New Zealand Economy: Onwards and Slightly Upwards
New Zealand recorded its 4th quarter of positive GDP growth with 0.6% q/q for
the March quarter of 2010. This matched consensus estimates, but was down
slightly from the 0.9% recorded in the December quarter of last year; reflecting
the somewhat subdued economic recovery, following one of the worst recessions in
decades. On a year-over-year basis, growth accelerated to 1.9% from 0.5% in the
previous quarter (rebounding from -3.1% in the March quarter of 2009).

The result shows the recovery (which follows a 5 quarter recession) becoming
more entrenched, but some sectors are doing better than others. On a quarterly
basis the winners were: Fishing, forestry, and mining - up 3.2%, Manufacturing -
up 1.6%, and Wholesale trade - up 1.4%. The losers were: Electricity, gas, and
water - down -2.2%, Retail, accommodation and restaurants - down -0.8%, and
Government administration and defense - down -0.6%. On an annual basis
construction continues to suffer, down -5.4%, while cutbacks on spending has put
government administration and defense down -1.0%. The standout was fishing,
forestry, and mining - up 10.4%, and manufacturing - up 4.3%.
The data follows the release of the current account balance yesterday. The data
showed New Zealand holding a current account deficit to GDP
ratio of -2.4%; the lowest in more than a decade. The key drivers were slightly
improved GDP position, and more notably cyclical improvements in the current
account deficit (i.e. lower investment earnings going offshore due to lower
corporate profits, and a lower trade deficit (now a surplus!) due to falling
imports driven by a drop in demand; but also by reasonably strong export
performance), assisted by one-offs related to bank structured finance tax court
cases. As previously
noted, the likely outcome is for a return to larger current account deficits
later this year as the cyclical factors begin to unwind.

So the key takeaway is that the New Zealand economy is in recovery mode; both in
the traditional sense of the word, and in somewhat of a healing way, as some of
the old bad habits of high spending, low saving, and over-investment in property
come home to roost. The recovery will likely persist, but growth wont return to
the sorts of levels seen before the crisis for some time yet, as consumers still
need to undergo a period of de-leveraging, and getting the savings rate back
into the black (from deep negatives).
So the path of monetary
policy has also begun to turn, with the Reserve Bank of New Zealand
increasing the OCR by 25bps to 2.75% in its June meeting. The outlook is for
probably another 50-100bps this year, but due to the sluggish nature of the
recovery the new neutral is probably going to be lower. But overall for the New
Zealand economy the message is; onwards, and slightly upwards.
Sources
Econ Grapher Analytics www.econgrapher.com
Statistics New Zealand www.stats.govt.nz
Article Source: http://www.econgrapher.com/24jun-nzgdp.html
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