New Zealand's trade deficit widened in November as imports such as crude oil and fertiliser outstripped the country's pace of export growth.
The trade balance was a deficit of $308 million in the month of November, in line with market expectations of a $300 million shortfall, as a 10 per cent lift in value of imports was bolstered by more foreign purchases of crude oil and fertiliser, Statistics New Zealand said today. That's wider than the $177 million deficit in November 2010, and a shortfall of $208 million in the month of October.
The value of exports rose 6.8 per cent to $3.91 billion in November from the same month a year earlier, slower than the 10 per cent lift in imports to $4.22 billion. The annual trade balance was a surplus of $555 million.
"Crude oil and fertilisers were key contributors to the 10 per cent rise in imports," overseas trade manager Stuart Jones said in a statement.
Today's release comes after data last month showed the country's current account deficit widened more than expected in the third quarter of last year on weaker prices for export commodities and fatter profits for the nation's Australian-owned banks.