The Northland Age

A summer of saving for rainy days that lie ahead

- — NZ Herald

Summer has at least a couple of false starts before it gets underway for real. Daylight saving in September and the long Labour Weekend holiday stir anticipati­on for the heat ahead but, while the days can be sunny, the temperatur­es aren’t quite there yet.

This past holiday weekend would have given many people a taste of how, in pleasant weather, it’s possible to get out and about and do things at little cost. Going for a bike ride or surf, taking a dog for a walk in a reserve, having a picnic in a park.

Trying to enjoy the outdoors in better weather — but cheaply — is something families will be thinking about as economic forecasts suggest even tougher times lie around the corner.

Inflationa­ry prices for basics like food and fuel have had people thinking of ways to save, from cutting out unnecessar­y car trips to being more careful about the grocery spend to putting in backyard vegetable patches.

Inflation is sticking around with the annual rate at 7.2 per cent, boosting the odds of mortgage rates rising higher as house prices fall, in common with other countries around the world. A lot of households will be worried about the looming end of their fixed-rate terms in these conditions.

Stats NZ data last week showed both that the property drop and declining investment­s had sliced into household wealth, but that people had been spending less and saving pay rises. The figures covered the three months to the end of June and the net worth of households fell nearly $89 billion, down 3.7 per cent on the previous quarter. There had been a growth in household savings of $2.1b.

In Europe, under pressure from inflation, cost of living, energy costs and shortages, there’s months of winter discontent to get through. Inflation is at 8.2 per cent in the US, 9.9 per cent in the eurozone and 10.1 per cent in Britain.

Here, the economy is the election ground being fought over with the Government having ruled out more inflation relief to keep a lid on spending and National’s tax plans attracting scrutiny.

A key difference so far in New Zealand compared to past financial crises has been that unemployme­nt is low and stable. For the past two quarters it has been 3.3 and 3.2 per cent.

While people have been under budgeting stress, and have had to cut back and juggle bills, they’ve at least had a cash flow to stay afloat.

People will look for ways to muddle through and save over summer, in case the outlook

takes a turn for the worse.

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