Spending pause? Economists seeing pullback in post-lockdown splurge. Photo / Paul Taylor
"The post-lockdown sugar-rush has finally come to an end," says KiwiBank economist Mary Jo Vergara.
"The splurge in spending over the second half of last year lasted much longer than expected. But now we have seen a pullback."
Kiwibank's Household Spending Tracker report for the March 2021 quarter showed domesticspend declined 9 per cent in the March quarter, the first decline since the first lockdown ended.
"The buffer of household savings built up over the initial lockdown may be eroding, Vergara said.
The details showed most high-level spend categories were on a downtrend.
Kiwibank Household Spending Tracker tracks spending data through KiwiBank's own electronic transaction data.
On an annual basis, spending was still up 41.8 per cent, although could be inflated because of a shift away from cash, Vergara said.
Meanwhile, preliminary ANZ Business Outlook data for April showed business confidence fell 4 points to -8 per cent, although their own activity outlook was unchanged at 16.4 per cent.
Details on the activity side were flat to weaker. Employment and investment intentions were unchanged, and export intentions rose slightly, but capacity utilisation fell 3 points.
Expected credit availability also fell 6 points. The proportion of firms reporting higher employment than a year ago fell 2 points.
Cost and inflation pressures remained intense, said ANZ chief economist Sharon Zollner.
"Pricing expectations hit a new high, in data that goes back to 1992. Cost expectations data only goes back two years but also hit an eye-watering high of a net 75 per cent of respondents expecting higher costs."
Despite intentions to pass costs on where possible, profit expectations fell 3 points, with a net 4 per cent of firms expecting lower profitability ahead.
"The stresses and strains in the New Zealand economy are starting to show," Zollner said.