The Reserve Bank sounds nervous. In last week's monetary policy statement (MPS), the word "uncertainty" came up eleven times, by my count.
To be fair, it's kind of their job to lose sleep over things like not enough inflation, too much credit growth and whether their estimates of the output gap are accurate enough.
Still, eleven is about double the average of the last five reports, and we need to go back to September 2015 to find a time they were this worried. In that statement, there were no less than 18 references to uncertainty.
Things were indeed looking shaky back then. The global economy was facing a commodity price rout, concern over the state of the Chinese economy, and fears of a Greek default.
Oil prices had collapsed to US$50 a barrel, about half the price of a year earlier, and just about every other commodity had followed them down. This included dairy, which had been languishing for most of the year, with Fonterra forecasting a sub-breakeven payout of $4.40.