New Zealand Economic Recovery Strengthens Further
The New Zealand economic recovery strengthened in the fourth quarter of 2009;
growing 0.8% compared to the September quarter. The result matched consensus and
beat the previous result of a revised 0.3%, marking the 3rd quarter of positive
growth and placing GDP into positive territory on an year on year basis at 0.4%.

Industries that gained the most in the quarter were Manufacturing (0.5),
Wholesale trade (0.2), Electricity, gas and water (0.1), Retail, accommodation
and restaurants (0.1), and Government administration and defence (0.1).
Industries that detracted were Personal and community services (-0.1), and
Fishing, forestry and mining (-0.1).
On a sector basis, much of the growth came from change in inventories (2.3),
followed by Private and Government final consumption expenditure, and
residential building (respectively: 0.5, 0.2, 0.2). While sectors that detracted
from growth were Imports (-1.7), Exports (-0.3), and other fixed asset capital
formation (-0.4).
The outlook for the New Zealand economy is reasonably strong with largely
balanced risks to the upside and downside. It's likely that the recovery will
continue to strengthen but that growth will soon settle into a more subdued pace
than previous years. There's also little sign that people are changing their
ways i.e. no structural change, rather a cyclical recovery.
There are two key areas to watch for New Zealand in the medium term: Monetary
policy, and Fiscal policy. In terms of monetary policy the RBNZ
has given guidance to the market that it will raise the official cash rate from
2.5% in the middle of the year (i.e. June); the relatively strong GDP result
will only add to the case.
On the Fiscal policy front, the budget is due for release on the 20th
of May and will likely layout changes in tax e.g. increasing the GST
sales tax to 15% from 12.5%, lowering personal and investment tax rates, and
closing property investment loopholes. The government also has a range of
initiatives stemming from a think tank (Capital Markets Development Taskforce)
on capital market development that will support growth over the medium to long
term.
Overall there is a lot of promise for the New Zealand economy over the medium to
long term if the government gets it right on its strategy for growing capital
markets and encouraging productive asset investment, and exports. Progress made
will build on the strong foundation that the agriculture sector (and
increasingly, the energy and resources sector) have provided.
Sources:
Statistics New Zealand www.stats.govt.nz
Econ Grapher
Analytics www.econgrapher.com
Article Source: http://www.econgrapher.com/26mar-nzgdp.html
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