Thursday 28th January 2016 |
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New Zealand imports rose to a record high last year as a decline in the value of the currency pushed up values.
The country's imports increased 2.5 percent to $52.53 billion compared with the year earlier, according to data from Statistics New Zealand. Annual exports slid 2.2 percent to $49 billion. The annual trade deficit widened to $3.55 billion from $1.18 billion in 2014, and the widest for a calendar year since 2008, the agency said.
The New Zealand dollar slipped about 12 percent against the US dollar last year as falling commodity prices, particularly for dairy products, weakened the country's growth prospects, while a pick up in the US economy bolstered the greenback. That increased the cost of importing goods into the country.
"The depreciating New Zealand dollar has an upward effect on import and export prices,” Statistics NZ international statistics senior manager Jason Attewell said. “Imports rose $1.3 billion, but exports fell $1.1 billion as the impact of falls in world prices, such as for dairy products, was greater than the upward exchange rate effect.”
The rise in imports was broad-based and was led by consumption goods such as clothing, toys and games, which increased 13 percent to $13.48 billion. Imports of capital goods rose 4.6 percent, led by a 5.8 percent increase in machinery and plant imports.
Offsetting the increases, the value of annual crude oil imports slid by about a third on the back of lower prices.
Meanwhile, the drop in export values was led by dairy products, which slid 21 percent to $11.53 billion, with China accounting for two-thirds of the fall. The decline was led by a 31 percent drop in milk powder values.
Still, the quantity of dairy exports rose 2.9 percent to a record high of 2.9 million tonnes, the agency said. China was the largest market, accounting for 21 percent of the total, down from 28 percent in 2014.
For the December month, exports rose 0.6 percent to $4.43 billion from a year earlier, led by logs and wine. December imports slid 2.6 percent to $4.48 billion, led by a drop in crude oil and transport equipment. Excluding the volatility of large capital items, goods imports rose 2.6 percent, the agency said.
The December trade deficit was $53 million, compared with expectations for a monthly deficit of $131 million in a Reuters poll of economists.
BusinessDesk.co.nz
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