close
close

Consumer Price Index Inflation Falls to 2.2%: Why It Didn’t Slow Even More

Consumer Price Index Inflation Falls to 2.2%: Why It Didn’t Slow Even More

“For the first time since March 2021, annual inflation is within the Reserve Bank of New Zealand’s target band of 1-3%,” said Nicola Growden, director of consumer prices at Stats NZ.

“Prices are still rising, but not as much as previously recorded.”

The increase in rental prices was the biggest contributor to the annual inflation rate, at 4.5%.

Almost a fifth of the 2.2% annual increase in the CPI was due to rental prices.

announcementAdvertise with NZME.

Rate rises have also pushed the rate higher, with rates prices and local authority payments rising by 12.2% in the year to 30 September.

Across all regions, there was a range of local authority rate increases, some higher than 12% and some lower, Mr Growden said.

Cigarette and tobacco prices also rose, up 10% year-on-year.

This increase was mainly due to the annual increase in tobacco excise duty on 1 January 2024, Stats NZ said.

But lower gasoline prices, which fell 8%, helped offset price increases elsewhere.

The New Zealand dollar weakened a touch to US$60.70 million from US$60.80 just before the launch.

Core inflation, excluding volatile sectors such as energy and seasonal food, was 3.1%.

“The era of crushing price rises is over,” Finance Minister Nicola Willis said.

“There’s more work to do to grow the economy, but New Zealanders can be confident we’re heading in the right direction.”

Non-tradable inflation measured final goods and services that did not face foreign competition and was an indicator of domestic supply and demand conditions.

announcementAdvertise with NZME.

But the contributions of these goods and services can be influenced by foreign competition.

Stats NZ described tradable inflation as that which measured final goods and services influenced by foreign markets.

Back to “victory”?

The 2.2% increase puts inflation back within the Reserve Bank’s mandated target band and nominally means victory in the central bank’s battle to use high interest rates to reduce inflation.

ANZ economists predicted a quarterly rate of 0.8% for an annual rate of 2.3%. Quarter-on-quarter inflation came in at just 0.6%, slightly higher than the 0.4% increase in the June quarter.

Westpac and ASB expected a rate of 0.7% for an annual rate of 2.2%.

Westpac senior economist Satish Ranchhod warned there were risks on both sides of the inflation forecast.

announcementAdvertise with NZME.

“On the downside, falling consumer spending could put an even bigger drag on prices for retail goods and some services.

“However, there is also the potential to see continued strength in the prices of items such as insurance and rates, which have contributed to stronger-than-expected non-traded inflation over the past two years.”

ANZ senior economist Miles Workman also struck a note of caution on high domestic inflation.

“Headline CPI inflation falling back into the 1-3% band may represent a key psychological threshold for policy makers and RBNZ watchers. But it should break the RBNZ with the bubble inflation that now do you have a double handle?” he said

“We don’t like to be partisan, but non-marketable inflation is still too high, meaning if the taps ring in the RBNZ building next week, they will be celebrating the progress of global disinflation as much as their own. Domestic deflation looks poised to continue, but there is still some way to go.”

ANZ economists expect non-negotiable inflation (driven domestically) to stand at 1.5% for the quarter and 5.2% for the year. That would be only a slight drop from the 5.4% annualized rate recorded in the second quarter.

announcementAdvertise with NZME.

Council rates were expected to be a key driver of quarterly inflation, with their biggest quarterly rise since 1987, Workman said.

Liam Dann is general business editor of the Herald of New Zealand. He is a senior writer and columnist, and also hosts and produces videos and podcasts. He joined the Herald in the year 2003.