Robertson: Economy grows despite global challenges

Finance Minister Grant Robertson. Photo: Samuel Rillstone/RNZ.

The economy is continuing to grow solidly with the return of tourists in increasing numbers and higher construction activity, despite a deteriorating global economy, according to Finance Minister Grant Robertson.

GDP rose 2 per cent in the September quarter following an increase of 1.9 percent in the previous June quarter, above economists' expectations which ranged from 0.7 per cent to 1.3 per cent.

The economy is nearly 7.9 per cent bigger than before the start of the pandemic, ahead of Australia, the US, Canada, Euro area, Japan and the UK.

'The growth has been led by business investment and return of tourists, while central government spending was down 1.8 per cent in the September quarter and flat in the previous June quarter. This follows the Treasury saying yesterday that the Government's fiscal policies were reducing inflation pressures in the economy,” says Grant Robertson.

'This is another solid result and shows the strength of the economy despite a challenging global situation marked by high inflation and the effects of the Ukraine war and ongoing disruptions from the pandemic. The latest economic indicators suggest the momentum has continued into the December quarter. There are signs however that activity will slow from there.

'Government actions to grow the economy means we are in a stronger position that before the pandemic. New Zealand is as well placed as any other country to face the shifting global conditions, with low unemployment, growing exports, a rebound in tourist numbers and a healthy set of Government books. Our economic plan is working for Kiwis.

On an annual basis, economic activity was 6.4 per cent higher than the same quarter in the previous year. The size of the economy was $375 billion.

'The economy's resilience stands us in good stead in a volatile economic environment with a period of high inflation to be followed by forecasts of a shallow recession. We will continue to focus on supporting New Zealanders with cost of living pressures while carefully and responsibly managing the Government's finances that the Treasury noted is helping reduce demand pressures,” says Grant Robertson.

'The services sector, which makes up two-thirds of the economy, rose 2 percent as more people travelled, which occurred in a period when the borders were fully opened to all visitors. The construction sector, business investment and exports of dairy and meat also grew strongly.

'Compared with New Zealand's 6.4 percent growth, Australia rose by 5.9 per cent, Canada by 3.9 per cent, the Euro area by 2.3 per cent, Japan by 1.7 per cent, the UK by 2.4 per cent and the US by 1.9 per cent. The OECD grew 2.5 per cent.

'Our balanced approach means we will continue to invest in the public services that New Zealanders value – hospitals, schools and houses - and build an economy for the long term that delivers higher wage jobs and low emissions that makes our businesses and families stronger in good times and bad,” says Grant Robertson.

3 comments

Spin

Posted on 17-12-2022 07:05 | By Slim Shady

Just means higher inflation for longer and higher interest rates for longer. A growing economy in high inflation is not a good thing. Robertson is standing round the fire rubbing his hands, while the RNBZ is trying to get around him to put it out. He’s celebrating like he’s clever. He’s not. He created the problem that is coming.


Muppet

Posted on 17-12-2022 15:14 | By Slim Shady

What Labour have done is borrow lots of money, which the country is paying around 5% interest on, and will be for decades. It's like you or I taking out a mortgage, paying over 5% interest, just to stick in a savings account paying 2% interest, and claiming we are getting better off just because the savings account balance goes up.


Yep small improvement

Posted on 18-12-2022 08:10 | By Kancho

Labour has borrowed heavily and printed money that the Reserve Bank now hiking rates so slightly better GDP isn't significant. Labour makes it hard for farmers who still lead our exports and still carry the country. Every New Zealanders share of the indebtedness is in excess of $140,000 each. So yes it's spin to say we are slightly better than expected and it's what happens next year that will tell whether we are in a recession and people suffer. Also fuel going back up will drive more inflation so Robertson spin won't save Labour at the elections


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