Manufacturing took a major hit last last year as inflation gobbled up disposable income.
High interest rates, that persistent inflation, consumer trepidation and investor skittishness have all been blamed for damaging the sector.
Stats NZ today said New Zealand manufacturing sales fell 6.9 per cent last year to$31.225 billion, the biggest plunge among 14 sectors measured.
But Kiwibank economist Sabrina Delgado said long-suffering consumers and firms could at least get relief late this year with a possible Official Cash Rate cut.
For now, manufacturing was often taking a pummelling.
“Manufacturing has really led the decline. Businesses are investing less in this high interest rate environment,” Delgado told the Herald after the Stats NZ Business Financial Data release.
High interest rates and sticky inflation did not create an environment conductive to growth, Delgado said.
Retail trade and accommodation sales were down 1.5 per cent in the quarter, and 0.3 per cent across the year.
Wholesale trade, the biggest of the sectors Stats NZ measured in the collection, was down 1 per cent in the quarter to $38.035b and down 2.7 per cent in the year.
Output across retail trade and construction was also down.
The biggest surges in annual sales were for electricity, gas, water, and waste services, up 23 per cent.
Rental, hiring, and real estate services were down 1 per cent in the quarter to $9.06b but up 6.2 per cent compared to a year earlier.
Information media and telecommunications was up 0.9 per cent in the quarter and 5.5 per cent over the year.
For all industries Stats NZ measures, sales last year were $200 billion, down $541 million or 0.3 per cent on the year before.
Employment: Canterbury strong
Jobs data indicated Canterbury and Hawke’s Bay had the fastest growth in jobs in late 2023.
Both regions were up 0.8 per cent on the September quarter.
Stats NZ said Canterbury added 2487 jobs, and in Hawke’s Bay 600 jobs were added in the December quarter.
“Their housing market hasn’t declined as much as other places,” Delgado said of Canterbury’s performance.
Kiwibank previously said Canterbury’s housing market had a soft landing compared to the sharp correction in other markets.
For new jobs, Auckland and Waikato weren’t far behind, each having a 0.6 per cent increase in the quarter.
And nationwide, overall earnings were up 9 per cent over the year, well above inflation.
Delgado said that measure of earnings might partly reflect wages playing catch-up after people faced wage freezes during the pits of the Covid-19 pandemic.
OCR cut on horizon?
Delgado said many people and companies will likely have to brace for a tough or austere autumn and winter.
But she said the Reserve Bank could be in a position to start lowering interest rates from November.
Delgado said the central bank should be seeing some of the deflationary influences already at work, such as the multiple recent datasets showing consumers were not splurging.
“People are pulling back. It’s quite obvious ... and it should be obvious to the Reserve Bank too.”
John Weekes is the Online Business Editor. He has covered court, crime, politics, breaking news and consumer affairs.