RBNZ estimates swine flu impact at below 0.6% of GDP
July 14th, 2009The Reserve Bank of New Zealand has published a research paper estimating that the potential economic impact from the Swine Flu would be less than 0.6% of GDP, which is significantly less than the 1-2% hit forecast by Westpac last month.
Here is the full release below the jump.
The Reserve Bank today released a paper on the potential impact of influenza A (H1N1) (Swine ‘Flu) on the New Zealand economy.
Reserve Bank Assistant Governor John McDermott said: ”We appreciate there is a real human cost to influenza, as this strain is already unfortunately demonstrating. Given the relatively high rate of contagion of this strain, we considered it appropriate to model the possible impact on the economy
from a pandemic.”Dr McDermott said the Bank’s baseline result suggests that the economic impact of influenza A (H1N1) is likely to be low with declines in output of less than 0.6 percent in the first year. These baseline numbers are smaller than some reported recently in the markets, and smaller than the historical experience of Hong Kong with SARS and the US economy with the 1918 episode, for example.
“The baseline numbers are based on Ministry of Health assumptions. We also modelled other more extreme scenarios which we note are extremely unlikely to occur since they are predicated on much more aggressive strains of influenza.”
Tags: John McDermott, RBNZ, swine flu
You may also like to read:




July 14th, 2009 at 2:05 pm
This study is bureaucrats making jobs for bureaucrats in a time of recession, and a complete waste of my taxpayer money. Nothing beneficial could have come from this.
Dump the RBNZ now.
July 14th, 2009 at 2:45 pm
Abstract:
A swarm of birds may eat the poo from a zebra infected by Swine flu in the Wellington Zoo and then drop it’s poo just near the entrance from the Beehive, where all our MP’s and 2 PM’s depart by 2pm on Friday.
Having all our parliamentarians and the 2 PM’s sick on Monday and isolated for weeks, what impact would that make on GDP – 1.235% ?
God, I’m lucky to be an artist and not a bureaucrat calculating GDP figures