The World
How global interest rates ripple into your supermarket bill
Central banks raising rates in Washington and Frankfurt can make groceries more expensive in Australia, through a chain of effects that is less obvious than it first appears.
The World
Central banks raising rates in Washington and Frankfurt can make groceries more expensive in Australia, through a chain of effects that is less obvious than it first appears.

When a central bank raises interest rates, the immediate effect is on borrowing costs: mortgages become more expensive, business loans cost more, and consumers have less to spend. But the effects do not stay inside national borders. Through exchange rates, commodity prices, shipping costs, and food supply chains, a rate decision in one country can change what families pay for bread and cooking oil on the other side of the world.
Capital moves across borders in search of the best return. When the United States Federal Reserve raises its benchmark interest rate, US dollar assets become more attractive relative to assets in other currencies. Money flows toward the dollar, pushing its value up relative to other currencies, including the Australian dollar. A stronger US dollar means that commodities priced in dollars, which includes most food staples traded globally, become more expensive for countries paying in other currencies.
For Australia, a weaker Australian dollar relative to the US dollar raises the cost of any imported food ingredient priced in dollars, even before it reaches a retailer. It also raises the cost of imported inputs to local food production, including fertiliser, machinery parts, and packaging.
Globally traded food commodities, including wheat, corn, soybeans, palm oil, and sugar, are priced in US dollars on international markets. When the dollar strengthens, these commodities become cheaper for American buyers but more expensive for everyone else. Countries that import a large share of their food staples feel this most acutely. Australia is a net food exporter overall, but it imports significant quantities of specific products and many of its agricultural inputs.
Higher interest rates also raise the borrowing costs for farmers, food processors, and retailers. When these costs rise, they are eventually passed through to shelf prices. The transmission is not immediate, often taking months, but it is consistent across countries because the underlying financing for food supply chains is largely denominated in US dollars.
The global food supply chain relies on shipping, and shipping companies borrow heavily to finance their fleets and operations. Higher global interest rates raise those financing costs, which eventually appear in freight rates. When it costs more to move a container of food from a farm to a supermarket, some of that cost reaches the consumer.
Australia's Reserve Bank sets its own interest rate independently, responding to domestic inflation and employment conditions. But because the Australian economy is deeply integrated into global financial and commodity markets, decisions made by the US Federal Reserve, the European Central Bank, and others create conditions that the Reserve Bank must factor into its own deliberations.
When global rates rise sharply, as they did in the early part of this decade, Australian consumers face a squeeze from multiple directions: their own mortgage costs rise as the Reserve Bank follows suit to manage inflation, while imported food and input costs also rise because of the exchange rate and commodity price effects described above.
No central bank makes decisions in isolation. A rate rise in Washington ripples outward through currency markets, commodity prices, and supply chain financing until it reaches, among many other places, the price of cooking oil and breakfast cereal in Australian supermarkets.
This article was compiled by AI and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.
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