Business profits lift saving
13 November 2008
Business profits lift
saving
National saving (from all
sectors) rose to $2.9 billion for the year ended March 2008
from a fourteen year low of $1.6 billion in 2007, Statistics
New Zealand said today. This is the first increase in
national saving for four years. Contributing to this rise,
gross operating surplus increased 8.5 percent, reflecting
increased business profits (mainly for agriculture and
manufacturing).
Compensation of employees increased 6.0 percent for the year ended March 2008. Gross domestic product (GDP) in current prices increased 7.0 percent for the year ended March 2008, following a 5.1 percent increase in the previous March year. Current prices means that the effects of inflation have not been removed, unlike the headline estimates presented in the quarterly GDP release.
National disposable income, which measures the total income available to New Zealanders (from all sources, both domestic and overseas) for consumption or saving, rose 6.7 percent. This follows a 4.7 percent rise in the March 2007 year. National disposable income grew at a faster rate in the March 2008 year than final consumption expenditure, resulting in higher national saving. Total final consumption expenditure by households and government increased 5.7 percent, the lowest increase since the year ended March 2002. Household consumption expenditure increased 5.0 percent in the year ended March 2008, following an increase of 5.6 percent in the previous year, dropping below increases above 6.0 percent for the years ending March 2003–2006.
The experimental household income and
outlay account shows that household consumer debt interest
on housing increased 20.8 percent, up $2.1 billion in the
March 2008 year, following annual increases in excess of 20
percent for the past four years. External financing of
capital investment increased, with net borrowing from the
rest of the world growing from $14.2 billion in the March
2007 year to $15.0 billion in 2008.
However, the
ratio to GDP improved from 8.6 percent of GDP to 8.4 percent
of GDP in March 2008. Capital investment in fixed assets
increased 6.0 percent, driven by residential building (up
9.0 percent) in the year ended March 2008. Other
construction (which includes roads, bridges and dams)
increased 10.0 percent, and plant, machinery and equipment
increased 5.0 percent in the March 2008 year.
Geoff
Bascand
Government Statistician
13 November 2008
ENDS