What is the Real Economy?
The ‘Real Economy’ is made up of the farmers, manufacturers, tourist operators and service providers that sell to the world and generate New Zealand’s external income. As Angus Tait once said, “There are three ways to generate wealth; you farm things, you make things or you dig things up.” That is the essence of the real economy.
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John Walley Posted:
Hi Eric – no issue on inflation targeting, provided (a) it hits the part of the economy causing inflation (non-trade exposed) (b) does not have a kicker on the exchange rate that damages the trade exposed sector immediately and overtime the prospects for us all.
(view article + comment)
Eric Crampton Posted:
Aha, thanks! We'll disagree about the relative merits of inflation targeting overall, but very glad to see that call in '07 and especially that the hikes were needed late '05.
(view article + comment)
John Walley Posted:
Also have a look at the logic in the old release.
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John Walley Posted:
Hi Eric Look for the post that will go up in a moment or two.
(view article + comment)
Eric Crampton Posted:
Out of curiosity, is there a single occasion in the last decade in which NZMEA has called for RBNZ to increase interest rates?
(view article + comment)


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29/07

RBNZ weighs against export recovery


Print-friendly 0 comment(s) Posted in: In the media

The Reserve Bank’s decision to hike the Official Cash Rate (OCR) again will stifle the export growth that needs to lead the economic recovery say the New Zealand Manufacturers and Exporters Association (NZMEA). There have been warnings from across the tradeable sector on the damage OCR hikes will do; this advice needs to be heeded.

NZMEA Chief Executive John Walley says, “Reserve Bank Governor Dr Alan Bollard noted that domestic demand, retail spending, housing turnover and business investment are all weak; this begs the question: why has he raised the rate again?”

“Hiking interest rates on the basis of business confidence and commodity prices is always going to be a risky practice. These are among the most volatile and unreliable forecasters of where the economy is going. Both of these indicators have dropped since its last announcement so the Reserve Bank should have put prudence before pride and put interest rates back on hold.”

“This must force some action from our politicians. The way the world is now we cannot afford to have a central bank policy that simply ignores growth today in order to focus on possible inflation a year or so down the track, particularly when most other central banks are pushing the ‘lower for much longer’ outlook.”

“As most of the others go ‘lower for much longer’ the RBNZ needs to accelerate the macroprudential measures to deal with inflation rather than using interest rates which tend to lift the exchange rate and are so damaging to the traded economy.”
 



tags: ocr, export recovery, reserve bank, policy targets agreement

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