International economics firm BMI has upgraded New Zealand鈥檚 political volatility score, warning of the country鈥檚 鈥渋ncreasingly volatile鈥 politics and that the Government鈥檚 cohesion was under 鈥渟evere strain鈥.
BMI measures countries鈥 political risk using a Political Risk Index, which is designed to indicate whether a country has more or less volatile politics.
In mid-2023, New Zealand鈥檚 score on this index was 16. It rose to 18.3 in November of this year. The scores are out of 100, with 100 indicating a high level of political risk. This means that while New Zealand鈥檚 political risk has increased, the country is still viewed as stable.
The Ardern Government also had moments of higher political risk, according to this measure.
In a note, BMI cited a recent Ipsos poll that showed Government confidence ratings at record lows and rumours of a coup against Prime Minister Christopher Luxon.
鈥淣ew Zealand鈥檚 political environment has become increasingly volatile,鈥 the note said.

BMI's measurement of political risk. Chart / BMI
鈥淲hile this tripartite arrangement delivered a strong mandate in the 2023 general election, managing ideological divergences has proven more challenging than we anticipated.鈥
BMI is owned by Fitch, the global credit ratings agency, but is separate from the ratings team. BMI鈥檚 analysis does not impact on the Government鈥檚 credit rating with Fitch.
The analysis said the coalition鈥檚 鈥渂road ideological mix鈥 had produced a 鈥渃ontradictory policy agenda鈥.
It cited tensions over the Regulatory Standards Act, which the Act Party promoted but NZ First has said it will campaign to repeal.
This, it said, underscored 鈥渄eep fractures within the coalition鈥.
鈥淥ur baseline view remains that the coalition will serve its full term through to 2026, but its cohesion is under severe strain.
鈥淭he clash over regulatory reform, persistent Treaty debates and deteriorating public confidence signal a turbulent road ahead,鈥 the note said.
鈥淲ith polls tightening and economic headwinds persisting, the Luxon Government faces a pivotal period that will shape its survival 鈥 and the trajectory of New Zealand politics 鈥 heading into the next elections.鈥
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