Grant Robertson is right, 6.9% inflation spike isn’t Government’s fault, but it soon will be!

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As TDB has been predicting, the second wave of Covid is the economic maelstrom it is creating and the inflation figures released to day see it surging to 30 year highs…

Cost of living soars: Annual inflation hits 6.9pc

Annual inflation has hit 6.9 per cent for the year to March 31, the largest movement since a 7.6 per cent annual increase in the year to the June 1990 quarter, StatsNZ said today.

The figure was lower than some economists had feared with forecasts of up to 7.4 per cent.

The New Zealand dollar fell by just over a quarter of a US cent to US67.86c in the minutes after the CPI’s release. Bond yields were unchanged.

The quarterly inflation rate was 1.8 per cent.

…Grant’s position is, ‘it wasn’t me’…

Grant Robertson doesn’t think New Zealanders blame him for inflation as CPI figures expected to rise further

TDB Recommends NewzEngine.com

Finance Minister Grant Robertson doesn’t think Kiwis blame him for inflation and instead believes New Zealanders understand that this is a “global phenomenon”.

As Shamubeel Eaqub points out, extra Government spending in the next budget can’t impact inflation now because the money hasn’t been spent yet, so Grant is right that much of our current spike in inflation is being driven offshore…

As the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund kick off their spring meetings this week, both are sounding a warning: The global economy, they say, is quickly losing steam.

What’s happening: The World Bank has slashed its forecast for global growth in 2022 to 3.2% from 4.1%, anticipating a sharp deceleration from estimated growth of 5.5% in 2021. The IMF’s latest outlook arrives later Tuesday.

World Bank President David Malpass told journalists that “severe overlapping crises” are weighing on the recovery.

“There’s Covid-19, inflation and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine,” he said on Monday.
Developing countries, many of which are facing high levels of debt and a plunge in the value of their currencies, as well as soaring food prices, are of particular concern, he added.

Breaking it down: Around the world, engines of growth are sputtering as prices rise and the war in Ukraine wreaks havoc on strained supply chains.

Europe, which relies heavily on Russia to meet its energy needs, is especially exposed. There, much could depend on Russian President Vladimir Putin’s next move. If supplies of Russian natural gas to Germany were suddenly cut off, Europe’s biggest economy would lose a shocking $238 billion in economic output over the next two years, the country’s forecasters have said.
In the United States, inflation has hit a level not seen in four decades. That’s forced the Federal Reserve to consider an aggressive pullback of its pandemic-era support for the economy, boosting fears that it could hike interest rates so much that it causes a recession.
And China saw retail sales plunge 3.5% in March from a year ago as tough lockdowns aimed at curbing the spread of Covid-19 weighed on activity in major hubs like Shanghai.
While Europe is the most vulnerable, Goldman Sachs this week put the odds of a US recession at 15% in the next 12 months and 35% within the next 24 months. Japan’s Nomura said Monday that the chances are rising that China falls into a recession this spring.

…however, the Governments decision to pump billions into the banks to fund property speculation has seen the wealthiest amongst us $1Trillion richer, and Grant is responsible for that…

Wealthy nearly $1 trillion richer since Covid began – Hickey

An economic and political commentator says since the Covid-19 pandemic reached Aotearoa, the rich have become richer and the poor have become poorer – in part due to the Government’s policies.

…if we can look after the rich, we have an obligation to the poor.

Here’s the reality, the inflation spike is not a transitory phase, it’s the new reality.

Look at China right now...

Nearly 400 million people across 45 cities in China are now under full or partial lockdown as part of China’s strict zero-Covid policy. Together they represent 40%, or $7.2 trillion, of annual gross domestic product for the world’s second-largest economy

…add the Ukrainian war and the instability to wheat and base line manufacturing in metals prices alongside the impact on developing economies

Smaller countries are also struggling. Many borrowed heavily over the past decade to deal with the effects of the 2008 financial crisis and the pandemic. Now, interest rates are starting to rise, just as the prices of essentials like food and fuel leap.

…and you have geopolitical shockwave after geopolitical shockwave hitting us and snapping neoliberal free market global supply chains.

