The Timaru Herald

Economic growth slows to 2.4pc

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Interest rates could be set for another drop on signs of a substantia­l slowdown in the economy.

Yesterday Statistics New Zealand revealed that the economy grew by just 0.4 per cent in the three months to June 30, cutting annual growth to 2.4 per cent.

Below the 0.6 per cent that the market and Reserve Bank had expected, it followed the 0.2 per cent growth in the first three months of the year.

ASB senior economist Jane Turner, who correctly predicted the 0.4 per cent increase in gross domestic product, said while there were encouragin­g signs from sectors such as tourism, overall the economy was slowing.

‘‘We’re getting slowing momentum in constructi­on and manufactur­ing and we need services to essentiall­y pick up the pace and while there are some encouragin­g signs it just hasn’t been adequate,’’ Turner said.

On September 10 the Reserve Bank cut the Official Cash Rate by 25 basis points to 2.75 per cent, the third straight cut, and signalled that another cut was likely, probably later this year. The figures raised the prospect that the cut would come in October, unwinding all the increases of 2014, which came on signs that growth and inflation were picking up.

At the start of the year growth was hit by a drought in the South Island, slowing dairy production, as well as a shutdown at one of New Zealand’s largest oilfields.

While both dairy and oil and gas production picked up in the June quarter, this was offset by a 1.8 per cent fall in the transport, postal and warehousin­g category, the biggest fall since March 2009.

Statistics New Zealand said the drop was mainly due to lower road transport activity. Turner said the outlook over the next 18 months was also weak.

In recent days ASB said it expected that dairy production in the 2015-16 season would be 5 per cent below last year, a much larger fall than that predicted by Fonterra, which expected a drop of between 2 and 3 per cent.

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