New Zealand's central bank cut interest rates to a record low Wednesday, the
first reduction in two-and-a-half years as policymakers look to provide support
in the face of slowing economic growth.
The move comes as central banks around
the world take a more dovish stance on monetary policy as the global economy
stutters and the China-U.S. trade tensions rumble along.
The Reserve Bank of New
Zealand reduced the official cash rate to 1.5 percent from 1.75 percent, where
it has been since November 2016, and just months after saying it expected it to
keep them on hold until 2021.
"The (bank) decided a lower OCR (Official Cash
Rate) is necessary to support the outlook for employment and inflation
consistent with its policy remit," governor Adrian Orr said.
The New Zealand
dollar dropped half a U.S. cent to 65.55 U.S. cents on the announcement, with
analysts tipping another rate cut before the end of the year.
"As unemployment
rises and growth remains subdued in the second half of the year, we think the
bank will cut rates to 1.25 percent in November," Capital Economics economist
Ben Udy said.
Westpac Bank head of New Zealand strategy Imre Speizer described
the move as a "dovish surprise" and said the central bank had left the door open
for more cuts.
Economic growth had slipped below 3.0 percent in 2018, with
primary industries accounting for much of the drop.
Orr said the outlook for
employment growth was subdued, with unemployment currently sitting at 4.2
percent, and inflation was expected to rise slowly from 1.5 percent in the year
to March.
"Given this employment and inflation outlook, a lower OCR now is most
consistent with achieving our objectives and provides a more balanced outlook
for interest rates," he said.
He cited an uncertain global outlook, poor
business sentiment and "softness" in the housing market as some of the reasons
behind the decision.
Source(s): AFP