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Pedestrians walk near the main entrance to the Reserve Bank of New Zealand located in central Wellington, New Zealand
The Reserve Bank of New Zealand has increased interest rates for the first time in seven years. Photograph: David Gray/Reuters
The Reserve Bank of New Zealand has increased interest rates for the first time in seven years. Photograph: David Gray/Reuters

New Zealand raises interest rates for the first time in seven years

This article is more than 2 years old

Rate hike puts New Zealand ahead of most other developed economy nations as central banks look to wind back emergency-level borrowing costs

New Zealand’s central bank has raised interest rates for the first time in seven years, signalling further tightening to come, as it looks to get on top of inflationary pressures and cool a red-hot housing market.

The 25 basis point rate rise on Wednesday marks the start of a tightening cycle that had been expected to begin in August, but was delayed after an outbreak of the coronavirus Delta variant and a lockdown that is continuing in its biggest city Auckland.

The New Zealand dollar briefly rose after the announcement of the increase in the official cash rate to 0.50%, but fell back to $0.6930, in line with broader market moves.

“It was pretty much in line with what everyone was picking,” Jason Wong, senior market strategist at BNZ in Wellington, said. “We’re on a path towards a series of rate hikes and the market is well priced for that.“

Announcing its decision, the RBNZ said further removal of monetary policy stimulus was expected, with future moves depending on the medium-term outlook for inflation and employment.

The rate hike puts New Zealand ahead of most other developed economy nations as central banks look to wind back emergency-level borrowing costs, although countries including Norway, the Czech Republic and South Korea have already raised rates.

In Australia, the central bank held interest rates at a record low 0.1% for an 11th straight month on Tuesday.

Economists expect the benchmark rate to reach 1.50% by the end of next year and 1.75% by the end of 2023, a Reuters poll showed.

New Zealand has enjoyed a rapid economic recovery since a Covid-driven recession last year, partly because it reopened its economy before others following efforts to eliminate coronavirus.

But with its borders still shut, labour and goods shortages are pushing up inflation, as well as contributing to a surging property market, which has been driven by ultra-low interest rates.

“Demand shortfalls are less of an issue than the economy hitting capacity constraints,” the RBNZ committee noted in the minutes of the meeting.

The central bank said headline CPI inflation is expected to increase above 4% in the near-term but return towards its 2% midpoint over the medium term.

Recent Covid-19 restrictions have not materially changed the medium-term outlook for inflation and employment, and economic activity will recover quickly when the measures are eased, it said.

But economists said the RBNZ may not race ahead with its hiking cycle in view of the current global uncertainty and the Delta variant outbreak dragging on in Auckland.

“[We] remain of the view that further rate hikes will be in 25 basis point increments rather than 50 basis point moves,” Citibank economist Josh Williamson said.

New Zealand abandoned its strategy of eliminating Covid-19 this week, with the government saying it will have to live with the virus and step up vaccination rates to control it.

In August, a central bank official confirmed it had also considered a 50-basis-point move that month, before taking a rate hike off the table altogether due to the lockdown.

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