Rates rises wrong as economy stalls: NZIER
Rates rises wrong as economy stalls: NZIER
by Pattrick Smellie
July 6 (BusinessDesk) - The Reserve Bank of New Zealand should stop raising interest rates, amid worrying evidence that the economy recovery is stalling, says New Zealand Institute of Economic Research Quarterly Survey of Business Opinion chief economist Shamubeel Eaqub.
His comments come with this morning's release of NZIER's June quarter Quarterly Survey of Business Opinion, showing a drop in optimism and actual activity experienced across the economy, and a fall in seasonally adjusted business confidence from 36% to 28% between the March and June quarters.
"It's not quite double-dip
recession, more a stumbling recovery," said Eaqub, but the
very weak growth evident in the QSBO showed a far weaker
economy than would normally be expected a year into the
recovery.
"Of concern is a renewed weakness in
manufacturing, construction, and investment intentions.
"Small firms, which tend to lead the economic cycle,
experienced deteriorating conditions in the June 2010
quarter. The outlook is still fragile."
The economy
had "yet again" failed to deliver on expectations of a
stronger recovery, with some weakening of export activity
underpinning ongoing weakness in the domestic economy, where
retailers' previously strong expectations were now falling
and becoming more realistic, said Eaqub.
"The
household sector is far more cautious than at any stage that
we've seen in the last decade or so."
Eaqub was
almost alone among economists urging the RBNZ not to raise
the Official Cash Rate last month, and the latest QSBO bore
out his caution, he said.
"The domestic economy is
very weak, the international situation remains particularly
volatile. The Reserve Bank should have waited and the
numbers we are seeing show that., It's a mistake to be
raising interest rates when the economy is not growing."
Inflationary pressures, as measured by the QSBO,
remained subdued, and sucgh pressure as there is may reflect
the combined effect of emissions trading scheme, ACC and GST
increases.
(BusinessDesk) 10:09:45