Luxon didn’t lower interests rates – the global economy after Covid did

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Here’s the good news – and reasons to be cautious – about the economy

Reserve Bank Governor Adrian Orr was jocular and jovial when he announced that the Official Cash Rate (OCR) was being cut on Tuesday afternoon.

During his press conference he asked, “who’s the daddy?” (context: Stats NZ or him?), and offered some real optimism (with a few big caveats) on the future – saying there was light at the end of this gloomy economic tunnel.

He had reason to be gleeful. As Reserve Bank Governor, it’s his job to lay down tough love on the economy. To bring down inflation – which raises the price of everything – his team increased the OCR, which pours cold water on the economy. It’s a blunt tool, but their only tool, that brings pain on households.

Luxon and Willis are attempting to claim that their Austerity Budgets where they borrowed billions for tax cuts while hollowing out public service budgets is the reason Orr is cutting the OCR.

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Bullshit.

Since Covid ruptured supply chains and geopolitical tensions changed just-in-time supply chains to just-in-case supply chains. The realignment of those supply chains is what is driving inflation lower than where it was but there are limits because the West is now importing inflation…

US inflation unexpectedly increases

US inflation increased by more than expected last month, as higher egg and energy prices helped to push up the cost of living for Americans.

Inflation rose to 3% in January, its highest rate for six months, and above the 2.9% expected by economists.

The rise comes weeks after the US central bank decided to hold interest rates, saying there was significant uncertainty about where the economy might be headed.

It poses a challenge to US President Donald Trump, who made tackling inflation a centrepiece of his election campaign last year, but has put forward policies, such as higher tariffs on imports, that economists say risk pushing up prices.

The other driver of inflation was price gouging by Price Makers that crushed the working classes with a cost of living crisis.

As Professor Wayne Hope pointed out in 2023 on The Daily Blog

Behind this policy correspondence lies the fundamental truth of New Zealand party politics. Labour and National are both die-hard monetarists, the Reserve Bank Act is their unspoken article of faith. On this doctrine, advanced in the late 1970s, excessive public expenditure and real wage growth will increase aggregate demand and inflation levels. If central banks can adjust the money supply to increase commercial/investment bank interest rates, demand will contract, and inflation will be manageable. Unemployment rise is a necessary if unfortunate side effect.

Research from William Phillips, Paul Samuelson, Milton Friedman and others seemed to indicate a trade-off between inflation and unemployment. Fiscally responsible governments would target the former through monetary policy. Well-meaning spend-up governments would over-inflate and damage the economy. In New Zealand, Labour’s 1989 Reserve Bank Act effectively ended the debate. Both major parties concurred with the legislation. The 2021 RBNZ Act modernised operations and tweaked the legal wording but didn’t change the basic doctrine. 

Aside from older macro-economic arguments, the doctrine is wrong. Inflation today does not have monetary causes and monetarist solutions cannot work. Edward Miller, economic researcher for FIRST UNION, cites a US Federal Reserve study which debunks the Phillips Curve. Organised labour’s declining bargaining power weakens the relation between unemployment and inflation. Wage-push inflation growth is just not there, so why contract the economy? In New Zealand, between 1991 and 2023, union density declined from over 50 to 20% of the workforce. Clearly, today’s stunted, uneven wage growth is not going to trigger an inflationary surge.

…exactly, this isn’t a wage generated inflation, it’s naked price gouging in a weak regulatory environment!

As Emeritus economics professor Tim Hazeldine noted:

It’s COVID inflation that was driven by a supply push from the pricing side of the market. The initial transportation logjams caused by lockdowns gave shippers—especially container shippers—the excuse to drastically hike their prices. In the confusion, many other sellers of many other products discovered that they suddenly had, as one analyst put it, ‘real pricing power’. And boy did they use it! 

…this Price gouging inflation is backed up by International research

For US economists Isabella Weber and Evan Wasner, evidence acknowledged by US and European central bankers indicates that “price setting by firms with market power drive inflation”. Giant corporations have the product portfolios, dominant market positions and revenue management systems to maintain margins and customers. With global reach, they are less dependent on any single national market and can shape prices. By contrast, small businesses cannot easily raise prices as costs go up and interest rate repayments increase. Creditworthiness and access to loans will therefore diminish.  

