NZMEA Supports Call for Action on Monetary Policy
19 November 2009
The New Zealand Manufacturers and
Exporters Association (NZMEA) is supporting calls from the
Labour party for changes to monetary policy. Labour leader
Phil Goff called for such a move in a speech to Federated
Farmers this morning.
Goff declared that, “today I
am announcing the end of the consensus around the policy
targets and tools of the Reserve Bank.”
“Labour
wants to see a step change in our export
performance.”
“We want policy that will keep our
exchange rate as stable and competitive as
possible.”
NZMEA Chief Executive John Walley says,
“We had a monetary policy review in 2007 where the whole
issue was basically ignored; clearly the economic problems
since then have brought this issue back into the spotlight.
A properly run review is long overdue but very welcome for
New Zealand’s exporters. As for changes we need look no
further than Singapore; their monetary policy has delivered
a stable exchange rate, lower inflation, lower interest
rates and higher growth than New Zealand for
decades.”
“As Phil Goff mentioned in his speech
our current monetary policy settings mean that the tradeable
sector is punished via a high exchange rate when non-tradeable inflation rises.
This policy sends all the wrong signals to the economy and
is largely responsible for our continual external
deficits.”
“We need to find additional tools to fight inflation in the
non-traded sector directly rather than transferring all
costs to our exporters; that wealth transfer has to stop
before the export sector collapses,” says Mr.
Walley.
“The Reserve Bank has introduced a new bank
funding policy and Treasury has suggested better fiscal
management to assist monetary policy objectives. The
Reserve Bank Act needs to be informed by the Singaporean
experience and target exchange rate stability to complete
this suite of measures.”
“The Government should
support this initiative and do more than just bemoan the
detrimental effects of an overvalued currency. It is time
to stop talking and start changing fiscal and monetary
policy to put an end to the wealth transfers from the
tradeable to the non-tradeable sector.”
ENDS