This
is NZ's Right-wing, bankster prime minister trying to persuade the NZ
public that as the rest of the world panics there is nothing to worry
about
"The rest of the world may be going to hell in a handcart, but we're all right Jack!"
Key
banks on forecasts despite slump
Prime
Minister John Key says the worst slump in retail sales in 17 years is
not a sign the economy is heading toward another recession, as the
world holds its breath over the possible fallout from the Greek
crisis
15
May, 2012
The
record fall triggered Opposition warnings of a possible double-dip
recession. But little more than a week out from the Budget, Mr Key
said Treasury and Reserve Bank forecasts showed no signs of a
contraction.
"The
Budget documents will show we are likely to experience ... reasonably
robust levels of growth in 2013-14," he said.
Australia's
performance was crucial. Its mining sector was strong but virtually
every other part of its economy was weak.
But
there was the risk of a slowdown in Europe, which could reverberate
around the world.
"If
the global conditions are very weak, that can have an impact and we
can't rule that out."
In
statistics released yesterday, core retail sales volumes were down
2.5 per cent in the first three months of the year, the biggest fall
since records began in 1995. Supermarket sales fell 7.4 per cent,
also the largest drop on record.
But
while the slide was larger than forecast, economists said a dip was
expected after the boost from the Rugby World Cup.
Labour's
Economic Development spokesman, David Cunliffe, said it was "an
ominous warning that a double-dip recession could be on the cards"
and was not all explained by the World Cup.
Government
policy was also to blame: "It's classic Keynesianism; cut, cut,
cut means money cannot circulate and the economy winds down."
With
real incomes going backwards and unemployment back up to 6.7 per
cent, consumers could not afford to spend.
BNZ
economist Craig Ebert said the dip, which saw sales volumes fall 1.5
per cent, was "the natural hangover from the Rugby World Cup"
though it was bigger than the market expected. It partly reversed the
4 per cent retail surge in the second half of last year.
The
slump in retail data comes as the Government prepares its second
"zero Budget" on May 24 against a backdrop of uncertainty
in Europe, where several countries are witnessing a backlash against
austerity measures.
German
Chancellor Angela Merkel, leader of the pro-austerity group, suffered
a defeat in the country's biggest region at the hands of the Social
Democrats and the Greens, while demonstrations took place in Spain.
Speculation
is mounting that Greece will abandon the euro, sparking a banking
crisis, after talks failed to resolve the political standoff over
spending cuts forced on it as part of a European Union bailout
package.
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