Modest growth underwhelms
Economists less than impressed by the numbers
The last major statistical release before tomorrow’s general election showed the economy grew at a modest pace in the June quarter, aided by a strong performance from the retail sector, but with weakness emerging in housing and construction.
Statistics NZ said gross domestic product (GDP) grew by 0.8 per cent over the quarter — in line with market expectations — up from a revised 0.6 per cent gain in the March quarter, taking GDP growth for the June year to 2.5 per cent.
The data showed export and domestic demand underpinned growth, although output in the construction sector continued to weaken.
While it came as improvement over the two previous quarters, economists were underwhelmed by yesterday’s result.
“It is clear that the economy is not quite firing on all cylinders as it grapples with some meaningful headwinds including late-cycle capacity pressures, a turn in the credit cycle and housing market weakness,” said ANZ chief economist Cameron Bagrie.
Westpac economists said they had expected the June quarter to mark the high point for growth this year, given the one-off boost from tourism and a rebound in agriculture and transport from previous weak quarters.
“In that light, a 0.8 per cent quarterly rise is not that impressive,” they said in a commentary.
Westpac has recently revised its September quarter growth forecast down to 0.7 per cent, and over the next year as a whole it expects GDP growth to fall “significantly short of Treasury and Reserve Bank forecasts”.
ANZ said the June quarter improvement, coupled with the small upward revision to the first quarter, made for a slightly better picture overall. “However, we’d still class it as somewhat of a ‘middling’ result,” ANZ economists said. “It is clear that the economy is grappling with some meaningful headwinds, which look unlikely to dissipate,” the bank said.
“That presents a challenge for the Reserve Bank in generating abovetrend growth — and hence higher inflation — and reinforces that the official cash rate [OCR] is not heading higher any time soon.”
The Reserve Bank kept its rate at 1.75 per cent in August and said its policy would remain accommodative “for a considerable period”.
The consumers price index rose by just 1.7 per cent in the June year.
“The Reserve Bank faces a challenge,” ANZ said. “Putting aside the fact that today’s ‘middling’ result actually raises questions about the economy’s growth potential at a time of anaemic productivity growth, growth barely at trend is hardly going to lift core inflation in a meaningful way.”
ANZ said growth, combined with indicators pointing to a further turn south in some parts of the economy, such as housing and construction, reinforced the likelihood that the OCR would not head higher any time soon.
In its commentary, ASB said GDP growth has been “underwhelming” over the past year and that the June quarter rebound had been relatively muted.