New Zealand Current Account Deficit Set to Widen During 2010
New Zealand's
current account data surprised some with the current account deficit for the
year through December 2009 coming in at -NZ$5.47 billion versus consensus
estimates of -NZ$3.33 billion, and the September quarter figure of -NZ$5.9
billion. The comparable figure in December 2008 was -NZ$15.97 billion.
Seasonally adjusted the current account balance during the December quarter was
-NZ$3.11 billion, versus the small positive of NZ$0.04 billion in the September
quarter of 2009.

The Current account deficit as a percentage of GDP also improved in December
2009 to a 8 year low of -2.9%, compared to consensus estimates for -2% and
September's -3.2%; and a marked reduction from -8.7% in December 2008.
However this improvement will only be short lived as it is entirely driven by
cyclical forces and one-off events. The current account deficit will undoubtedly
widen again through 2010 and will likely return to levels greater than -5% as a
percentage of GDP by the end of 2010.

The positive balance in September was partially made possible by large one-off
tax provisions by the banks after a couple of large Australian owned banks lost
court cases brought by the New Zealand Inland Revenue Department over structured
finance transactions and tax avoidance.
Cyclical forces also played a critical role; New Zealand has a net international
investment position of -90% as a percentage of GDP, thus if company earnings
fall then so to will current account outflows... this is a bad way to improve
the current account deficit.
The current account balance was also influenced by the goods balance which saw a
marked turnaround due to imports falling faster than exports. New Zealand
generally tends to have fairly stable exports; dominated by agriculture i.e. the
volumes are fairly stable, but what has the most influence is soft commodity
prices. Thus this was driven mostly by falling demand for imports.
Already the balance on investment income (-NZ$3.39billion) has returned to
levels seen prior to the crisis driven by performance of direct investment (e.g.
company subsidiaries in New Zealand). Another interesting point in the release
was that the amount reinvested by international investors in direct investments
in New Zealand grew to a record NZ$1.5 billion.
So to sum up, the New Zealand current account deficit improved, but primarily
due to cyclical forces; the deficit will widen again through 2010 as the New
Zealand economy recovers. The only thing that will structurally improve it is:
less spending on imports, more exports, and more saving (yes KiwiSaver
will help) from both the private and public sectors.
Sources:
Statistics New Zealand www.stats.govt.nz
Econ Grapher
Analytics www.econgrapher.com
Article Source: http://www.econgrapher.com/26mar-nzcurrentac.html
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