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Reuters
Reuters
Business

Australian consumer sentiment falls again in May

Women shop for clothes on a store in a shopping mall in Sydney's central business district (CBD) Australia, February 5, 2018. Picture taken February 5, 2018. REUTERS/Daniel Munoz

SYDNEY (Reuters) - A measure of Australian consumer sentiment eased again in May as consumers remained cautious about the outlook for family finances.

A Melbourne Institute and Westpac Bank <WBC.AX> survey of 1,200 people published on Wednesday showed its index of consumer sentiment dipped 0.6 percent in May, from April when it fell by a similar amount.

The index was still up 3.9 percent on May last year at 101.8, meaning optimists just outnumbered pessimists.

The survey, conducted over May 7 to 12, comes just a week after the government handed out a voter-friendly budget, unveiling a package of income tax cuts.

"This is a disappointing update," said Westpac Chief Economist Bill Evans. "Despite what appears to have been a well-received Federal Budget, consumer sentiment has continued to drift lower."

Earlier this week, two opinion polls showed Australia's centre-right government still trailed the opposition suggesting the budget failed to deliver a much-needed boost for the ruling coalition.

(This version of the story corrects month to May, not April, in third paragraph)

(Reporting by Swati Pandey; Editing by Shri Navaratnam)

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