As the old tongue-in-cheek saying goes, Australia is a lucky country. We've fared better during recessions and crises (GFC, Covid) than most other countries. The population of around 26 million remains wealthy on a global scale, well-educated, and healthy. The currency is fairly stable, a testament to the Reserve Bank and Australia's standing on the global stage.

However, Australia is not a bubble and is not immune to other challenges of advanced economies - an ageing population, a declining birth rate, and an increasing reliance on personal income tax as government revenue, to name a few.


Need somewhere to store cash and earn interest? The table below features savings accounts with some of the highest interest rates on the market.

Update resultsUpdate
BankSavings AccountBase Interest Rate Max Interest Rate Total Interest Earned Introductory Term Minimum Amount Maximum Amount Minimum Monthly Deposit Minimum Opening Deposit ATM Access Joint Application TagsFeaturesLinkCompare
4.40% p.a.
5.75% p.a.
Intro rate for 4 months
then 4.40% p.a.
$289
4 months
$0
$250,000
$0
$0
Featured
  • Bonus rate for the first 4 months from account opening
  • No account keeping fees
  • No minimum balance
Bonus rate of 5.50%
Rate varies on savings amount.
5.50% p.a.
$276
$0
$100,000
$0
$0
Featured *Rate varies on savings amount
  • Deposit $500 per month to get bonus interest
  • 5.50% p.a. available on total savings up to $100k.
  • 5.00% p.a. applies to savings between $100k-250K.
  • Tiered bonus rates apply. (TMDs at ubank.com.au)
4.75% p.a.
5.35% p.a.
Intro rate for 4 months
then 4.75% p.a.
$269
4 months
$0
$249,999
$0
$0
Featured
  • A high-interest online savings account with no monthly fees, easy withdrawals and award-winning digital banking
  • No withdrawal notice periods or interest rate penalties
  • Save up to 10% on eGift cards at over 50 retailers with Macquarie Marketplace
2.85% p.a.
3.55% p.a.
Intro rate for 4 months
then 2.85% p.a.
$178
4 months
$0
$49,999
$0
$0
Featured
  • For deposit amounts $0 - $49,999
  • New ING personal savings customers receive an introductory bonus 0.50% p.a. variable kick starter rate for the first 4 months on balances up to $500,000.
  • Reverts to variable ongoing rate. T&Cs apply.
Important Information and Comparison Rate Warning

All products with a link to a product provider’s website have a commercial marketing relationship between us and these providers. These products may appear prominently and first within the search tables regardless of their attributes and may include products marked as promoted, featured or sponsored. The link to a product provider’s website will allow you to get more information or apply for the product. By de-selecting “Show online partners only” additional non-commercialised products may be displayed and re-sorted at the top of the table. For more information on how we’ve selected these “Sponsored”, “Featured” and “Promoted” products, the products we compare, how we make money, and other important information about our service, please click here. Rates correct as of . View disclaimer.

Important Information and Comparison Rate Warning

1. Australian Population

Australia has enjoyed strong population growth over the past 20 years. However the rate of growth slowed through the pandemic as international borders were largely closed, but quickly ramped back up in 2023 as more than 500,000 immigrants arrived. ABS data indicates Australia at long last cracked a population of 26 million at the end of September 2022, and is flirting with a population of 27 million as of 2024.

2. GDP Growth

GDP or Gross Domestic Product is the sum total of all that Australia produces. The common definition of a recession is two consecutive quarters of negative GDP growth. Australia avoided a recession during the Global Financial Crisis of 2007-2009, but wasn't so lucky in Covid.

More recently, GDP growth has been meagre through the back half of 2023 and into 2024. On a per-capita basis, we have endured the worst per-capita recession on-record in more than 50 years, with five consecutive quarters of negative GDP growth per capita. This is as a result of weak growth combined with record immigration levels.

3. Unemployment Rate

Unemployment tracked sharply upwards during the pandemic to rates not seen in many years. The unemployment rate is a calculation based on those who can work presently looking for work. Even if you work one hour per week, that’s considered employed. This is an international definition for consistent measurements across countries. This is why looking at the underemployment rate is also important - those who are in work but aren’t getting as many hours as they’d like.

4. Participation Rate

The participation rate is the percentage of the civilian population aged 15+ that either works or is willing to work, so it includes both the employed and the unemployed. Retirees and people permanently unable to work are considered non-participants. A participation rate over the low-60 per cent range is considered pretty line-ball among developed countries. Recently, Australia has enjoyed a higher participation rate than other leading countries such as the UK and US. However this may come at the expense of wages growth, as there are theoretically more people competing for the same number of jobs.

5. Inflation Rate (CPI growth)

The Consumer Price Index (CPI) measures the price of a defined basket of goods. This is a weighted index and changes over time, particularly for technology goods. The inflation rate is the percentage growth of this index over time, typically expressed in annual and quarterly growth rates.

Inflation in the early 2020s was at near record lows, and headline rates even experienced deflation (negative CPI growth) as the cost of childcare plunged with the government’s temporary subsidy. High consumer demand (thanks to low interest rates and government stimulus) mixed with global supply shortages have generally caused inflation to rise sharply through late 2021 and through 2023.

6. Wages Growth

Wages growth is released quarterly. Wages have largely been flat over the past couple of decades, however as the pandemic becomes endemic, wages are picking up. However, with inflation also running hot, workers are realistically experiencing falling real incomes if their wage growth does not outpace this. Wages growth minus inflation is often called real wages growth.

7. RBA Cash Rate Target

The Reserve Bank’s cash rate target is the interest rate on which most financial products' interest rates are based. Over the past 30 years, the RBA’s cash rate target has generally been trending down. While we never saw negative rates like in parts of Europe, various extra stimulus by the RBA saw the overnight rate track close to zero. The target hit a record low of 0.10% in November 2020.

The RBA’s remit is to promote financial stability in Australia. The cash rate can affect both wages growth and inflation. If the economy is running too hot, the RBA may want to increase the cash rate to subdue demand, and vice versa.

8. Household Savings Ratio

Data on the household savings ratio is released quarterly alongside GDP stats. The household savings ratio is calculated by dividing household net saving (household net disposable income less household final consumption expenditure) by household net disposable income.

During the pandemic the ratio increased to near 50 year highs as lockdowns prevented many people from spending money. Many household members managed to keep their jobs, while generous stimulus payments meant people could hoard large sums of money. However that is quickly unwinding with increases to the RBA cash rate heightening mortgage payments while post-pandemic spending remains elevated, somewhat due to pent-up demand and inflation.

Photo by Joshua Hoehne on Unsplash





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