Sharechat Logo

Housing, household utilities and food prices squeeze beneficiaries the most in 2Q

Thursday 27th July 2017

Text too small?

Beneficiaries were the hardest hit by inflation in the second quarter of the year due to higher prices for housing, household utilities and food, while overall prices continued to dip for top earners, Stats NZ said. 

Overall costs for beneficiaries rose 0.3 percent in the June 2017 quarter, compared with the March quarter, according to Statistics New Zealand.  Households in the highest earning group, however, saw their cost of living fall 0.1 percent, Stats NZ said.  The agency began publishing the quarterly data in November last year to provide new insights into inflation experienced by 13 different groups including beneficiaries, Maori, pensioners and others based on their income and spending patterns. 

"Rising prices for the basics such as rent, electricity, and food had a greater impact on beneficiaries," prices senior manager Jason Attewell said. "Over half their spending was on these essentials, compared with about a quarter for the highest earners." 

It noted that in the June 2017 quarter, higher prices for vegetables and electricity had a large effect on all groups but this was countered by lower prices for petrol. High spenders benefitted the most from cheaper domestic airfares, Stats NZ said. 

On an annual basis, living costs for low-spending households and for beneficiaries rose 2.0 percent while it rose 1.4 percent for the highest-expenditure household group, Stats NZ said. It noted that high spending households spent proportionally more on high-tech items, which had price falls for the year.

"Technology generally improves for items such as smartphones. This reflected as an effective price fall, as consumers receive more value for the same price. Mid to high earners and spenders have more discretionary income for high-tech items and receive the most benefit from these improvements," Stats NZ said. 

(BusinessDesk)



  General Finance Advertising    

Comments from our readers

No comments yet

Add your comment:
Your name:
Your email:
Not displayed to the public
Comment:
Comments to Sharechat go through an approval process. Comments which are defamatory, abusive or in some way deemed inappropriate will not be approved. It is allowable to use some form of non-de-plume for your name, however we recommend real email addresses are used. Comments from free email addresses such as Gmail, Yahoo, Hotmail, etc may not be approved.

Related News:

PaySauce Quarterly Market Update - Dec 2024
CHI - FY24 Results Date and Audio Conference Details
AIA - December 2024 Monthly traffic update
January 15th Morning Report
PF - Details of Interim Results Webcast
Scott Secures NZ$18 million in Global Contracts for Protein
January 14th Morning Report
AFT - NEW YEAR LETTER TO INVESTORS
TruScreen Invited to Present WHO AI Collaboration Meeting
January 13th Morning Report