Grant and Labour can be blamed for what’s happening now, but they will be blamed when things get worse by the end of the year because of the predictability of these black swans all landing at the same time.

This is why the Government must seize the possibility of fully funding universal services as a means to counter the cost of living crisis.

Free public transport, free lunch and breakfasts at school and breaking the Supermarket duopoly by setting up a new 30% player will do more to lower the cost of living than any tax cut.

Labour must have courage and vision to make fundamental bold policy changes that directly impact the pockets of renters and first time home buyers alike.

If they don’t they will get blamed come December.

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40 COMMENTS

  1. Fact 1 – Robertson and Orr deliberately created house price inflation and one-off discretionary spending to kick the economic can down the road.
    Fact 2 – inflation is a combination of domestic and international factors. Extra compliance costs, and covid-related disruption is on the government.
    Fact 3 – The property market is now odds on to shit itself over winter. Developers going tits up are always the goldmine canaries.

    December? Try July. Short of Te Reo Luxon getting caught sniffing cocaine off Lisa Lewis’ boobs he will be preferred PM by the time our Glorious Leader goes on her US holiday. The government and local governments won’t be able to control their spending as they are like crack cocaine addicts when it comes to other people’s money. When stagflation is confirmed this will go down like warm vomit with the sheeple.

    Not even Jessica followed by Tova will save them this time.

    • So Frank now property prices coming down is a bad thing? I know it is for Luxon that’s why he wants to bake in the spike by killing the bright line impact. From memory he also made noises about a bad time for interest rates to go up.

      As for COVID disruption that’s a way too simplistic summation as it implies if the government didn’t do anything we would be sweet. Look around globally and you’ll find those economies that were “living with it” basically had supply chain disruption and more dead people.

      I have to agree with your take on the election.

  2. “THE MOWREES DID IT!”
    He’ll blame the Maori Caucus for asking for too much money to fund ‘their,’ pet projects.

  3. Actually, in a sense, I do blame Grant Robertson for this period of high inflation as I do see at least a part of it to be a direct consequence of both economic and social policies that his government has chosen to, or chosen not to, implement.

    For example, this Labour government has curtailed the price of petrol but only for three months and only after at least two years of high petrol prices which have made it difficult on the majority of Kiwi families.

  4. They responded to transport costs correctly and fast. Well done. But good luck putting that tax back on fuel, it is not going to happen without definite vote losing consequences!

    They always fail to mention their direct involvement in housing inflation and nearly 4 and a half years of timid tinkering is now biting them quite rightly in the arse. Not grabbing the bull by the horns is their fault.

    And stuffing about with the piss weak supermarket recommendations from the Commerce Commission is another failing. Food will carry on going up and up and the duopoly will carry on getting even richer!

    Time is running out.

  5. Minister Robertson also allowed the changes to the RBNZ taking its focus off just inflation which has led to an utter cluster happening under Orr awful leadership. Then let’s consider masses of really shit spending on daft things like the MAMIL’s bike bridge, that train to nowhere, etc. on top of banana’s increases in the minimum wage.

    So yes, there’s inflation across the world but Minister Robertson will knows that he’s poured so much fucking petrol onto an already raging dumpster fire of an economy that he’s made it far far worse than it needed to be. If he doesn’t then that’s actually worse.

    Of course he’s going to deny it as he has to – to admit it would seal his fate and confirm what we all know but many here won’t ever admit which is that Labour in NZ always drive our economy into recession and blow every budget they can on stuff that doesn’t do anything other than make them feel good about themselves (or in Helen Clark’s time, buys an election)

  6. It’s either Grant Robertson’s fault or Adrian Orr’s fault and Grant Robertson said he was happy with the RBNZ’s actions during COVID which means Granty boy, it is ALL your fault. He is totally out of his depth, and it shows.

  7. well nate good in theory but exactly (please provide list) of which services YOU would cut to make up the tax shortfall….
    there are alternatives like oooohhhhh lemmie think, oh yeah CGT and an end to the tax scam that is NZ trusts.

    • -Junkets for politicians on so called trade missions — that produce nothing…that would save millions
      -Various subsidiaries for corporations, such as, the America’s Cup nonsense, Land developers/property developers, that would save tens of millions.

