The fallout from the European sovereign debt crisis will dampen New Zealand growth and mean the Reserve Bank will not raise the Official Cash Rate from its current record low of 2.5% until mid 2013, the New Zealand Institute of Economic Research (NZIER) says.
Meanwhile, there was a 25% chance the Eurozone would split, restricting New Zealand's access to capital, pushing up borrowing costs and steering the economy into another recession, forcing the Reserve Bank to cut interest rates.
And if that wasn't enough, government spending programmes are likely to face renewed scrutiny as the government's 2014/15 surplus track becomes even more challenging due to economic growth rates well below what Treasury is forecasting.
NZIER Principal economist Shamubeel Eaqub delivered a dour outlook for the domestic and global economies when releasing NZIER's latest Quarterly Predictions.
Growth lower than Treasury assumes
“New Zealand’s fledgling recovery will be severely hampered by the rapidly worsening global economy,” Eaqub said.
"The fall-out from the European sovereign debt mess will depress export growth. It will weigh on exports and tourism, which had been a buffer. Investment will remain depressed because banks will find it harder to raise capital overseas. The uncertainty around the global outlook is also weighing heavy on business and consumer confidence and thus spending," he said.
NZIER's central scenario – where it assumes a political solution is found that prevents the Euro area from breaking up – has economic growth at just 1.5% in 2012, gradually rising to 2.5% by 2014.
In contrast, Treasury in its Pre-election update released on October 25 is forecasting 2.3% growth in the year to March 2012 to rise to 3.4% growth in the year to March 2013, followed by 3.3% in 2014 and 2.9% in 2015.
The OECD in its latest Economic Outlook released yesterday, is forecasting GDP growth for New Zealand of 2.5% in 2012 and 3% in 2013.
Domestic spending to remain soft
Eaqub said there was little domestic demand growth.
"Households are saving, the housing market is struggling, businesses are cautious about investing and the government is in a period of fiscal consolidation. The Canterbury rebuild will provide a much-needed injection of building activity from mid-2012, but the speed of the recovery programme is not yet clear," he said.
Interest rate rises off the table until mid-2013
"Faced with the darkening global outlook and weak domestic activity, the Reserve Bank will not raise the Official Cash Rate (OCR) until mid-2013. Inflation will be contained as excess labour market capacity keeps a lid on wage growth and firms hold prices low to remain competitive. If the global situation worsens, the RBNZ will have to cut the OCR," Eaqub said.
Return to fiscal surplus to be delayed
The slower recovery would dampen tax revenue.
"A 2014-15 return to budget surplus projected by the Treasury– estimated before the global outlook deteriorated so rapidly – will be challenging. Government spending programmes will face further scrutiny," he said.
Interest rate cuts if Euro splits
Finally, a more pessimistic scenario in Europe could not be ruled out.
“If the Euro area splits, New Zealand firms should prepare for another global crisis. This would restrict access to capital and push up global borrowing costs, in addition to an even weaker export outlook. New Zealand would likely experience another recession and the Reserve Bank would need to cut interest rates. We place the odds of such a scenario at about 25%,” Eaqub said.
(Updates with video interview)
19 Comments
..... they need to have a cup of tea with Ollie Newland , or with Big Daddy ..... to discover where their NZIER economic models have failed them ........
Why have a " dour outlook " Shamubeel ? .... the sun is shining , we're about to flog the under-armers in the cricket at the Gabba , and Gummy is up to page 67 of his Edmonds cook-book ....... lamingtons ! ...... yay ...
they look great on the outside, but they're all fluff and nothing if you consume one. And they shed crap all over the place when they're being eaten. Sure there's a bit of dairy in the middle but nowadays it tends to just be over processed fake crap, with fake flavouring and a ton of preservative to stop it rotting in view.
What a perfect metaphor for the New Zealand economy.
Come come now GBH....The Nats have just as many gender curious people amongst it's ranks.....just a little harder to spot when it's a walk in wardrobe....not a closet.
Enjoy that cooking and baking...! there is an error on page 81 see if you can spot it ..! if not you'll taste it .
Haappy Baking..!
So in other words you have convinced yourself that all be well, this time its different......
Not so much head in sand as head in sand while hands are superglued to your ankles....and your trousers down around your knees......
To paraphrase him, risks are going off the scale....and what he says here sounds like his mid-range expectation....meanwhile Europe seems to be close to panic...no one is lending to them....
Lets revisit this about say the 10th december see if things have improved....eh....you might want to invest in some condoms and ky about then, sounds like you will need it in bulk.
regards
"Citgroup's guru Willem Buiter has more or less condemned the eurozone to death by asphyxiation (if it doesn't die of a heart attack first)."
http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/finance/ambroseevans-pritchard/100013498/c…
2.3trillion debt to be rolled/raised in over the next 2 years.....and only ECB is buying now....
regards
No worries right....Bollard will keep the ocr cheap as chips and secretly print to exchange cash for bank "securities" because this economy is floating on a river of credit...and the river is heading for the falls..paddle as fast as you like and you will still be dragged over the edge...
The most likely outcome will be far higher costs to refi bank credit in Europe...and the ocr will not change that...so mortgage suckers are set for a bashing...and that means pressure on property prices...ditto pressure on banks...how soon before the weakest falls over..expect it to be kept alive until the OBR scam is in place...so the share holders and the deposit holders take the hit...great stuff...
So who's dumb enough to keep loot in one of the banks! The laziest approach is to spread your savings across them all....wiser money is leaving for Aus as fast as....which means the OBR idiocy is going to make the banks fail earlier...remember Northern Rock...the long long lines of sick looking savers...and the cash had run out....coming to a bank near you very soon.
There was something in the paper during the election (so got lost in the tes pot coverage), that discussed that the reserve bank was going to introduce something that prevent people withdrawing more tha 80% of their money, if it looked like there could be a run on the banks. It is like a slow car crash becuase you can see that something big is about to happen due to the world financial crisis.
If you can't trust keeping your money in the bank, then there is no point in even saving, as due to inflation you are losing money by keeping it in the bank with the current low interest rates. Guess buying houses again is the way to go.
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