Commonwealth Bank (CommBank) has released a series of updates underscoring Australia’s evolving economic and financial dynamics.
From rising household spending to strategic input on payment regulations and the tangible impact of educational content, these developments signal a nation steadily regaining its footing.
As of September 2025, these insights offer a multifaceted view of consumer resilience and institutional support.
Household spending showed encouraging signs of stabilization in August, according to CommBank’s Household Spending Insights (HSI) Index.
The index climbed 0.3% for the month, extending a streak of six consecutive gains and affirming that recovery is indeed taking hold after earlier hesitations.
Nine out of 12 categories posted increases, led by Utilities at +2.9%, driven by fluctuations in energy bills and the timing of rebates.
Communications and Digital followed with +1.0%, reflecting a broader shift toward experiential spending over goods.
Recreation, Education, and Household Services also rose modestly at +0.6% and +0.5%, respectively, while Hospitality and Health edged up. Only Insurance (-0.1%), Household Goods (-0.3%), and Food & Beverage Goods (-0.1%) dipped slightly.
Year-over-year, spending is up 5%, with standout performers like Communications and Digital (+10.6%), Utilities (+9.4%), and Recreation (+8.3%).
Transport lagged at -1.6%, weighed down by softer petrol prices. CommBank’s Head of Australian Economics, Belinda Allen, attributes this momentum to supportive tailwinds:
“We’ve now seen six months of solid growth, reinforcing our view that a consumer recovery is underway… The combination of growing incomes, a solid labour market, and lower interest rates is helping improve household sentiment.”
She points to recent GDP data highlighting consumer sector strength, bolstered by the Reserve Bank of Australia’s (RBA) three rate cuts this year amid easing inflation and lingering effects of 2024 tax cuts.
Weather played a role too—Sydney’s rainiest August in 27 years boosted food delivery but curbed cafe visits.
Looking ahead, Allen anticipates steady progress:
“We expect consumer spending and the broader economy to improve back to around the rate of potential economic growth in 2026,” with just one more RBA cut likely in November.
Shifting to the payments ecosystem, CommBank has weighed in on the RBA’s ongoing consultation on merchant card costs and surcharging, submitting a detailed 22-page response.
The bank backs the RBA’s proposal to ban surcharging on debit and credit cards, arguing it would alleviate burdens on small businesses by eliminating add-on fees that have proven hard to enforce.
Current regulations, overseen by the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission, are often skirted, diminishing their effectiveness as a price signal.
However, CommBank raises flags on proposed tweaks to interchange fees—the charges merchants pay to card issuers.
While aimed at cost reductions, these changes might not yield anticipated savings and could inadvertently favor offshore entities over local infrastructure.
“This could undermine the resilience of the domestic payments system,” the submission warns, especially amid global uncertainties.
As an alternative, CommBank proposes a balanced model that keeps interchange fees competitive internationally, targets aid to small businesses, and distributes economic impacts more equitably across the payments chain.
This approach aligns with national interests, preserving consumer choice, business viability, and systemic stability.
The bank pledges continued collaboration with the RBA and stakeholders to refine these reforms, ensuring a payments framework that serves all Australians.
Complementing these macro trends, CommBank’s educational initiative “The Brighter Side” is seemingly proving its worth in fostering personal financial health.
Season two has launched, capitalizing on season one’s success where 81% of viewers—over 1.5 million people—took concrete actions to enhance their wellbeing.
Notably, 87% started budgeting, 90% reviewed finances, and 84% experimented with show-inspired recipes.
Hosted by Georgie Tunny, the series blends insights, everyday stories, and expert advice.
Episodes explore budgeting hacks with CommBank’s Jess Irvine, affordable cooking via Chef Adam Liaw (emphasizing bulk buys and leftovers to slash grocery bills by up to 20%), resilient small business tales from Narelda Jacobs OAM, and scam vigilance with James Roberts.
Viewers report cutting dining out (66%), clothing buys (60%), and finding meal-prep savings (57%).
With only 52% of Australians feeling confident about financial goals, the show demystifies money management, making it “simple, accessible, and fun.”
As food emerges as a prime savings avenue—skipping one weekly shop could free 20% of budgets—”The Brighter Side” empowers incremental changes for lasting security.
Together, these updates paint an Australia navigating recovery with pragmatism.
CommBank’s role—from tracking spending pulses to shaping policies and inspiring individuals—highlights a commitment to holistic progress.
As economic headwinds ease, such efforts and initiatives could potentially accelerate a more stable financial environment.