      • good start but you know what the right would actually cut, don’t you

        and I’ll bet you a pound to pinch of shit it won’t be anything on your list.

  8. But what about all those Crises?!

    We’re stuck in a 2017 loop. Except for, the fact it gets worse and worse every year for the 40% who’re struggling on incomes less than $54k.

    Housing, 25,000 Homeless, Poverty, Health, Terrorism, Immigration, War, Inflation, Environment, Economic.

    Add to that globalisation has died and Neoliberal McCarthyism is on the rise.

    Tanking polls and the evisceration of a 26pt lead.

    What’s she gunna do now then?

    Resign? Get married? Get a new job somewhere? Resign as leader of the government?

    Call a short election?

    Or go into Maggie Thatcher mode and declare War on Russia officially!!

  9. 96% govfnment failure. They have been running a sort of double entry book – high inflation on the basic – housing and low inflation on the rest. Guess who gets hit the most, the poor are punch drunk. Get the wages up, gradually in steps but transfer some money to where it can’t be grabbed by other parts of the government, landlord included. Just do it ..gggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggrrr

  10. I remember Clark and Cullen had a economic response plan to the GFC in 2008 and the PM went into the general election with a response to the economic storm which in retrospect is no where as bad as where we find ourselves now.

    Judging by Robertson’s comments so far I don’t hold out much hope and Robertson is not Cullen more’s the pity.

  11. Can I just write; Stupid podium. Looks like stacked kindling.
    Can I also write?
    What a load of pointless guff.
    The real reason for ‘inflation’ is that inflation turns brain farts into billions. All so called ‘inflationary’ experts need to do is bend over and fart on while we shovel money up their exhaust pipes.
    The fiscality of currency fiddling is as perfiditary and omniprecient as an anal flange polishing ointment of nettles and bird feathers. It achieves nothing, does nothing and means nothing except to the nettles and bird feathers people in their jandles twanging on their mandolins for its giving of relief from the greater pains of MSM induced fears, frights and on-going paranoia’s that’s rammed down our gullets by the ‘media’, AKA E-brainwashers but without the stain remover.
    Here’s some good advice. Learn to grow your own because you’re getting fucked without the kissing.
    Grant Robertson? What would your mother think. For shame!
    Here are words of good advice:
    Repair, reuse, recycle, work less, play more and never, ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever,ever do debt.

    • Get rid of GST on Fresh Fruit and Vegetables for FFS, as it’s now cheaper to survive on Potato Chips and Coca Cola or McDonalds ? However your health will deteriorate over a period of time.

  12. -Junkets for politicians on so called trade missions — that produce nothing…that would save millions
    -Various subsidiaries for corporations, such as, the America’s Cup nonsense, Land developers/property developers, that would save tens of millions.

  13. Government has ultimate control over the currency. Therefore it is responsible for inflation of the currency even if it delegates responsibility to the Reserve Bank.
    It is absurd for a Labour government to blame external influences when it was a Labour government which decided to completely open the domestic economy to foreign trade and investment and, to a large degree, to foreign persons and a Labour government which clings tenaciously to that policy.
    “Inflation is a global phenomenon” the Prime Minister informs us. But it isn’t. It is a phenomenon that affects “the states we like to compare ourselves with”, that is the imperial/colonial states which are in headlong economic, cultural and moral decline.
    The apologists for the colonialist regime are desperately casting around for excuses and solutions where there are none to be found.

    • Geoff what do you mean “inflation of the currency”? I am not sure who we should be comparing to. I would question what countries are not seeing inflation increasing. The OECD might only be 38 countries but I hardly think others would be immune.

      • I used that phrase “countries we like to compare us with” because it is beloved of New Zealand politicians. The countries they like to compare themselves with are, of course, countries that are doing no better than themselves, or preferably a little worse, with respect to whatever indicator or parameter is at issue.
        If you look you will see that China and Japan and many other nations have much lower rates of inflation than New Zealand or the United States. So in this context China and Japan are not “countries we like to compare ourselves with”.
        The term “inflation of the currency” is to distinguish the phenomenon from other forms of inflation, such as inflation of a tyre or inflation of a balloon.

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