In this section
Offers for readers
The comment stream
Recent comments
- 1 of 9747
- ››
Editors choice
- 1 of 79
- ››
The news stream
Latest news
Most commented
- 'Housing showing few signs of life' 251
- 'Dear Allan: Say sorry and thanks' 159
- 90 seconds at 9 am with BNZ 83
- 'A fish stinks from the head' 69
- 'Will we regret getting what we wished for?' 46
- Thursday's Top 10 with NZ Mint 45
- Barfoots says sales stalled in August 40
- Racism claimed in foreign ownership debate 32
- Should the RBNZ hold the Official Cash Rate at 3% until December 9 as many economists and the markets are now forecating? 17
- Taxpayer dives into the red 16
Most viewed
Interest on Twitter
NZ posts NZ$2 mln trade surplus in December as imports fall faster than exports
New Zealand posted a trade surplus of NZ$2 million in December, the first monthly surplus since May, after imports fell 18.6% in the month from a year ago and exports fell 11.3% from a year ago, Stats NZ data shows.
Exports for the December quarter fell 2.8% to NZ$9.2 billion from the September quarter, the fourth consecutive quarterly fall. Imports fell 3.2% in the quarter to NZ$9.4 billion, the fifth consecutive quarterly decline. This left a quarterly trade deficit of NZ$170 million or 1.8% of exports, which was the lowest deficit since the March quarter of 2009.
Dairy exports fell 10.1% by value in the quarter and 6.1% by volume, while imports of capital goods for investment by businesses fell 11.1% in the quarter as businesses bought less machinery and equipment.
Consumption imports fell 3.6% in the quarter, mostly in semi-durable and non-durable goods such as clothes, shoes, food and beverages. Passenger car imports rose 26.8%.
The figures show New Zealand is turning around its chronic trade deficits by investing less in business equipment and reducing its consumption goods imports by a lesser amount. Contrary to hopes that a turnaround in New Zealands trading performance would see a shift in the economy towards exports and away from consumption, the turnaround has instead come towards a starvation of business investment and only a moderation in consumption growth.
Post new comment