Philip Lowe replaced as Reserve Bank chief by deputy Michele Bullock

New Reserve Bank boss revealed: Australia’s first female RBA governor is revealed by Anthony Albanese as Philip Lowe loses his job after a year of interest rate rises

  •  Philip Lowe’s term ending on September 17
  •  Deputy Michele Bullock will replace him  

Philip Lowe has been replaced as Reserve Bank governor by the country’s first female central banker, a 38-year veteran of Australia’s premier interest rate setting body. 

Michele Bullock, who only became Dr Lowe’s deputy little more than a year ago, is taking taking over on September 18, following her appointment by Treasurer Jim Chalmers.

Ms Bullock is also the first Labor-appointed Reserve Bank boss since 1989 and the first woman to lead the RBA since it formed in 1960.

‘She is an outstanding economist and leader with a deep understanding of the RBA’s role and operations, built up over her long and distinguished career with the central bank,’ Dr Chalmers said on Friday morning.

‘Ms Bullock will make history as the first woman to lead the RBA in its 63-year history.

Philip Lowe has been replaced as Reserve Bank governor after he raised interest rates 12 times in little more than a year

‘Her appointment strikes the optimal balance between providing exceptional experience and expertise and offering a fresh leadership perspective.’

Michele Bullock’s career

1985: Joined as intern spending next 13 years in economic group and international department roles

1998 to 2007:  Chief manager, payments policy department

2007 to 2010: Head of payments policy department 

2010: Adviser, currency group

2010 to 2015:  Assistant Governor (Currency)

2015 to 2016: Assistant Governor (Business Services)

2016 to 2022: Assistant Governor (Financial System)

2022 to 2023: Deputy Governor 

Ms Bullock’s appointment was announced on Friday morning just 15 months after she replaced Guy Debelle as the RBA’s deputy governor, when he quit to work for billionaire mining magnate Andrew Forrest’s renewable energy group Fortescue Future Industries.

She joined the Reserve Bank as an intern in 1985 after completing a Bachelor of Economics with Honours at the University of New England. 

She later did a masters degree at the London School of Economics. 

In her 38-year career with the RBA, she has been in charge of the central bank’s payments policy department, and overseen the currency, business service and financial system areas. 

She has only attended RBA board meetings since April 2022 but was present the 12 meetings where it was decided to raise rates, marking the most aggressive monetary policy tightening since 1989. 

Ms Bullock will now be the first RBA governor to preside over a specialist monetary policy board, following a review into the Reserve Bank. 

From next year, the Reserve Bank under her will be meeting eight times a year instead of 11, with Ms Bullock set to front a media conference after each decision. 

She is also one of the few women to lead a central bank, with her appointment coming nine years after Janet Yellen was appointed chair of the US Federal Reserve.

Ms Bullock beat two other leading contenders – Treasury secretary Steven Kennedy who already sits on the RBA board, and Department of Finance secretary Jenny Wilkinson who previously worked at the Reserve Bank. 

Dr Chalmer’s decision not to extend Dr Lowe’s seven-year term beyond September 17 means Dr Lowe is now Australia’s shortest-serving RBA chief in almost three decades.

Under Dr Lowe’s watch, interest rates have gone up 12 times since May 2022, even though he suggested in 2021 they would stay on hold at a record-low of 0.1 per cent until 2024 ‘at the earliest’.

Michele Bullock, his deputy, is his replacement, making her Australia's first-ever female RBA governor when she starts on September 18 (she is pictured with former Liberal treasurer Josh Frydenberg in March 2022 after she was appointed deputy governor)

Michele Bullock, his deputy, is his replacement, making her Australia’s first-ever female RBA governor when she starts on September 18 (she is pictured with former Liberal treasurer Josh Frydenberg in March 2022 after she was appointed deputy governor)

Dr Lowe was also the first RBA chief since 1991 to be in charge during a recession, as a result of the 2020 Covid lockdowns that also led to deflation.

But by the end of 2021, inflation breached the RBA’s two to three per cent target and kept climbing in 2022 after Russia’s Ukraine invasion led to sanctions which pushed up global crude oil prices. 

Inflation hit a 32-year high of 7.8 per cent at the end of last year but has since moderated, with the Reserve Bank expecting inflation to stay high until mid-2025.

Economists fear the Reserve Bank’s 12 rate rises in just 13 months could spark a recession, repeating the experience of 1989 when tighter monetary policy caused a downturn in 1991.

Bernie Fraser, the last Labor-appointed RBA governor in 1989, didn’t have his term extended in 1996 by new Liberal treasurer Peter Costello. 

Dr Lowe is the first Reserve Bank boss to only serve seven years since Mr Fraser finished. 

Three contenders for Reserve Bank governor

MICHELE BULLOCK: Appointed Deputy Governor in April 2022, replacing Guy Debelle who quit to work for mining magnate Andrew Forrest’s renewable energy group Fortescue Future Industries.

That means she hasn’t had a lot of experience sitting in on Reserve Bank board meetings but she was present for every rate rise since May 2022. 

Before that, she had spent six years as the Reserve Bank’s assistant governor in charge of financial services .

She joined the Reserve Bank in 1985 after completing a Bachelor of Economics with Honours at the University of New England.

Ms Bullock completed a masters degree at the London School of Economics in 1989. 

STEVEN KENNEDY: Appointed Treasury secretary in September 2019 by former Liberal treasurer Josh Frydenberg.

He was secretary of the Department of Infrastructure, Transport, Cities and Regional Development from September 2017 to August 2019.

Dr Kennedy had worked and trained as a nurse before joining the public service in 1992 as a a cadet at the Australian Bureau of Statistics.

He has a  PhD and a masters degree in Economics from the Australian National University, and a bachelor of Economics (First Class Honours) from the University of Sydney.

JENNY WILKINSON: Appointed Department of Finance secretary in August 2022.

But during her career, she has worked as an analyst and policy adviser with the Reserve Bank of Australia, Treasury, the Parliamentary Budget Office, the Department of Industry, the Department of Climate Change, the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet.

She is married to Australia’s chief statistician David Gruen. 

 

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