New Zealand Economy Contracts The Most Since Great Depression

Bloomberg

Published Sep 17, 2020 08:52

Updated Sep 17, 2020 09:09

(Bloomberg) -- New Zealand suffered its worst economic slump since the Great Depression in the second quarter as a strict nationwide lockdown to combat the coronavirus brought the country to a standstill.

Gross domestic product plunged 12.2% from the first quarter, Statistics New Zealand said Thursday in Wellington. That’s the biggest three-month contraction since quarterly records began in 1977. Economists forecast a 12.5% decline. From a year earlier, the economy shrank 12.4%, the most recorded in comparable official data dating back to 1955.

New Zealand is going through a sharper but shorter economic shock than it experienced during the depression, when GDP fell 5.3% in 1931 and a further 7.1% in 1932, according to academic research. Nor is the Covid slump as bad as initially feared. The South Pacific nation succeeded in eliminating community spread of the virus, allowing it to emerge early from lockdown, and indicators suggest growth surged in the third quarter as consumers went on a spending spree.

However, the real pain may still lie ahead. The border remains closed to foreigners, crippling the tourism industry, and the end of the government’s wage subsidy is expected to see unemployment rise.

The New Zealand dollar was little changed at 67.36 U.S. cents after the release.

Today’s report confirms the first recession -- defined as two consecutive quarters of economic decline -- since 2010. GDP fell a revised 1.4% in the first quarter of the year, the statistics agency said.

The data are unlikely to dent Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern’s chances of winning a second term in the Oct. 17 election. Ardern is riding high in the polls after her deft handling of the pandemic.

New Zealand’s seven-week lockdown began in the final week of March and ended in May. While a fresh community outbreak of Covid-19 in mid-August required a second lockdown in largest city Auckland, the country has fared better than many of its peers who still don’t have the virus under control.

U.K. GDP plummeted 20.4% in the second quarter from the first and 21.7% from a year earlier. In the U.S., the economy shrank 9.5% in the quarter, a drop that equals an annualized pace of 32.9%, its sharpest downturn since at least the 1940s.

Australia’s economy shrank less -- 7% in the quarter and 6.3% in the year -- but it is not expected to enjoy the same bounce back in activity in the third quarter that New Zealand is experiencing.

The government has pledged NZ$62 billion ($42 billion) of fiscal support to help revive domestic demand and protect jobs, while the central bank has slashed interest rates and embarked on quantitative easing to drive down borrowing costs. Reserve Bank policy makers are considering taking interest rates negative to further nurse the economy through the downturn.

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