The Southland Times

Constructi­on drags on growth

- Hamish Rutherford hamish.rutherford@stuff.co.nz

New Zealand’s economy has slowed sharply in recent months, recording the weakest quarter of growth in almost five years.

Statistics New Zealand said yesterday that in the three months ended on September 30, New Zealand’s gross domestic product (GDP) grew by 0.3 per cent, well below the 1 per cent expansion in the June quarter.

Weighed down by a fall in food manufactur­ing, and ongoing weakness in the constructi­on sector, it was the weakest three-month period since December 2013.

Infrastruc­ture investment and gross fixed capital formation – a measure of how much businesses are investing – both fell, but remain positive for the year to September 30.

The primary sector grew strongly, expanding 2.2 per cent, while the services sector grew but at a slower pace than in recent quarters.

GDP growth per capita was zero in the September quarter.

Economists had predicted the economy would show some sign of slowdown after the unexpected­ly strong June figures; however, most predicted quarterly growth of about 0.5 per cent.

The weak quarter means the economy has expanded 2.6 per cent since September 30, 2017, the slowest annual expansion since the end of 2013.

Westpac senior economist Michael Gordon said while the September quarter was expected to show slower growth than June, the figures were weaker than either financial markets or the Reserve Bank were predicting.

‘‘There were . . . some factors that proved less positive than we expected, although these in turn are not likely to have a lingering impact on growth,’’ Gordon said, with the expected rebound in mining likely to simply reflect a delay, while the slowdown in road repairs after the 2016 Kaiko¯ ura earthquake would not be a recurring drag on growth.

Yesterday’s figures also revealed that New Zealand’s economy grew more quickly during 2017 than previously thought.

Statistics NZ revised each quarter of growth upwards, meaning it now estimates the economy grew 3.4 per cent in 2017, up from the 2.8 per cent it previously believed.

ASB chief economist Nick Tuffley said the economy had been stronger than believed in 2017.

‘‘Today’s figures paint a picture of an economy which had very good momentum, which then slowed quite sharply into the second half of 2018.’’

National Party finance spokeswoma­n Amy Adams said the economy appeared to have cooled, with the growth not strong enough to cover population growth.

‘‘Despite all the Government’s talk of wellbeing, that means New Zealanders are becoming worse off.’’

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