Meanwhile
the head of the New Zealand Council of Trade Unions, Helen Kelly has
described New Zealand's economy as being 'in collapse'
Australia’s
Economy Is In Worse Shape Than We Thought
Australia’s
economy slowed more than economists forecast last quarter on a weaker
housing market and rising imports. The local currency declined to a
six-week low.
4
September, 2012
Second-quarter
gross domestic product advanced 0.6 percent from the previous three
months, when it rose a revised 1.4 percent, a Bureau of Statistics
report released in Sydney today showed. The result compared with the
median of 26 estimates in a Bloomberg News survey for a 0.7 percent
gain.
The
report covers a period before companies including BHP Billiton Ltd.
scaled back mining projects in response to lower prices of iron ore,
the nation’s most valuable commodity export. Reserve Bank of
Australia Governor Glenn Stevens cut interest rates in May and June
to help support consumption and the nation’s housing market as an
elevated currency extended a slump in manufacturing and services.
“It
was inevitable growth would decelerate after the impressive but
unsustainable expansion” in the first quarter, Katrina Ell, an
economist at Moody’s Analytics in Sydney, said before the report.
“Mining investment, coupled with robust household consumption and
higher government spending were behind the solid second quarter.”
The
local currency weakened, touching $1.0190, the lowest since July 25.
It bought $1.0207 at 11:41 a.m. Sydney time, compared with $1.0210
before that data were released.
China’s
Slowdown
Resource
investment to meet Chinese demand and foreign investment funds
seeking a haven have spurred gains in the currency, which closed
above parity with the U.S. dollar for all but 23 days this year. The
Aussie has averaged $1.0246 in the past two years, compared with 72
U.S. cents in the prior decade.
It
has since retreated -- dropping 3.3 percent in the past month, the
worst performer among the 16 major currencies tracked by Bloomberg --
as signs mount that growth is slowing in China. A quarter of
Australia’s exports, or about 5 percent of GDP, goes to the world’s
second-largest economy, and 60 percent of those shipments are iron
ore.
Compared
with a year earlier, the economy expanded 3.7 percent in the second
quarter, today’s report showed. That matched the median forecast of
economists in a Bloomberg survey.
Government
spending rose 1.6 percent in the second quarter, adding 0.3
percentage point to GDP growth, today’s report showed. Household
consumption advanced 0.6 percent last quarter, also adding 0.3 point
to the expansion, it showed.
Housing
Slump
Dwellings
decreased 1.7 percent, subtracting 0.1 point from growth, the report
showed. Imports gained 0.9 percent, subtracting 0.2 point from the
expansion.
The
nation’s household savings ratio rose to 9.2 percent in the three
months through June from a revised 8.9 percent in the first quarter,
today’s report showed.
The
RBA yesterday held its benchmark interest rate at 3.5 percent for a
third straight meeting, citing “quite firm” consumption in the
first half, commodity prices that have fallen “sharply” in recent
months and a more uncertain outlook for China’s growth.
Data
since midyear have indicated that the economy may grow more slowly
than it did in the first half.
A
government report two days ago showed retail sales fell 0.8 percent
in July from a month earlier, the steepest drop since October 2010.
Consumer confidence in August declined by the most in five months,
according to a Westpac Banking Corp. and Melbourne Institute index.
BHP,
the world’s biggest miner, last month decided to delay approval of
an estimated $33 billion expansion of the Olympic Dam copper, uranium
and gold mine. Fortescue Metals Group Ltd., Australia’s biggest
iron ore producer after Rio Tinto Group and BHP, said yesterday it’s
cutting its full-year capital spending forecast by 26 percent to $4.6
billion.

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.