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 |
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Inflation, interest rates and the exchange rate
New Zealand's inflation has risen to 3.4 per cent in the
year to March 2008 and is expected to exceed 4 per cent this calendar year. High
food and fuel prices have been key contributors to this.
New Zealand's official interest rate was the highest in the
Asia-Pacific region in May 2008 at 8.25 per cent.
The New Zealand dollar was strong against the US dollar in
May 2008 due to weakness in the US housing market and the global credit crunch.
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New Zealand's inflation rose by 0.7 per cent in the March
quarter of 2008, bringing inflation to 3.4 per cent in the year to March. This
is above that of 2.5 per cent in March 2007 and is the highest since June 2006.
This matched the Reserve Bank's expectations, but was outside its target
inflation rate of 1-3 per cent.
Inflation can be analysed as tradable and non-tradable
inflation. Non-tradable covers price rises in goods and services that cannot be
exchanged with other countries (for example, dining out), while the tradable
component includes goods that are, or could be, traded.
Non-tradable inflation increased by 1.1 per cent over the
March 2008 quarter, contributing to an annual percentage change of 3.5 per cent.
Tradable inflation increased by only 0.2 per cent during the March quarter, but
rose to an annual increase of 3.4 per cent, up from an annual decrease of -0.5
per cent in the June 2007 quarter. Events in the global economy had a large
(direct and indirect) impact on both of these categories.
Higher food (particularly grocery food), fuel prices and
housing costs have been the key contributors to rising inflation. Furthermore,
their relative contribution to inflation has also increased.
Landlords are pushing up rents, shifting their focus away
from capital gain to return on investment at a time when there is greater demand
for rental properties due to high home ownership costs. New housing costs and
household insurance have also contributed to inflation. As essential areas of
expenditure, this has increased the pressure on households.
Yet, on the positive side, recreational goods (such as
package holidays, audio-visual and computing equipment, and newspapers, books
and stationery) became cheaper during the March quarter.
Food and energy price rises have been offset to a degree by
cheaper imports through a stronger New Zealand dollar and retail discounting
associated with the slowdown in the retail sector. However, despite these
offsets, retail prices rose strongly during the March quarter, up 1.9 per cent
on the December quarter.
Inflation is forecast to reach or exceed 4 per cent this
calendar year, leaving little room for the Reserve Bank to make any large
reductions to the official cash rate. This means that home owners and households
are unlikely to experience much relief from high mortgage rates or essential
expenditure items in the near term.
Some forecasts have not anticipated inflation coming back
to within the Reserve Bank's target band until the latter half of 2010. Much of
this is currently beyond what can be controlled domestically, due to the large
impact of international events on our economy. This includes global commodity
price rises and generalised world inflation.
Inflation
Annual percentage
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Source: Reserve Bank of New Zealand.
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New Zealand's official interest rate is relatively high in
comparison to other developed economies and in May 2008 was the highest in the
Asia-Pacific region at 8.25 per cent. Australia's interest rate was 7.25 per
cent. High interest rates attract foreign capital, increasing the value of the
dollar and placing strain on exporters. In line with other economies, the
Reserve Bank uses the official cash rate, which in May 2008 had been at 8.25 per
cent since July 2007, to control inflation.
The New Zealand dollar has increased in value against the
US dollar due to weakness in the US housing market and the global credit crunch.
Over May 2008 it was valued at an average of 0.7769 cents, 33 per cent above its
10-year average.
In the last year the New Zealand dollar has also increased
by 11.8 per cent against the UK pound, bringing it to 18 per cent above its
10-year average. It has decreased against other major currencies, the Australian
dollar (-1.7 per cent), the Japanese yen (-1.0 per cent) and the Euro (-1.8 per
cent) over the last year, although it is 21 per cent above its ten-year average
against the yen. The New Zealand dollar is not expected to depreciate
significantly until there are signs that the Reserve Bank will loosen monetary
policy and the US dollar regains strength after the housing market slump.
Interest and exchange rates
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Source: Reserve Bank of New Zealand.
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Published August 2008