…which is exactly what we are seeing in NZ

Sound familiar? As Tim Hazledine would attest, supermarkets, power companies and banks are pricemakers who drive up inflation while the rest of us struggle. Most obviously, the four largest Australian banks in New Zealand collectively made over NZ$6 billion in 2022. They exploit, ruthlessly, the margins between the interest rates of wholesale money for them and the mortgage rates for captive homeowners.

…into this debate Orr has clearly drawn a line under how far the Reserve Bank Governor now sees the limits of NZ Free Market Monetarism.

I’m no longer looking for Socialism from Labour, just basic regulated capitalism and even the Independent Reserve Bank Governor seems to be communicating that to Treasury.

The message is clear.

Push up wages, regulate the market and tax the rich!

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15 COMMENTS

  1. WHERE IS lUXON, we have a Clayton’s PM noticeable by his frequent absences from important announcements and avoiding interviews. He tells us that he is working incredibly hard, is the work affecting his health? Maybe he is not tough enough mentally and physically to face up to his job and has to have rest periods?

    • Not only that, but when he isn’t doing his impersonation of a Himilayan Yeti, he’s found out to be lying….

      The other day he boasted how he had built 2000 houses since becoming Prime Minister…

      With a bit of forensic probing by
      Labour’s Kieran McAnulty it turns that out all the new houses that have been built and issued a CCC were initiated ,permited and paid fo
      r by the previous Labour government.

      Or in other words…How many houses has the Coalition of Chaos built to completion since coming into office?…answer..None!!

  2. Not only that, but when he isn’t doing his impersonation of a Himilayan Yeti, he’s found out to be lying….

    The other day he boasted how he had built 2000 houses since becoming Prime Minister…

    With a bit of forensic probing by
    Labour’s Kieran McAnulty it turns that out all the new houses that have been built and issued a CCC were initiated ,permited and paid fo
    r by the previous Labour government.

    Or in other words…How many houses has the Coalition of Chaos built to completion since coming into office?…answer..None!!

  3. What Luxon is responsible for is 500 people applying for 1 retail job in Hamilton. That is Luxon proclaiming NZ is a better place under National. Rising unemployment, the destruction of our health system and record numbers leaving NZ will be Luxons legacy, NOT falling interest rates.

  4. Aggregate demand is produced by the sum of Govt expenditure and money created by banks for borrowers to spend. (You knew that banks create money out of thin air didn’t you). Economists do not know that banks creating money adding to demand because they are a cult and dangerous.

  5. I was taught that the multiplier effect was all to do with whatever % the banks had to keep in reserve of their deposits. The wouldn’t be able to keep lending money if consumers didn’t have such a borrow and hope attitude although with the excessive prices of essential items and the lack of growth in real wages there is not many other options for people starting out today. You can’t really blame the banks for the policy settings that aim to exclusively reward the owners of capital and pay as little as possible to the suppliers of labor. The current hype about AI is just more evidence of that.

  6. With inflation within the RBNZ’s target band, and price stability (inflation) the RBNZ’s only tool, what’s the need to cut interest rates? How far will the government let the RBNZ over-reach it’s mandate? And why?

  7. Luxon has to be the weakest most useless faking it pretend leader of the worst bunch of turds masquerading as arseholes in the entire history of New Zealand politics.

  8. Hope and Halzedine are close to the mark. And most don’t have the econmic /political literacy to fully comprehend it all. I’ll admit I don’t. I just know the system sucks. Yet I got along well enough, for the most part kept my head down and made some reasonable decisions. Wouldn’t be the only one. Sometimes I’m just grateful I wasn’t cannon fodder in some conflict not of my own making, wasn’t enslaved to build the pyramids, or simply had to walk away from everything- or worse – in one of the Great Depressions. I feel lucky to be fucked over by the system we now have and not cold and stiff in a trench, or somehow survived and missing limbs, or standing in a welfare line with little hope on my side. Yep, I feel lucky it all worked out, more or less. Fucked over by the system – hand on heart never doing the fucking – but having some fun along the way. Granted they were relatively benign times. And i understand for some it doesn’t work out, even in the new millenia. Call it the collateral damage of neoliberalism. But has it ever worked out for everyone? Who said life was ever a level playing field. Better to be working at Bunnings for $23 an hour than dead stiff in trench, me thinks. Yet, no doubt about it, we are sold the promise but for a good many the promise never quite meets expectations. Not sure I have an answer for that. Drugs perhaps – nah, only kidding!

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