The Northern Advocate

Slowdown? What slowdown?

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Apandemic seems like an improbable job-creation scheme. Yet somehow the New Zealand economy has ended up with more people employed now than it had at the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic. That’s a staggering achievemen­t given the border closures and lockdowns we’ve faced.

This time last year there was also the more serious threat of a full-blown Covid-19 outbreak derailing the nation. Looking at the numbers with no historic context, you couldn’t imagine what we’ve just been through. Labour market data for March shows job numbers sit 0.3 per cent — or 8000 — higher than they did a year ago. At 4.7 per cent, our unemployme­nt rate is lower than it was during the “rock star economy” years from 2013 to 2015.

Perhaps there have been structural changes in the economy that make that topline figure flattering — though we should note the methodolog­y for measuring it is unchanged since the 1980s.

Regardless, as the pandemic first hit, we were braced for recession era — or even depression era — unemployme­nt figures well into the double digits.

After a successful lockdown eliminated the worst of the pandemic health risks, it quickly became clear that level of economic carnage wasn’t happening.

ASB economist Mark Smith provided a summary of our success last week in a report highlighti­ng three key factors. The most obvious reason for the resilience was Government and Reserve Bank policy — unleashing billions of dollars on the economy in the form of bond buying, new borrowing and wage subsidies. The Government continues to fill gaps where industry is unable to adapt.

A second factor of success was the extent to which businesses were able to keep operating through lockdowns.

ASB’s third factor for success was the one we should perhaps be most proud of. Businesses and individual­s proved more adaptable and flexible than we imagined. As rebound spending faded late last year, economists assumed we would face a fresh dose of economic reality. But assumption­s that the run of “better than expected” economic data would grind to a halt this year are not panning out.

Business surveys show confidence still rising. The latest ANZ Business Outlook snapshot for the start of April has expectatio­ns of profitabil­ity running at the highest level since October 2017. If anything, the challenges we now face are those of an economy running too hot.

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