New Zealand's monthly trade deficit widened in October as demand for imported mechanical machinery offset gains in the value of the country's export commodities with renewed appetite from Chinese buyers.
The country's trade deficit was $871 million in October compared to $798m a year earlier, Statistics New Zealand said.
The value of imports climbed 15 per cent to $5.43 billion in October, driven by a 33 per cent jump in purchases of mechanical machinery and equipment to $777m, including items such as jet parts and computers. That offset a 16 per cent increase in exports to $4.56b.
"Intermediate goods, used as ingredients or inputs into the production of other goods and services, were the leading contributor to the increase in imports in October," international statistics manager Tehseen Islam said in a statement.
The higher cost of imports coincides with a slump in the kiwi dollar, which makes foreign purchases more expensive, with the trade-weighted index down 2.8 per cent from a year earlier. Policymakers have long complained about the strength in the exchange rate as putting undue pressure on exporters and sapping inflationary stimulus on imported goods.