Lowe was entitled to $8,500 in benefits and ‘other allowances’ and $23,335 in long-service leave, the RBA’s annual report for 2021 showed.
The ‘other benefits and allowances’ entitlements cover car use like parking, gym membership and fringe benefits tax relief.
Despite those generous perks, Dr Lowe this week expressed concern about the spending habits of Australians, as inflation keeps soaring.
‘A key source of uncertainty continues to be the behaviour of household spending,’ he said.
The Reserve Bank Board Remuneration Committee determines the salary of Dr Lowe under the Reserve Bank Act of 1959 and meets twice a year.
An RBA spokeswoman pointed out Dr Lowe’s salary complied with independent Remuneration Tribunal terms.
Under the terms of his pay, Dr Lowe is required to attend 11 monthly board meetings a year.
Dr Lowe, who earns double Prime Minister Anthony Albanese’s $549,250 salary, last year repeatedly promised the RBA would leave the cash rate on hold at a record-low of 0.1 per cent until 2024 ‘at the earliest’.
As recently as October, he argued wages needed to rise before the cash rate rose, even though inflation in June last year was already growing by 3.8 per cent – an annual level well above the RBA’s 2 to 3 per cent target.
Warwick McKibbin, who served on the RBA board from 2001 to 2011, said the Reserve Bank had made a mistake in delaying rate increases last year.
‘I was already arguing for rates to be rising by the middle of last year,’ he told Daily Mail Australia.

Australia’s most powerful banker in charge of setting interest rates receives $120,000-a-year in super as he inflicts the most severe pain on borrowers in three decades
‘To make a statement that he had to wait for wages to change, if there was a war in Ukraine, that would cause inflation as well – of course, that’s not on the horizon until it happens.
‘So the uncertainty just isn’t communicated well enough.’
A bigger inflation surge, following Russia’s February invasion of Ukraine, saw the Reserve Bank raise rates in May, June, July and again in August by another 0.5 percentage points.
The 1.75 percentage point increase this year has been the steepest since 1994.
The cash rate has also increased by half a percentage point for three straight months for the first time since the RBA began publishing a target cash rate in 1990.

His total package is significantly higher than the average Australian mortgage of $600,000. Dr Lowe’s superannuation of $119,760 made up 13 per cent of his base salary of $924,434
Dr Lowe released a statement explaining the board he chairs had a ‘high priority’ of getting inflation back within the RBA’s two to three per cent target.
A borrower with an average $600,000 mortgage now faces another $169 increase in their monthly mortgage repayments following the latest rate rise.
This will take typical repayments on a Commonwealth Bank loan to $2,827 from $2,658.
CBA and ANZ announced on Thursday they would match the RBA’s latest rate increase, with their variable rates going up on August 12.
All of Australia’s big four banks are expecting another 50 basis point rate rise in September, after inflation in the year to June surged by 6.1 per cent – the steepest increase in 21 years.
When the one-off effect of the GST was removed, this was the biggest rise since 1990.
The Reserve Bank has adjusted its forecasts to have inflation peaking at a 32-year high of 7.75 per cent in 2022, matching Treasury’s predictions published last week.
As recently as June 14, Dr Lowe told former ABC 7.30 host Leigh Sales inflation would peak at 7 per cent this year.
‘At the moment it’s 5 per cent, and by the end of the year I expect inflation to get to 7 per cent,’ he said.

On top of that, Dr Lowe was entitled to $8,500 in benefits and ‘other allowances’ and $23,335 in long-service leave, the RBA’s annual report for 2021 showed
‘That’s a very high number and we need to be able to chart a course back to 2 to 3 per cent inflation.
‘I’m confident that we can do that, but it’s going to take time.
‘And with inflation being as high as it is and when interest rates are as low as they are, we felt it was important to take a decisive step to normalise monetary conditions and we did that at the last meeting.’
That interview with Sales occurred after the RBA in June raised the cash rate by 50 basis points, which was then the steepest monthly increase since February 2000.
Both the RBA and Treasury are expecting inflation to stay above the Reserve Bank’s 2 to 3 per cent target until 2024.
The ANZ back is forecasting a 3.35 per cent cash rate by November, reaching the highest level since October 2012.
Westpac is expecting that cash rate to be reached in February 2023.
For a borrower paying off $600,000, that will mean they would owe their bank $1,060 more a month than they did in May when the cash rate was still at a record-low of 0.1 per cent.

Warwick McKibbin, who served on the RBA board from 2001 to 2011, said the Reserve Bank had made a mistake in delaying rate increases last year
This Australian with a mortgage would owe $3,366 a month, up from $2,306.
The Commonwealth Bank, Australia’s biggest home lender, is forecasting a 2.6 per cent cash rate by November while NAB is expecting a 2.85 per cent cash rate by Melbourne Cup Day.
The Australian Securities Exchange’s 30-day interbank futures market is predicting a 3.2 per cent cash rate by February.
Professor McKibbin, the director of the Australian National University’s Centre for Applied Macroeconomic Analysis, said it was unfair to blame Dr Lowe for not forecasting surprise supply shocks when he last year made conditional promises to keep the cash rate on hold.
‘The reason that they got it wrong wasn’t because, necessarily, they had the wrong framework,’ he said.
‘It was because some pretty big shocks came along like the war in Ukraine which really propelled the supply side shocks in the system.
‘Back in October, no one would have known what the world would be like in 2022.’