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Average household costs up 3% across the year. Who was hit hardest?

Author
John Weekes,
Publish Date
Mon, 3 Feb 2025, 1:13pm

Average household costs up 3% across the year. Who was hit hardest?

Author
John Weekes,
Publish Date
Mon, 3 Feb 2025, 1:13pm

Household inflation last year was 3%, according to Stats NZ, but some groups were stung harder than others.

The 3% increase followed a 3.8% annual increase in the year to September 30.

Stats NZ released its latest household living-costs price indexes (HLPI) today.

Inflation experienced in the year to December 31 for beneficiaries was 3.3%, while for M膩ori it was 3.1% and for superannuitants it was 3.6%.

For the wealthiest household group, inflation was 2.7% and for the poorest it was 3.9%.

Unite union national secretary Shanna Reeder said many low-income workers and their families were struggling.

鈥淚t鈥檚 extremely tough ... Even when they鈥檙e not on the minimum wage, they鈥檙e still behind and it鈥檚 really obvious when you get to the checkout.鈥

Reeder鈥檚 union had members nationwide and she said living costs were especially punishing in places where rents where high, such as Auckland, Queenstown, the Bay of Plenty and Wellington.

鈥淥ur Government right now would say they should leave and get another job but that鈥檚 pretty hard to do at the moment when you鈥檝e got hundreds of people going for the same job.鈥

Reeder said ongoing high living costs meant some people were forced to redefine what necessities were and were postponing or cancelling trips to the dentist or optometrist because they could not afford it.

鈥淪omething we are noticing is people aren鈥檛 able to get just the basic healthcare they need, and I think that applies to middle-income people as well.鈥

Reeder鈥檚 union represented about 3500 fast-food workers and was about to go into bargaining with Restaurant Brands and McDonald鈥檚.

The HLPI measured how inflation affected different household groups, plus an all-households group.

鈥淲hat we鈥檙e seeing across all income groups is living-costs inflation is starting to slow,鈥 Westpac senior economist Satish Ranchhod said today.

But he added: 鈥淲e鈥檙e still seeing pressure on household finances.鈥

Ranchhod said interest rates had been a major driver of household inflation early last year but the Reserve Bank鈥檚 Official Cash Rate announcement on February 19 could deliver some relief.

He expected a 50 basis points cut in the cash rate from 4.35% to 3.75%.

鈥淐ompared to two years ago, the average two-year mortgage rate is now about 100 basis points lower.鈥

For the average household that translated to about $300-$400 a month in savings, he said.

But he said rising insurance costs and council rates could counter some of the deflationary forces in months ahead.

Quarterly inflation

For the three months to the end of December, average inflation for all households was 0.4%.

For beneficiaries it was 0.6%, for M膩ori it was 0.5% and for superannuitants it was 0.5%.

For the highest-expenditure household group, inflation was 0.4%. It was 0.6% for the lowest-expenditure household group.

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