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Independent economist Brian Easton says households with children are more likely to have mortgages, so they are likely to be hit more heavily by the rise in interest rates

Public Policy / opinion
Independent economist Brian Easton says households with children are more likely to have mortgages, so they are likely to be hit more heavily by the rise in interest rates
mortgage-childrf1.jpg
Source: 123rf.com

This is a re-post of an article originally published on pundit.co.nz. It is here with permission.


The just released Statistics New Zealand (SNZ) estimates of child poverty for the year ending June 2023 show the proportions of children on nine different poverty measures are higher than they were in the June 2022 ending year. SNZ warns that the increases are not large enough to outweigh the sampling error but here I accept the conclusion as meaningful and discuss why.

(Each indicator in 2023 is below the 2018 measure, when the SNZ first began measuring. Even so, the data is not on track to hit the child poverty reduction targets set out in the 2018 Child Poverty Reduction Act.)

Some readers may find the next few paragraphs a bit tediously data (and definition) driven. If you trust the analysis – you shouldn’t without checking it – you might skip to the next italicised paragraph – eight paragraphs down – which provides a conclusion.

Average annual household equivalised disposable income (before housing costs) rose 7.0 percent between June 2022 and June 2023. The Consumer Price Index (CPI) rose 6.8 percent. Seems households are fractionally ahead?

I am now share with you a secret. The CPI does not reflect all the outgoings of households. Very importantly, it omits mortgage interest outlays. (There is a complicated story why it is omitted.)

Now mortgage interest rates rose sharply during the period. For instance, floating rates on new mortgages increased from 5.0% p.a. for the year ending June 2022 to 7.5% p.a. for the year end June 2023. According to SNZ, all household mortgage interest payments jumped 50 percent.

SNZ also produces a Housing Living Cost Price Index, which includes mortgage interest payments, but it is rarely reported. According to the measure, between June year ending 2022 and June 2023 household prices rose 7.7 percent, almost 1 percentage point higher than the CPI rise. It is also greater than the 7.0 percent rise in incomes. The rise in poverty is now less surprising.

The interpretation of the household equivalised disposable income figure of a 7.0 percent rise in incomes assumes that mortgage interest payments are spread evenly through the income distribution. SNZ estimates that there are an extra 12,000 children in poverty between the two years. (This uses a poverty line based on 50 percent of median (equivalised) household incomes.)

But households with children are more likely to have mortgages, so they are likely to be hit more heavily by the rise in interest rates. SNZ also provides an estimate of the change in all household incomes if housing costs (including mortgage interest) are deducted. It showed an increase in disposable income after housing costs of 4.4 percent, well below the 7.0 percent increase of incomes before housing costs and the various price index increases. When SNZ allows for this, it estimates that there were an additional 36,000 children in poverty – the increase is as common sense would predict.

Working with a large data base sometimes results in conclusions inconsistent with common sense. Usually that is because one has made a mistake or an oversight. This column simplifies how tricky the analysis can be. I did a lot of cross-checking. I have put some of the results in an appendix.

SNZ also provides another estimate of poverty, based on asking households whether they are having to make serious cuts in their spending. On their preferred measure they think ‘hardship poverty’ among children rose 23,000, from 10.5 percent of all children to 12.5 percent. Different poverty line, different level, but a similar increase in the poverty rate.

The above analysis, and the appendix, shows that the rise in child poverty was not so much weakness in income growth. Rather the evidence points to rising mortgage interest payments.

We know why interest rates have risen. The Reserve Bank has been increasing them to restrain the economy in order to reduce inflationary pressures. (World interest rates rose in the same period for similar reasons.) I do not want here to get into the intricacies of this macroeconomic-monetary policy, but to draw attention to the way it impacts on the income distribution (as most policy changes do).

It is ironic that among the people most impacted by the policy are the most defenceless and innocent – children. John Kenneth Galbraith once said that the unemployed were employed fighting inflation; so, apparently, are children.

If you raised the issue with the Reserve Bank, I would expect it to say something like while it is aware of distributional issues, its legislation charges them with restraining inflation but has no mention of doing so fairly or taking the concerns of the weak into consideration. That, the Bank would probably say, is the responsibility of Treasury and fiscal policy; in any case it has no policy instruments to directly modify the income distribution..

We sort of recognised this when both National and Labour campaigned on raising Working for Family (WFF) payments. Note that WFF does not target families paying mortgages. It is hard to think of a viable fiscal instrument that would. WFF is intended to benefit many families with children, so a hike is likely to reduce child poverty to some extent. We shan’t know until February 2026 (and there may be other factors that will increase it).

What surprised me when I did the above analysis is that the evidence is that, until June 2023 anyway, there is not a special case that households need income tax relief. There are always demands for cuts, of course, and National campaigned on income tax cuts. It is quite likely that they had not looked at the evidence – who does? Their promise to cut income tax may be based on the ideological desire to reduce the scope of the state and increase the size of the private sector – an honourable political ideology (although not particularly mine). Thus their decision to stop indexing benefits to rising average wages, returning to indexing by the CPI, even though it will increase child poverty.

My guess as to what is currently going on in tax policy is that state sector spending is proving much harder to cut than promised and the economy seems to be deteriorating more than expected. That is going to make it much harder to deliver the promised income tax cuts within the coalition government’s promised public debt target.

If the public debt track is higher, it will be paid for in the future by today’s children. If the Reserve Bank decides that requires a higher interest rate track, it will be paid for by today’s children. If we get the macroeconomic stance wrong and unemployment rises, the income cuts will be paid for by today’s children – in part anyway. Funny, isn’t it, how often the frontline payees are the weak and innocent?

There are two appendices. One reports on the data I used in the above analysis; the second is some notes on disability and poverty.

