Auckland city business and economy report 2008
Executive summary |
Past economic performance |
Relative international economic performance |
Economic structure |
Population |
Labour market |
Retail trade and tourism |
Building and property |
Inflation, interest rates and the exchange rate |
Focus on manufacturing |
Focus on Rosebank 2030 |
Economic outlook
| Auckland city in figures |
Download the report
Executive summary
Despite low overall growth, Auckland city's traditional
growth leaders - the high value-adding sectors of finance and insurance,
property services, business services and communication services - have
continued to perform solidly. |
Economic growth in Auckland city has been trending
downwards since the immigration-fuelled peak of 2003. International economic
conditions have been turbulent including the global "credit crunch" and
generalised world inflation. The city's economy is estimated to have grown by
only 1.1 per cent in the year to March 2008, considerably lower than the New
Zealand economy as a whole (3.0 per cent).
External migration has been a major contributor to Auckland
city's growth this decade. However, net migration has fallen considerably since
its peak in 2003 and was slightly lower in the year to March 2008 compared with
the previous 12 months.
Slowing migration and a reduction in the number of public
sector non-residential projects contributed to the fall off in the construction
industry. Slowing construction was the single largest contributor to Auckland's
slower growth over the past two years.
Auckland city's labour market has been softening, with
unemployment rising to an annual average of 4.2 per cent in the March 2008
quarter, from 3.8 per cent in the same quarter in 2007. Total employment
declined by 0.5 per cent in the year to March 2008 after growing by 1.2 per cent
in the previous year.
The Auckland city economy is forecast to grow by only 1.6
per cent in the year to March 2009 as many of the growth constraints of the past
year will continue. Further falls in net migration together with persistently
high interest rates will result in a continued decline in residential
construction. High interest rates and falling house prices will dent consumer
confidence and constrain the retail and hospitality industries. The New Zealand
dollar is likely to remain relatively high, which will impact negatively on
exports and limit tourism growth.
The outlook for the year to March 2010 is more optimistic,
with Auckland city's economy forecast to grow by 2.4 per cent (compared to 2.3
per cent at the national level). Tax cuts will put more money into consumers'
pockets as will lower mortgage repayments following a potential fall in interest
rates late in 2008. Consumer confidence will be further lifted by a recovery in
house prices. House construction will resume growing and non-residential
construction will bounce back due to construction work ahead of the Rugby World
Cup. Following interest rate cuts, the exchange rate is expected to weaken,
which will support a recovery in exports and higher tourism growth.
Auckland's economy has underperformed relative to many of
its international comparators over the past ten years. Auckland ranked in the
middle of nine benchmark cities when measured according to growth in total GDP.
On a GDP per capita basis, the city ranked 80th out of 116 cities, with
populations over one million, from Western Europe, North America, Japan and
Australasia.
Published August 2008