NZIER Consensus forecasts
NZIER Consensus forecasts
Incorporating returns received up to Tuesday 15 June 2010
Sustained and sustainable growth
The NZIER Consensus Forecasts are an average of New Zealand economic forecasts compiled from a survey of financial and economic agencies. These are not NZIER’s forecasts. The average forecasts do not necessarily represent the views of individual participants. Forecasts are for March years, e.g. 2009/10 refers to the year ended March 2010.
The economy is on the path to sustained and sustainable economic growth, according to economic forecasters in the latest NZIER Consensus Forecasts Survey. The broad consensus is of a rebalancing from consumption and housing towards exports, and a return towards trend growth. However, there is considerable divergence of views on the residential construction sector’s recovery, the exchange rate and the current account deficit.
The consensus on average forecasts sustained economic growth in 2011 (3.2%, up from 3.1% in the March survey) and 2012 (3.3%, up from 3.2%). GDP forecasts for the March 2010 year remained flat at -0.4% as the year draws to an end. The pace of upward revisions has slowed, suggesting the economy is no longer surprising on the upside.
The unemployment rate is expected to gradually improve from 6.0% currently to 5.3% in March 2012, in line with the economy. Wage growth will be slow in the March 2011 year (1.5%), but a strengthening economy will see accelerating wages from 2012.
Consumer price inflation will spike due to GST and other administered charges, peaking at 5.1% in March 2011. Household spending will be subdued, despite personal tax cuts, due to a slow recovery in jobs, wages and the inflation spike eroding households’ purchasing power.
The outlook for residential construction is positive, but there is a wide divergence of views, ranging from a rip-roaring recovery to renewed deterioration. Exports will be strong through the forecast horizon, helped by a recovering global economy and moderate exchange rate appreciation. The exchange rate outlook is wildly divergent, suggesting exporters and importers will need to manage their currency exposure carefully.
Sustained recovery
Forecasters are optimistic of the
economic recovery. Upward revisions to GDP growth forecasts
have stabilised in the June quarter. The March 2010 year
forecast remained unchanged at -0.4%. Forecasters expect
quarterly GDP growth of 0.6% in the March quarter (data due
24 June) and 0.9% in the June 2010 quarter. Economic growth
is expected to be strong at 3.2% in the March 2011 year (up
from 3.1% in the previous survey). Economic growth will
remain strong at 3.3% in the March 2012 year (up from 3.2%).
However, there is a wide range of forecasts (2.2% to 4.2%),
indicating some uncertainty on the outlook.
Unemployment has peaked
The unemployment rate
has peaked. Forecasters expect it to have already peaked at
6.0% in the March 2010 year, a substantial improvement from
the 7.2% forecast in the previous survey. This reflects a
surprise dip in the unemployment rate in the March 2010
quarter (from 7.1% to 6.0%). The unemployment rate is
expected to gradually improve to 5.3% in the March 2012 year
in line with an improving economy.
Exports
strong and imports soar from 2011
The export outlook is
strong. Improving global activity, particularly in Asia has
boosted export forecasts. Forecasters expect exports to grow
strongly in 2011 (3.5% from 2.7%) and 2012 (5.3% from 5.1%).
There is some divergence of views on the exchange rate and
this is reflected in a wide band of export forecasts.
Imports are expected to recover in line with the
domestic economy. Imports are expected to recover sharply in
2011 (9.7% from 7.3%) and 2012 (5.9% from 6.2%). The trade
balance may worsen as imports grow more strongly than
exports.
Current account to worsen in 2011 and
2012
The current account deficit is expected to
deteriorate through the forecast horizon. After being
boosted in the March 2010 year by one-off tax payments by
the banking sector and an improving trade balance, the
current account is expected to return to large deficits.
There remains much uncertainty with a wide divergence of
views, ranging from very small deficits to the deficit
nearing recent high levels. Again, this reflects a wide
divergence of views on the exchange rate.
Investment to rebound sharply
Investment
activity is forecast to surge in 2011 and 2012 after two
years of contraction. Forecasters expect investment to
contract in March 2010 (-9.9% from -10.9%), but rebound
strongly in March 2011 (7.4% from 6.1%) and March 2012 (9.0%
from 8.7%). Within this, forecasters now expect the recovery
in the residential sector to occur earlier and other
investment to be strong over the forecast horizon. However,
the residential construction sector outlook ranges from
strong recovery to renewed weakness. Forecasts for other
investment are universally positive.
GST
increase to drive inflation
Inflation forecasts have
surged from the March survey (5.1% from 2.4%), reflecting
the GST increase announced in the May 2010 Budget. Excluding
the increase in GST, inflation is expected to fall in the
upper end of the RBNZ’s 1%-3% target band over the
forecast horizon. Inflation is expected to peak in March
2011 at 5.1% and remain elevated at 2.7% in 2012. The policy
changes will influence published CPI inflation figures for
some time. Excluding these changes inflation is expected to
be closer to 2% in the March 2012 year.
Wage
growth subdued – uncertain
The private sector wage
outlook is wildly divergent. Forecasts for March 2011 range
from a respectable 2.9% to a lacklustre 0.6% decline in
wages. On average wages are expected to grow by 1.5% in
March 2011 (down from 1.9% in the previous survey), but
recover in 2012 (3.0% from 2.6%). A slow recovery in wages
is reflected in only a gradual household spending recovery
over the forecast horizon.
Kiwi to
strengthen
Economic forecasters expect moderate exchange
rate appreciation over the forecast horizon. The exchange
rate outlook remains uncertain, reflected in a wide range of
forecasts, from strong appreciation to moderate
depreciation. The consensus forecast for the NZD trade
weighted index is 62.9, 66.6 and 66.4 in March 2010, March
2011 and March 2012 respectively. An appreciating exchange
rate will reduce the price of imports and erode export
competitiveness.