New interactive map offers insights into regional spending – Media release
18 May 2018
Stats NZ has launched an interactive map that allows users to explore patterns of retail spending around the country.
In 2017, New Zealanders and visitors spent $92 billion at retail businesses within New Zealand, 6.8 percent ($6 billion)
more than in 2016. Unsurprisingly, most of these sales were in those regions with the highest populations. Auckland,
with its 1.7 million inhabitants, recorded $33 billion in sales in 2017, while the West Coast (population about 33,000)
had just $0.6 billion in sales.
However, when we look at regional sales on a per capita basis, some interesting patterns emerge.
Our interactive map shows the annual per capita sales value for each of New Zealand’s 16 regions. It also shows how sales within a region
are split between the four major retail groupings:
• motor vehicles, parts, and fuel retailing
• supermarket and specialised food retailing
• accommodation and food services
• other retailing (including non-store retailing such as catalogue and online retailers).
Per capita spending in a given region is influenced by factors like the median income of its residents, the strength of
its local tourism industry, and the presence of non-store-based retail businesses (which are more likely to sell to
shoppers outside their region as well as locals).
Regions with lower per capita retail spending tend to have lower median incomes, and a higher proportion of their retail
spending goes to supermarkets and specialised food retailers, such as butcheries, delis, and liquor stores. Regions with
higher per capita retail spends tend to have higher average incomes, and a greater proportion of their retail sales are
from the accommodation and food services industry group, largely driven by tourists.