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New Zealand employment market tight as wage inflation hits 14-year high

New Zealand's jobless rate held just above historic lows while wage inflation hit a 14-year high, raising prospect that the central bank might have to increase rates more aggressively than expected

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Photo: Bloomberg
Reuters Wellington
3 min read Last Updated : Aug 03 2022 | 9:02 AM IST
New Zealand's jobless rate held just above historic lows while wage inflation hit a 14-year high, raising the prospect that the central bank might have to increase rates more aggressively than economists expect.
 
The unemployment rate rose to 3.3 per cent in the June quarter, Statistics New Zealand data showed on Wednesday, slightly higher than a forecast 3.1 per cent by economists but just above the historic low of 3.2 per cent in the previous quarter.
 
Wage growth was strong in the quarter with the private sector labour cost index (LCI) recording a 3.4 per cent lift on year, above a forecast 3.3 per cent increase. This was its biggest increase since 2008.
 
"Nearly two-thirds of roles surveyed in the LCI saw an increase in ordinary time wage rates in the year ended June 2022“ the highest level since the series began in 1993," business employment insights manager Sue Chapman added in a statement.
 
Most economists expect the Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) to raise rates by 50 basis points later this month and hotter than expected wage inflation to feed into expectations of more rate hikes than initially expected.
 
ANZ Bank said in a note the labour market is likely to remain a driver of persistently high inflation over the next year.
"The risk of a wage price spiral is certainly not abating.
 
That should keep the RBNZ on track to hike the OCR (official cash rate) to 4 per cent by the end of the year as per our forecasts," it added.
 
The RBNZ in July raised its official cash rate to 2.50 per cent, the latest in a series of hikes that has taken the benchmark from a record low 0.25 per cent in October last year.
 
The bank has also signalled plans to increase the rate to 4.0 per cent by the middle of 2023. However, economists are mixed on whether the RBNZ will need to go that far.
 
"The risk for the RBNZ is that wage pressures provide an avenue for the recent bout of price shocks to turn into sustained inflation over time," said Westpac acting chief economist Michael Gordon.
 
He said Westpac will be reviewing its OCR forecasts later on Wednesday but the risks are clearly towards a higher peak than the 3.50 per cent it had been forecasting.
 
(Reporting by Lucy Craymer; Editing by Tom Hogue and Sam Holmes)

Topics :InflationNew Zealandemployment crisisCentral bank

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