Fiji Sun

NEW ZEALAND CHIEF EXECUTIVES CAUTIOUS BUT POSITIVE ABOUT GLOBAL ECONOMIC OUTLOOK

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Chief executives remain cautious about the global economic outlook despite New Zealand’s better-thanexpect­ed response to the pandemic. An annual global survey by PwC of more than 5050 chief executives in 100 countries has found just 39 per cent of 89 New Zealand chief executives surveyed believe the global economy would improve this year, compared with 70 per cent of Australian chief executives and 76 per cent of chief executives around the world.

PWC New Zealand chief executive Mark Averill said New Zealand’s closed border was perhaps one of the reasons for the lower rate of optimism.

“New Zealand is a smaller market, we’ve probably been a bit more restrictiv­e, so therefore that’s got challenges around labour pool. We’ve also got greater dependency on sectors like tourism,” Averill said, adding that Australia had a broader-based economy with mining and other sectors and was therefore less dependent on tourism, which was hard hit by the pandemic.

Despite the uncertaint­y, he said New Zealand businesses were planning to invest more.

Nearly half expected to take on more staff (48 per cent), with 73 per cent expecting revenue growth this year, and 85 percent confident of revenue growth over the next three years. “Where we are now in New Zealand is a lot better place than we expected to be 12 months ago and that’s indicated by optimism around global economic growth and certainly revenue growth in New Zealand and desire to invest in New Zealand. So that provides a really positive platform for Covid recovery,” Averill said.

New Zealand chief executives were more concerned about the ongoing pandemic (57 per cent) than cyber threats (41 per cent), supply disruption­s (40 per cent), skill shortages (38 per cent) and overregula­tion (37 per cent).

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