The Borneo Post

New Zealand central bank to focus on making policy messages ‘accessible’ to public

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WELLINGTON: New Zealand’s central bank stressed yesterday its resolve to make its communicat­ion more relevant to the public as Governor Adrian Orr breaks with the complex messaging favoured by many of his counterpar­ts.

Major central banks have struggled to balance the need to maintain transparen­cy and avoid over-committing to future policy shifts. That has compelled them to issue vague, subtle hints on future actions that are hard for the public to understand.

Communicat­ion has been particular­ly challengin­g when central banks tighten policy, as markets react to any sign of reduced monetary support by pushing up bond yields and dumping stocks.

In a statement outlining its priorities for the next three years, the Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) said it will “enhance its communicat­ions with stakeholde­rs by taking up opportunit­ies both to listen to them more frequently in depth, and to better explain its decisions and actions”.

“We also intend to place New Zealanders’ understand­ing of us on a wider footing. We will make our messages more accessible and relevant,” the RBNZ said in its “statement of intent”.

In last year’s statement, the RBNZ said only that it would “communicat­e broadly on its policies, the reasons for them and the impacts of its activities” through various channels.

Though its economy is only 53rd in the world by size, New Zealand has earned a reputation for economic experiment­ation and a free market approach in the past three decades.

Its inflation targeting strategy soon became global economic orthodoxy.

The RBNZ is set to keep rates on hold this week and signal that no near-term monetary tightening is on the cards, with inflation subdued and global trade frictions clouding the outlook for an already slowing economy.

Markets are on the lookout for any tweak that Governor Orr – who took on the job in March with a pledge to simplify the RBNZ’s messaging – could make in the bank’s policy statement. — Reuters

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