The New Zealand Herald

RBNZ picks Kiwis to keep calm and carry on spending

Bank holds OCR, tips housing growth to soften GDP hit from coronaviru­s

- Hamish Rutherford

The Reserve Bank has shrugged off concerns about the impact of coronaviru­s, predicting the economy will pick up speed this year on the back of strong household confidence.

In its first interest rate review of 2020 the Reserve Bank not only left the benchmark official cash rate (OCR) unchanged at 1 per cent, but signalled that the next move was likely to be higher.

While economists had broadly expected the OCR to remain unchanged, markets were braced for warnings that the impact of the coronaviru­s could force it to cut this year.

However governor Adrian Orr predicted the impact “will be of a short duration, with most of the impacts in the first half of 2020” shaving around 0.3 percentage points off New Zealand’s gross domestic product.

The statement sent the New Zealand dollar strongly higher, up around half a cent against the US dollar, with the estimate of the impact smaller than what several of the trading banks are now assuming.

Westpac says its base case is that coronaviru­s will shave around 0.6 per cent off New Zealand’s gross domestic product, while ANZ has forecast a hit of around 0.5 per cent over the first half of the year.

But the Reserve Bank’s working assumption is that the impact will begin to ease in March.

“We are looking at around a sixweek hiatus disruption; the working assumption is the travel bans are lifted and there’s some renormalis­ation over the month of March, with some lingering effects,” Orr told reporters.

He acknowledg­ed both that the virus presented a “downside risk” to its forecasts, and that pockets of the economy, including tourism, forestry and seafood would be “deeply affected” but the bank was describing the overall picture.

Although the Reserve Bank acknowledg­ed the assumption­s it made on the virus could quickly prove to be wrong, the bank predicted economic growth would pick up this year, boosted by household spending.

Orr said the bank was assuming growth in consumer spending this year, with some members of the monetary policy committee predicting persistent pressure from consumptio­n.

“People are employed, real wages are rising and that is being spent,” Orr said.

A cut in the OCR in 2019 had boosted asset prices, in particular house prices, which was having flowon effects. “With house prices rising, that wealth effect is alive and giving and people will be more confident to consume and borrow to consume,” Orr said.

The Reserve Bank was forecastin­g around a 7 per cent annual increase in house prices.

“While we’re seeing some momentum, we don’t believe it’s going to be . . . as strong or as persistent as what we’ve seen in past house price asset cycles.”

In 2019, the Reserve Bank began urging the Government to use its low borrowings to fund infrastruc­ture to help boost demand.

The Government gave details of a proposed $12 billion infrastruc­ture “upgrade” in January.

Orr signalled this would end his pleas for fiscal support for monetary policy. “We’re not having any additional . . . cries for more. We’re very excited about seeing it put in place.”

ANZ chief economist Sharon Zollner said the Reserve Bank would have been confident that the interest rate cuts of 2019 were working, but the emergence of coronaviru­s created a “big black cloud” on the horizon, which would have an uncertain impact on the economy.

Zollner said the bank could have cut the OCR “as an insurance move” just as it did after 9/11, the Sars outbreak and the Christchur­ch earthquake.

“What’s different this time is that the RBNZ has very little convention­al ammunition left. Every bullet must be used judiciousl­y.”

 ?? Photo / Bloomberg ?? Adrian Orr says the Reserve Bank is glad to see the Government’s proposed $12 billion infrastruc­ture “upgrade”.
Photo / Bloomberg Adrian Orr says the Reserve Bank is glad to see the Government’s proposed $12 billion infrastruc­ture “upgrade”.

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