Stagflation (the toxic mix of high inflation and stagnant economic growth) is no longer just a 1970s textbook concept. In early 2026, some economists warned that stagflation “is happening” or may be a serious near-term risk for the economy.

What stagflation actually means

Stagflation occurs when an economy experiences these three factors at once:

  • slow or negative economic growth,
  • rising unemployment, and
  • persistently high (or rising) inflation.

This combination is especially painful because the usual policy fixes clash. Raising interest rates can fight inflation; however, it often crushes growth and jobs. Cutting rates to boost growth can, in turn, entrench or worsen inflation.

The term was coined in the 1960s by British politician Iain Macleod, who warned of “the worst of both worlds”. Today, that phrase feels uncomfortably relevant for Australia.

Australia's 2026 warning signs

Australia’s economy is currently showing several stagflation warning lights:
IndicatorStatus in early 2026Why it matters
Inflation (CPI)3.7% annual rateAbove the RBA’s 2-3% target, eroding household purchasing power
UnemploymentAround 3.4%Historically low, however economists warn it could rise if growth stalls further
Economic growthSlowing, with weak GDPGrowth has lost momentum, raising fears of stagnation

Professor Bob Gregory, a former RBA board member, says Australia may already be seeing the initial signs of stagflation and expects both inflation and unemployment to rise. Dr Martin Parkinson, former Treasury Secretary, doesn’t see full stagflation yet, however, warns that the risk is substantial.

What's driving the risk right now?

The current threat is largely supply side, not demand side:

Oil and fuel shock

Soaring petrol, diesel and jet fuel prices are lifting transport and delivery costs across the economy, pushing up prices for goods and services.

Global oil crisis

Escalating conflict in the Middle East, including tensions with Iran, is threatening oil and gas supplies, amplifying energy price volatility.

Little spare capacity

HSBC’s chief economist for Australia and NZ says Australia is ‘less well placed’ than many peers to cope with a stagflationary shock because inflation is already above target and the economy has little or no spare capacity.

Fiscal position

Some commentators describe the Australian economy as ‘hostage to the war’, and suggest stagflation may already be ‘baked in’, with the budget in a weaker fiscal shape than in previous periods.

This is different from the 1970s, when inflation was already around 10% before the first OPEC oil embargo and later hit 17.5%. Today’s inflation is much lower, however the risk is that it re-accelerates while growth stalls.

Why this matters for ordinary Australians

If stagflation takes hold, households and businesses face a triple threat:

Household budgets

Prices for food, fuel, utilities and services keep rising while wage growth lags, reducing real disposable income.

Mortgages and loans

If the RBA keeps rates high or hikes further to fight inflation, mortgage repayments stay elevated or increase, tightening household cash flows.

Jobs

Unemployment rises as businesses cut costs in response to higher input costs and weaker demand.

Savings

Inflation erodes the real value of cash savings and low yield deposits.

Investments

Traditional 60/40 portfolios (shares and bonds) can struggle when growth is weak and inflation is high.

Are we definitely in stagflation now?

Not all economists agree that Australia is already in full stagflation. Unemployment is still below 4.5%, historically low, suggesting we may see a recession rather than classic stagflation if growth turns negative. However, the risk is elevated and the conditions are aligning: stubborn inflation, slowing growth and a global energy shock that could push unemployment higher.

Looking for the full picture?

This article is the first in a two-part series. If you’re a borrower or business owner, you need to know:

– how stagflation could specifically affect your mortgage and cash flow,

– what loan structures may suit your circumstances when rates remain higher for longer, and

– how to stress test your budget in a stagflationary environment.

In Part 2, we look at each of these in detail and the practical steps worth considering now. In the meantime, feel free to reach out on 07 3356 6666 or at [email protected] if you’d like to talk through your own position.

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