Reality
is starting to bite in New Zealand and there is real nervousness
about Europe and the world economy.
Kiwi
trade balance weakens
New
Zealand's current account deficit widened in the first quarter,
mainly reflecting a drop in the goods and services balance as dairy
export prices and oil shipments fell and the nation imported more
fuel.
TVNZ,
20
June, 2012
The
current account gap was $2.8 billion, seasonally adjusted, in the
three months ended March 31, up $600 million from the final quarter
of 2011, according to Statistics New Zealand. The annual deficit was
$9.7 billion, or 4.8% of gross domestic product.
Economists
in a Reuters survey had expected a quarterly gap of $1.1 billion,
unadjusted, for an annual deficit of $9.4 billion, or 4.6% of GDP.
Weaker
dairy prices are casting the biggest shadow on the New Zealand
economy, forcing Fonterra to cut its forecast payments to farmers and
slowing the pace of GDP.
In
the first quarter, exports of services also fell, reflecting the drop
off in visitors compared to the Rugby World Cup impact in the fourth
quarter of 2011.
"The
value of dairy exports fell despite an increase in volumes, as dairy
prices fell for the third quarter in a row," the Government
statistician's balance of payments manager John Morris said.
Reinsurance
premiums rose following the Canterbury earthquakes, which lifted
overall insurance payments in the year by $400 million. Outstanding
reinsurance claims fell to $11.9 billion at March 31, down $1.2
billion from December 31.
The
annual deficit mainly reflected fatter profits earned in New Zealand
by Australian banks, even as their earnings fell in the latest
quarter.
The
surplus on goods narrowed to $117 million in the first quarter,
seasonally adjusted, the smallest since December 2008 and a slump
from the $899 million surplus in the fourth quarter last year.
Exports
of goods fell $497 million in the latest quarter while imports rose
$402 million.
The
services deficit rose to $332 million from a deficit of $214 million
three months earlier, mainly reflecting a drop in spending in
overseas visitors, while kiwis spent a record $1.17 billion abroad as
the strong kiwi dollar made travel cheaper.
Profits
of foreign-owned companies fell $452 million in the latest quarter
while dividends paid to foreign direct investors by New Zealand
companies declined by $822 million.
In
the year, the income deficit widened to $10.77 billion, which was
$982 million wider than the deficit a year earlier.
There
was a $200 million net outflow of investment in the latest quarter as
a $1.8 billion outflow of New Zealand investment abroad was offset by
a $1.6 billion inflow of foreign investment in the local economy.
New
Zealand's net international debt position was $141.2 billion at March
31, a decline of $3.6 billion from three months earlier.
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