Wednesday, 25 October 2017

The National Party is leaving New Zealand with unprecedented levels of debt


Next time someone tells you National have left the country in good shape....


No automatic alt text available.

Nation of Debt: Half a trillion dollars and still rising

Картинки по запросу


10 June, 2017


Our national debt has topped half a trillion dollars and is still rising, despite signs that the pace of borrowing is starting to ease.
The Herald has tallied the country's total gross debt - combining household, business, agricultural, central and local government debt.
The grand total of $528.7 billion is up 7.3 per cent from a year ago.
The latest Reserve Bank figures (for the year to April 30) show household debt has topped $250b, driven by rising property prices and an increase in consumer borrowing.
That's an increase of more than 60 per cent in 10 years.
But, while household debt remains at levels that worry the Reserve Bank and leaves us vulnerable to the risk of a housing market crash or international financial crisis, there have been signs of improvement in the past year.
Crown debt has stabilised as the Government looks to reduce its debt to 20 per cent of GDP by 2020.
The cooling of the housing market, particularly in Auckland, saw the rate of credit growth ease in the first four months of the year.
In terms of housing credit growth, things "have definitely improved", Deputy Reserve Bank deputy governor Grant Spencer told the Herald.
The overall ratio of net debt to GDP - a key measure for economists and ratings agencies - has fallen as economic growth and improved savings offset total volume of debt.
Dairy prices have also improved, taking the cashflow pressure off debt-laden farmers.
"This loss of momentum in the housing market has seen the rate at which we're accumulating debt slow down over the past year," said Westpac senior economist Satish Ranchhod.
However, the risks remain high.
For New Zealand households, the ratio of debt to income has now reached a record - 168 per cent, well above the pre-financial crisis peak of 159 per cent.

As well as continuing vulnerability to international shocks, New Zealand now faces a risk to economic growth as the borrowing trend slows, Ranchhod says.
"With interest rates set to continue gradually rising over the coming years, we expect house price inflation will remain modest through 2017 and 2018. That's likely to continue dampening credit growth, and will weigh on spending and economic activity more generally."
The slowdown in debt accumulation and house price inflation makes it less likely that we'll see a tightening of Reserve Bank policy in the near term, Ranchhod says.
But the RBNZ is still looking at introducing new tools such as debt-to-income ratios for mortgage borrowers.

No automatic alt text available.
Image may contain: text



National and Labour both just play the same game, but change around which end of the see-saw to sit on. The see-saw is the debt-based monetary supply pump owned by the banks. Either govt debt or private debt has to grow. Here's how Cullen's time looked. The graph series was discontinued after 2012”

No automatic alt text available.
This was the speech Winston Peters gave in which he imparted some home truths about the true state of the New Zealand economy.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.