NZ Wage Inflation Subdued in Third Quarter
* Wages grew 0.4%q/q in the September quarter
*
Labour demand continued to decline
* Employment report
Thursday the main focus
Private sector labour costs
(as measured by the LCI) in New Zealand rose a slightly
faster than expected 0.4%q/q in 3Q (J.P. Morgan and
consensus: 0.3%). From a year earlier, wage inflation
moderated to just 1.9%oya, the slowest rate since early
2001, from 2.6% in 2Q.
With respect to the monetary
policy outlook, today’s numbers alone have few
implications.
To view pertinent graphs click on the following link: http://img.scoop.co.nz/media/pdfs/0911/JPMorgan113.doc
Thursday’s 3Q employment numbers are,
however, an important milestone on the monetary policy
front. With the unemployment rate rising, and wage growth
subdued, the RBNZ will afford itself some time to sit on the
policy sidelines. Our forecast is for the unemployment rate
to jump from 6.0% to 6.7% (consensus 6.4%), inflated to some
extent by an elevated level of labour force participation,
which we expect will nudge up to 68.6%. Underemployment will
remain near a 10-year high, which will remain a key policy
concern.
The Quarterly Employment Survey also
released today showed average hourly earnings spiking
1.7%q/q in the private sector in 3Q. Reflecting the
underlying weakness in the labour market, however, demand
for labour continued to decline, particularly in the
manufacturing sector. The number of full-time equivalent
employees (-3.5%oya), filled jobs (-2.6%), and total paid
hours (-3.0%) all fell for the fourth straight quarter.
The RBNZ last week shifted to a neutral policy stance,
signaling that the OCR will remain unchanged until 2H10,
with the RBNZ seeing no “urgency” to withdraw the
monetary policy stimulus. Our forecast calls for Governor
Bollard to deliver the first rate hike in mid-2010, although
we acknowledge the risk of an earlier move if the housing
market indicators continue to firm and the labour market
fails to deteriorate as much as expected. If these domestic
indicators prove to be stronger than expected, Dr. Bollard
will tighten policy earlier to hamper the prospects of
another consumer spending
spree.
ENDS