The New Zealand Herald

Business confidence dives again

- Liam Dann companies surveyed expect business conditions to get worse. Down 5 points expect to reduce investment. Down 6 points

Business confidence fell further in August, according to the latest ANZ Outlook survey, prompting a warning that lower investment by firms could dent GDP growth.

A net 50 per cent of 369 firms that took part in the ANZ business outlook survey for August expected general business conditions to deteriorat­e in the coming 12 months, 5 points lower than July’s result.

“It is rare for this series to be negative. If this weakness is sustained, it will not bode well for GDP growth heading into the end of the year,” said ANZ chief economist Sharon Zollner.

Employment intentions fell 8 points to -6 per cent. No sectors were positive.

“This suggests weaker employment growth over coming months, consistent with stability rather than improvemen­t in the labour market,” she said.

In July the survey showed confidence falling to levels not seen since the global financial crisis in 2008.

But, in what may offer some comfort to the Government, firms’ views of their own activity remained steady. Zollner noted that firms’ perception­s of their own prospects “are a much better gauge of actual economic outcomes”.

These stabilised in August, with a net 4 per cent expecting an improvemen­t but still well below the longterm average of positive 27 per cent.

Zollner also acknowledg­ed the political debate that has been raging about the significan­ce of confidence surveys.

In a speech on the issue this week Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern acknowledg­ed the serious downturn in business confidence but argued that business expectatio­ns did not correlate with GDP performanc­e.

“We have been looking closely at the data,” Zollner said. “What is clear is that asking firms about their actual intentions garners more accurate indicators for future GDP growth than asking about their expectatio­ns.”

She emphasised that, in particular, investment intentions from the survey provide a very good directiona­l signal for GDP growth.

“In August, a net 5 per cent of firms reported they intend to reduce investment [down 6 points],” she said. “If this weakness is sustained, it will not bode well for GDP growth heading into the end of the year.”

Westpac senior economist Michael Gordon said he suspected “that a large part of the fall in business confidence reflects firms’ discomfort with the new Government’s policies, especially the planned changes to labour laws”.

 ?? Photo / Getty Images ?? The ANZ Business Outlook Survey headline business confidence dropped a further 5 points in August.
Photo / Getty Images The ANZ Business Outlook Survey headline business confidence dropped a further 5 points in August.

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