Nelson Mail

‘Job losses key to taming inflation’

- Rob Stock rob.stock@stuff.co.nz

Just under 50,000 people may need to lose their jobs before the Reserve Bank Te Pūtea Matua can bring inflation under control.

Economists at the Financial Services Council conference in Auckland on Wednesday followed an upbeat presentati­on by Finance Minister Grant Robertson with a more doom-laden panel assessment of the next 12 months for the economy. Robertson said he didn’t want people to talk themselves into a negative frame of mind, telling delegates there was ‘‘every reason to be optimistic’’ about the year ahead.

But the economists who followed him on the conference podium struck a less upbeat tone, saying unemployme­nt might have to rise from 3.3% to 5% before inflation was back within the central bank’s target range of 1% to 3%. ‘‘The Reserve Bank published a forecast of 5% in their last monetary policy statement,’’ said Sharon Zollner, ANZ’s chief economist.

‘‘It’s quite reasonable to interpret that as their best estimate for what they think they need to see,’’ she said.

Mark Lister, head of private wealth at Craigs Investment Partners, said: ‘‘The central banks are driving the ship at the moment, aren’t they? I think the outlook is in a big way a function of how they operate.’’

But he said: ‘‘Going from 3.3% in the March quarter to 5% is quite a big move.’’ The 3.3% unemployme­nt rate in the June quarter represente­d 96,000 people, data from Stats NZ shows.

In December 2020, when the unemployme­nt rate was 4.9%, the number of unemployed people was 141,000. An unemployme­nt rate of 5% was still low in the context of history, Lister said.

But Zollner said the rise would be as rapid a rise in unemployme­nt as when the global financial crisis (GFC) hit. There was the risk that the Reserve Bank’s actions could drive unemployme­nt higher.

Zollner said ANZ now expected the Reserve Bank to crank up the official cash rate (OCR) from its current 3% to 4.75% by the end of May next year.

The economists were not certain whether the country would avoid a technical recession of two quarters of negative growth.

Zollner said that definition was not how the public thought of a recession. ‘‘For the person in the street, they define recession in terms of employment,’’ she said.

The current labour market was ‘‘very, very tight’’, she said, and bringing down inflation required ‘‘some spare capacity’’ in the labour market.

It was a hard thing for the Reserve Bank to talk about, she said.

‘‘It’s a difficult thing for them to talk about. To beat inflation, they require some people to lose their jobs. That’s a comms challenge right there,’’ she said.

Unemployme­nt had not been this low since the 1980s, Lister said. ‘‘You’ve got to cause some pain. You’ve got to create some unemployme­nt,’’ he said.

‘‘You’ve got to cause some pain. You’ve got to create some unemployme­nt.’’

Mark Lister

Craigs Investment Partners

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