Australians are living through one of the strangest economic moments in memory: the numbers say “boom”, but people feel anything but confident. At the heart of that disconnect sits a quiet, dangerous gap—not in GDP, but in confidence.
A powerhouse economy sure, but why are we so anxious about the future?
Western Australia now accounts for around 17% of the national economy by GDP, more than one and a half times its population share and leads the country on household consumption growth. Yet almost two‑thirds of West Australians say they are worried about the future of the economy, and a majority are deeply concerned about day‑to‑day financial pressures.
Around six in ten people worry about having enough disposable income for non‑essentials and for unexpected expenses.
More than half are extremely worried about inflation, and large numbers fret about interest rates and both the current and future state of the WA economy.
If you feel uneasy despite the headlines about strong growth, you are not alone—and you are not irrational. You are living inside the confidence gap.
The Voice of WA financial research was conducted before the outbreak of war in the middle east. It shows that beneath the surface; financial stress has become part of the emotional fabric of life in this state. People are juggling school fees, mortgages, retirement planning and the rising cost of simple pleasures like eating out and travel. Many feel they are one surprise bill away from financial trouble.
Consider a few simple facts:
- Only about four in ten retirees say they can afford the lifestyle they had hoped for.
- Three in five West Australians across all income brackets express concern about the WA economy, and even many higher‑income households worry about their personal finances.
- Almost a quarter of pre‑retirees say they cannot afford to travel at all, and one in five has no savings.
Where has this shown up for you? Perhaps in small decisions—hesitating before committing to a holiday, deferring necessary home maintenance, or feeling a quiet dread when another rate announcement looms.
When Aspiration and Reality Collide
What West Australians want from money is modest and consistent. The research is clear: most people aspire to live comfortably, free of debt, confident their money will last through retirement, with some left over to travel. These are not extravagant dreams; they are a reasonable definition of a good life.
Yet there is a stark gap between that aspiration and the reality many retirees are experiencing.
Almost three in four pre‑retirees say their primary goal is to live comfortably without financial stress in retirement, and around two in three wants to be debt‑free and confident their money will last.
But a similar proportion of current retirees worry that their savings may not see them through, and more than one third say finances constrain their ability to do what they want to do.
This is the confidence gap at work: the economy can be strong, household income reasonable, and still, you may not feel safe enough to make decisions with calm and conviction. That lack of security seeps into every choice—when to retire, how generously to support adult children, whether to say yes to experiences that would enrich your life.
Why Strong Numbers Don’t Feel Secure
Part of the problem is structural. WA has always lived with a boom‑bust narrative, and many people carry a deep memory of what happens when the music stops. Overlay this with a media environment that has a bias to the negative, and you have a community primed to expect the worst, even when the macro data look robust.
But there is also a more personal dynamic at play. Most of the conversation about money in Australia is still about products, markets and short‑term movements, not about goals, trade‑offs and long‑term planning.
Financial literacy remains patchy, which means many people lack a simple, trusted decision‑making framework when conditions change.
Only around one in eight West Australians currently receive financial advice, leaving the majority to carry the mental load alone.
In other words, people are being asked to live in a complex, volatile system with very little or no scaffold for making good decisions. The result is predictable: heightened anxiety, cautious spending, and concern about the future.
What Builds Confidence
One of the most hopeful findings in The Voice of WA is that confidence is not mysterious; it responds to structure, clarity and support. The research shows that West Australians who receive financial advice report greater confidence in their ability to make good decisions and to afford the life they want, both now and in retirement.
People getting advice are more likely to focus on long‑term goals like maintaining lifestyle, affording travel and even retiring early, rather than only surviving the next few years.
Retirees with advice are significantly more likely to say they can afford their dream retirement lifestyle, and less likely to say finances stop them doing what they need to do.
Advice on its own is not magic. But good advice does three important things for confidence:
1. Enables you to make the smartest decisions you can about your money and avoid unnecessary mistakes.
2. Ensures the people you care about will be ok, no matter what.
3. Sets you up to live the best life you can with the resources you have.
A quiet call to action
The confidence gap at the heart of Australia’s economy cannot be closed by GDP numbers, budget speeches or market forecasts. It will close family by family, as more people move from anxious uncertainty to a clear plan, and from reacting to headlines to acting on principles.
For policymakers, The Voice of WA points to the need for a serious push on financial literacy, and for systems that make quality advice more accessible. For those of us working with families, it is a reminder that our real job is not to predict the future, but to help people live well in it—whatever it brings.
And for you, the question is simple: what one step would make you more confident that you will be okay financially in the long term?
Not hopeful. Not lucky. Confident.


