The Reserve Bank鈥檚 higher-than-expected Official Cash Rate hike 鈥渨ill push New Zealand into recession鈥, an economist says.
The bank today lifted the Official Cash Rate by 50 basis points to 5.25 per cent.
The 11th successive hike, it takes the rate to its highest level since December 2008.
Inflation is still too high and persistent, and employment is beyond its maximum sustainable level. The recent severe weather events in the North Island have led to higher prices for some goods and services, the RBNZ said.
Abhijit Surya, who works for Sydney-based Capital Economics, said the move 鈥渨ill push New Zealand into recession鈥.
鈥淭he RBNZ鈥檚 tightening bias all but firms up our forecast that New Zealand will enter a protracted recession this year,鈥 they said.
Capital Economics expects the downturn will be so sharp that we will see rates being cut by the end of the year.
National鈥檚 finance spokesperson Nicola Willis said today鈥檚 50-point lift in the OCR was a 鈥減unch in the guts鈥.
She said it means far more pain for New Zealand families.
鈥滿ortgage-holders up and down the country were holding their breath and hoping for some relief. Instead, they鈥檝e been given another punch in the guts.
鈥漈his is the 11th consecutive hike in the Official Cash Rate. Around half of New Zealand mortgage holders will be re-fixing their mortgages in the next six months, meaning many will see their interest rates double from 3 per cent or less to more than 6 per cent.鈥
Willis said the speed of this hike will leave many 鈥渟crambling, trying to find hundreds of dollars more every fortnight just to stand still鈥.
鈥漇ome will be unable to do that,鈥 Willis said. 鈥淪adly, for too many Kiwis this will be the punch that sends them off the edge, into mortgage arrears, unwanted house sales and financial distress.鈥
Willis said New Zealand is 鈥渆nduring a prolonged cost of living crisis鈥.
鈥漀ew Zealand鈥檚 inflation rate is higher than Australia鈥檚, the USA鈥檚 and many other countries we like to compare ourselves with.
ASB said recent weather disasters were 鈥渕ore inflationary than initially assumed in February鈥.
鈥淎 final 25 basis-point increase in May, to 5.50 per cent, is our new forecast 鈥 but it鈥檚 a lineball call,鈥 ASB said in a statement.
The New Zealand Council of Trade Unions (NZCTU) said the RBNZ should pause before it considers further increases in interest rates, says NZCTU economist Craig Renney.
鈥漅BNZ today chose to increase interest rates by 0.5 per cent, above market expectations. Internationally, inflation is falling in advanced economies.
鈥漇ome Reserve Banks such as the Reserve Bank of Australia are holding their interest rates. They have recognised that monetary policy operates with a significant lag, meaning that much of the impact of the increased interest rates have yet to be felt,鈥 Renney said.
鈥漈he last NZIER Quarterly Survey of Business Opinion showed that capacity constraints were easing. Now is not the time to be adding further interest rates increases when the impact of existing OCR changes are yet to be discovered. The Monetary Policy Statement today made scant mention of the employment impacts of these changes.鈥
Unemployment in New Zealand has been rising in recent quarters, and too many New Zealanders are underutilised in the labour market, Renney said.
鈥漈o say that unemployment is above its maximum sustainable level is to accept that tens of thousands more Kiwis must become unemployed.
鈥漌e reject that approach and the idea that some of the most vulnerable must pay the price for inflation control.鈥
Renney said placing the impact of inflation control 鈥渙nto the back of working people is neither fair nor economically sustainable鈥.
The New Zealand dollar rallied sharply on the higher-than-expected hike. In the minutes following the release, the kiwi was trading at US63.6c, up about half a US cent from US63.08 before the release.
The RBNZ effectively shrugged off global banking woes. 鈥淭he Committee鈥檚 assessment is that there is no material conflict between lowering inflation and maintaining financial stability in New Zealand,鈥 it said.
鈥淗owever, wholesale interest rates have fallen significantly since the February Statement, and this could put downward pressure on lending rates,鈥 it said. 鈥淎s a result, a 50 basis point increase in the OCR was seen as helping to maintain the current lending rates faced by businesses and households, while also supporting an increase in retail deposit rates.鈥
In other words, the RBNZ appears concerned that a smaller hike may have resulted in mortgage rates falling.
鈥淢embers agreed that the sooner supply and demand were better matched in the economy, the lower the overall cost of reducing inflation.鈥
The two-year swap rate, which has an influence on home mortgage rates, gained 15 basis points to 5.1 per cent.
鈥漀o one saw this coming,鈥 Imre Speizer, senior markets strategist at Westpac, said. 鈥漈he markets are extremely busy dealing with the shock,鈥 he said.
Pundits had expected there would be a pullback from the 50 basis point hike forecast after the last Monetary Policy Statement in February - and that the peak for rate hikes will now be 5.25 per cent, rather than the 5.5 per cent previously expected.
Today鈥檚 decision is a briefer Monetary Policy Review, as opposed to a full Monetary Policy Statement.
That means the RBNZ and Governor Adrian Orr will likely give less away in terms of the overall economic outlook.
Economists this week told the Herald a听.
Yesterday, the听, leaving its official cash rate at 3.6 per cent.
That decision followed consecutive interest rate rises across the Tasman since May last year.
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