Glass half-empty: economists
Economists are warning of devil in the detail of a big drop in inflation reported by Stats NZ.
Annual inflation dropped to 4% in the year to the end of March, sharply down from the rate of 4.7% recorded for the 2023 calendar year, according to Stats NZ’s estimates.
But Capital Economics economist Abhijit Surya said the figures showed domestic inflationary pressures still running strong.
Meanwhile, there are concerns that the prices of international commodities, which have been falling and which are mainly responsible for easing inflation here, could be about to resume an upward tick.
Moody’s Analytics said moderating food prices and to a lesser extent transport prices were behind the easing in headline inflation.
But it said that behind this, there were “a few worrying trends”, such as strong population growth and weaker construction activity driving rents higher. ANZ said there was a “strong underbelly” to the latest inflation figures, which it believed would concern the Reserve Bank.
“The details presented a much less convincing story of underlying disinflation than meets the eye,” it said. “With the recent moves higher in oil prices and the re-emergence of shipping disruption likely to add upwards pressure in the coming quarters, there remain plenty of risks to the outlook.”
The Reserve Bank forecast when it issued its last monetary policy statement in February that annual inflation would have dropped even more by now, to 3.8%.
But the actual headline figure was towards the lower end of most economists’ more recent predictions.
ANZ had forecast that annual inflation would fall to 4%, while ASB had expected it would come in at 4.1%, and Westpac and Kiwibank had tipped 4.2%.
Stats NZ manager Nicola Growden said the quarterly increase in the Consumer Price Index, measured at 0.6%, was the lowest it had been since June 2021. Rents and rates remained a blackspot.
Stats NZ reported that rents rose 4.7% in the year to March, while rates were up a hefty 9.8%.
Rising prices for overseas accommodation booked by Kiwis and the likes of Netflix subscriptions contributed to a 9.7% annual rise in the price of recreational and cultural services. Higher prices for cigarettes, tobacco and alcohol were noteworthy contributors to the 0.6% rise in the CPI in the most recent quarter, Stats NZ said.
The inflation figures were helped by a drop in the price of petrol and international airfares, and are not expected to change the Reserve Bank’s view that it need now only “watch and wait” for inflation to fall further before considering rate cuts.
But the downsides in the latest data have left economists remaining divided on whether to expect the Reserve Bank to begin cutting the official cash rate from 5.5% towards the end of this year, or not until next year.
So-called “tradeable inflation”, which attempts to measure the changes in the prices of goods and services whose prices are determined internationally, such as fuel, rose by a lowly 1.6% in the year to March, and actually fell 0.7% in the latest quarter.
However, nervousness over fuel prices has increased in the past week as a result of the exchanges of fire between Israel and Iran.
ANZ warned yesterday that while progress was being made on inflation, there was potential for inflationary pressures to re-emerge globally.
This meant the Reserve Bank was likely to remain cautious on the future track of interest rates, ANZ said.