SYDNEY, March 5 Reuters Australia39;s current account surplus rose sharply in the December quarter as iron ore and coal exports surged, a muchneeded boost to the economy that lessens the risk of recession.
Other data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics on Tuesday showed government spending also rose in the quarter, helping offset a steep drag from inventories.
ABS data from on Tuesday showed the current account surplus jumped to A11.8 billion 7.68 billion in the fourth quarter, from an upwardly revised A1.3 billion the previous quarter. That compared to forecasts of a A5.6 billion surplus.
The ABS said net exports driven by higher export prices and rising shipments of mining commodities would add 0.6 percentage points to gross domestic product GDP in the fourth quarter, when analysts had thought they would add only 0.2 percentage points.
Government spending also rose 0.4 in the quarter, which added 0.1 percentage point to GDP. The spending helped offset a sharp fall in mining inventories in the quarter, which looked to have shaved 1 percentage point off growth.
Coupled with solid capex data and a modest boost from public demand, GDP growth should be positive, albeit unspectacular in tomorrow39;s print, said Sean Langcake, head of macroeconomic forecasting for Oxford Economics Australia.
Figures for fourthquarter GDP are due on Wednesday. The median forecasts had pencilled in a subpar increase of 0.3, which would see annual growth slow to 1.4.
The slowdown…