Hawke's Bay Today

Hopes of farmers slump on global doubts

- Rebecca Howard

New Zealand farmer confidence in the economy hit its lowest level since July 2009, dented by global uncertaint­y and instabilit­y in key export markets.

Only 5.1 per cent of farmer respondent­s said they expected general economic conditions to improve during the next 12 months while 45.9 per cent expected they would worsen and 46 per cent said they would stay the same in Federated Farmers’ twice-yearly survey. As a result, a net 40.8 per cent of farmers were pessimisti­c versus a net 39.4 per cent in the prior survey in July.

“As with the wider business community, I think we’re seeing concern about the impact of global uncertaint­y and instabilit­y on our key export markets, with the likes of Brexit and US-China trade relations,” Federated Farmers vice-president and economics spokesman Andrew Hoggard said.

According to Hoggard, the “survey found the lowest level of confidence in the economy since July 2009, when we were just emerging from the global financial crisis”.

In the 2009 September quarter, New Zealand’s economy emerged from what was the deepest recession since the 1990s, although growth stalled a year later.

Yesterday Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said New Zealand’s economy remained “relatively strong” but warned slowing global growth would have an impact.

“We have strong fundamenta­ls

and are well prepared, but we need to be realistic that if the global economy slows, it will affect our economic growth,” she told Business New Zealand in a speech.

“The finger of blame for the slowdown in global trade growth is generally pointed at countries pursuing increasing­ly protection­ist policies, which are naturally affecting confidence and investment plans,” she said. Specifical­ly, “trade tensions in the wake of tariffs imposed by the US on Chinese imports dented the strong growth seen in 2017”.

The twice-yearly survey was undertaken between January 7 and 15, attracting 1462 responses. Since then, dairy prices at the Global Dairy Trade auction have risen twice, including a biggerthan-expected gain this week.

A total of 56 per cent of respondent­s said they were currently turning a profit, down from 62.3 per cent in July 2018. Meanwhile, 9.3 per cent are reporting a loss, up from 7.8 per cent, and 32.4 per cent are just breaking even, up from 27.8 per cent in July.

Looking at the year ahead,

almost 30 per cent of respondent­s expected farm profitabil­ity would deteriorat­e versus 18 per cent who had expected a profit improvemen­t in the July survey. The resulting 11.4 per cent net negative outlook contrasts with July’s 10.4 per cent net positive score.

Another key area of concern for farmers was difficulty recruiting staff, with a net 40.1 per cent of respondent­s finding it harder over the past six months to recruit skilled and motivated staff, up 4.2 points on the July 2018 survey.

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