Appendix I: Changes Between the June 2022 and the June 2023 Year

Consumer Price Index: up 6.8 percent.

Housing Living Cost Price Index: up 7.7 percent.

Household (Equivalised) Disposable Income: up 7.0 percent.

Household (Equivalised) Disposable Income after deducting housing costs: up 4.4 percent.

Ordinary-time hourly wages: up 7.3 percent.

The minimum wage up 10.8 percent (but not everyone on the minimum wage has children).

The net social security benefit for sole parent support: up 8.1 percent, and the family tax credit up by 11.4 percent (these are but representative of benefits generally).

The unemployment rate went up from 3.25 percent to 3.43 percent (or about 13,500 souls). (Some research I did many years ago suggested that incomes at the bottom of the distribution were very sensitive to unemployment, but my study focused on far bigger changes than have occurred recently.)

Appendix II: Disability and Poverty

According to the SNZ data, the proportion of children with a disability living below the poverty line (defined as 50 percent of median equivalised disposable household income) is much the same as the proportion for non-disabled children. (They are reported as about 1 percentage point higher over the last four years). However, on the measure of severe material hardship the proportion of disabled children in poverty is about two-and a half times that for the non-disabled children (5.7 percentage points).

This is no surprise. Disability generates additional expenses. We make no adjustment for this in the poverty-income measures.

We knew this when the poverty measurement paradigm was developed five decades ago. But we have hardly progressed our thinking since. Over the five decades we have never taken serious research on poverty seriously – it just has not been a research priority. The weak missing out again?


*Brian Easton, an independent scholar, is an economist, social statistician, public policy analyst and historian. He was the Listener economic columnist from 1978 to 2014. This is a re-post of an article originally published on pundit.co.nz. It is here with permission.

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18 Comments

So the conclusion is the housing ponzi scheme has led to high mortgage payments and high rents - and this has actually screwed ordinary Kiwis. Whoda thunk it?

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So 6 years of economic mismanagement and a mentality of "be kind, welfare for all, money for nothing" has led to people not working and child poverty.  No surprise there.

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Nope. 

https://www.msd.govt.nz/documents/about-msd-and-our-work/publications-r…

 

Your claim is at odds with evidence. Go look it up, above. below is short summary for you:

“In fact, the most common demographic for children below the poverty line features a Pakeha child in a two child, two parent family in paid work, living in a private rental.”

 

 

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“In fact, the most common demographic for children below the poverty line features a Pakeha child in a two child, two parent family in paid work, living in a private rental.”

They must feel really good & charitable about their hard earned incomes & taxes making people who can't be bothered getting out of bed (& their kids) much better off than they are themselves.

 

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2

This is completely correct. Jacinda came to power on the promise of free houses for everyone and massive handouts. Everyone was happy (particularly those expecting the free stuff).

My opinion was that each and every one of the people targeted with handouts and promises would end up poorer and less happy. She promised to saddle landlords and other productive industries with higher costs, which were obviously going to be passed down to consumers and renters and magnify the inflation disaster they also created, and so it happened. 

...and here we are with the legacy of the incompetent.

 

 

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Worse than usual, from you.

Landlords are NOT a productive industry. 

They're 100% parasitic - like most 'income earning' activities. 

 

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I said 'other productive industries'. Rental property is an investment, on which you get a return. Not a very good return unless there are capital gains, but a return never the less. Costs were added, they were passed on, that is what happens. Other productive industries include farming and the food and transportation industry in general, upon which additional costs we saddled, and then passed on.

I don't think you can argue that an array of costs were not added across the board, and combined with incompetence and resulting inflation it has stuffed the very people that they were supposed to represent.

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But, yes I get that you don't like landlords, and any mention of them makes you and many other people react with some strange sort of anger. You don't seem to approve of anyone getting ahead. I'm not a landlord, I am an investor. I am not sure I could deal with renters, rental property or the issues that come with it.

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Lol... Landlords are productive industries...

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Scrap those school lunches.

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1

In our day , we had to scrap our school lunch out of the gutter , and eat it with gravel.

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2

Luxury! we used to dream of having gravel...

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4

Yes, I agree, They should be scraped. I have heard over half of them are not eaten and end up in the rubbish. This is another successful Labour policy, Successful in that nothing is achieved and the money is flushed down the bog, which is their MO (lots of people are probably employed to make the lunches, and many people to throw them away too). What do you make of this PDK ? You don't like waste, but is manufacturing stuff to throw away ok when Labour do it, or is it better because it could be composted (but isn't).

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You could also say that those things will be paid by tomorrows immigrants. Many of today's children will be in Australia paying tax there (if they realise what's best for them).

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4

For every 5 Maori in NZ there is one living in Australia (in my extended family the number is two and both live in Australia).  Is there any similar data for Pakeha?  When it becomes 50% Kiwi living in Australia should we merge countries?

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Capitalism values debt, capital, profit, getting and having the largest quantities possible for oneself, higher than it values the wellbeing of people and planet.  People and planet are merely expendable resources.  As a societal construct/ruling system and via mass propaganda it's logical that those beliefs/values eventually embed themselves into the individual human.

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Child poverty.

....breeding like flies...banging kids out from a young age....no education or apprenticeship....drugs, tobacco  and alcohol....and an entitlement attitude, "everyone else can go to work but I won't".

Loads of jobs but employers can't find enough motivated people. 

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Haha. Ever cared to understand why there is a large number of "Boomers" - because their parents and their parents before them "bred like flies".  They would've been considered to be living in poverty too under the current measurements, but I doubt they realised it.  Tobacco and alcohol was fairly common and they appeared to be able to afford these and a home doing "minimum" wage jobs.  I think the community was generally more encouraging and supportive of each other too without the downright bashing we hear today.

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