The
media can't really ignore news like this, but they can keep it out of
context.
NZ:
Terms of trade get ugly as exports slide
National
income took a hit in the first three months of the year as export
prices fell faster than import prices.
2
June, 2012
The
terms of trade, which measures the changing volume of goods imports
that can be funded by a fixed volume of New Zealand's exports, has
been falling since it hit a 37-year high in the June quarter.
The
decline accelerated to 2.3 per cent in the March quarter, bringing
the terms of trade back to where it was nearly two years ago and 4.3
per cent off its peak from last year.
It
is still about 10 per cent above its average level over the past 10
years.
But
Goldman Sachs economist Philip Borkin said: "While the level of
the terms of trade is important, as it is effectively a gauge of
purchasing power, and it is expected to remain elevated relative to
history, it is the change that is a key determining factor for
national income growth."
Strong
national income growth, particularly in the agricultural sector, had
made the process of deleveraging less painful, Borkin said, but he
expects it to contract through most of this year.
A
rise in the exchange rate during the March quarter reduced export and
import prices in New Zealand dollar terms, but the 3.8 per cent fall
in export prices outstripped a 1.5 per cent fall in import prices.
Dairy
prices were the biggest contributor to lower export prices, falling
5.6 per cent to a two-year low.
Fruit
prices fell 7.3 per cent, forest products 4.2 per cent, meat 3.6 per
cent and wool 10.1 per cent.
On
the import side, transport equipment prices fell 2.3 per cent,
mechanical machinery 1.8 per cent and electrical machinery 2.6 per
cent. Oil prices were flat.
ASB
economist Jane Turner expects world prices for dairy products and
meat to continue to ease back from the extremely high levels reached
last year.
"Falling
export prices mean the export sector will be providing less support
for the economic recovery over 2012 compared with 2011," she
said.
Compounding
the adverse change in relative prices, volumes of exports eased 0.6
per cent in the quarter while imports climbed 5.4 per cent.
Imports
of oil and refined products accounted for much of the increase. They
can impart some volatility to the import numbers.
But
even when they were excluded, import volumes were up 1.8 per cent on
the December quarter.
New
Zealand also exports oil, but 19 per cent less in the March quarter,
on top of a 9 per cent fall in the December quarter.
Oil
exports have been on a declining trend, in line with falling
production from the Tui field.
Dairy
export volumes rose 3.6 per cent, the third quarter in a row to
record an increase in volumes, offsetting three consecutive quarters
of falling dairy prices.
Meat
exports rose 1.1 per cent but that followed falls of 4.6 and 6.5 per
cent in the preceding quarters.
Fruit
export volumes fell 21 per cent.
Turner
said the quarter's 2.2 per cent rise in imports of capital goods,
excluding transport equipment, was an encouraging sign of continuing
investment demand in the economy.
Weaker
kiwi helps export commodities
A
weaker kiwi dollar took the sting out of a further drop in world
prices for New Zealand's export commodities last month.
ANZ's
commodity price index dropped 4.2 per cent, its 12th decline in the
past 13 months.
The
index has fallen 18 per cent from its peak a year ago and is back to
a 21-month low. But the currency fell slightly more, so that in New
Zealand dollar terms the index was up for the month, albeit only 0.8
per cent above the two and a half year low it hit in April.
Wool
recorded the largest decline, 11 per cent to the lowest level since
September 2010, ANZ economist Steve Edwards said.
Dairy
products, which make up 43 per cent of the index, fell 8 per cent to
be 28 per cent off their peak in March last year. Sheepmeat prices
fell 6 per cent, while beef, pelts and aluminium all fell 2 per cent.
But apple prices rose 12 per cent as the new season's Braeburns
reached Northern Hemisphere markets, Edwards said.
"Likewise
kiwifruit prices lifted 7 per cent as its export season got under
way."
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