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Source: University of Otago

Wednesday 8 July 2020 4:09pm
A leading University of Otago economist has crunched the figures for New Zealand and its major trading partners’ growth rates for the first quarter of 2020, revealing some startling results.
Dr Murat Ungor.
Senior Lecturer Dr Murat Ungor has used recent data releases from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development’s Quarterly National Accounts to analyse the negative impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the global economy.
Not only did New Zealand record its biggest quarterly fall since 1991, but one of its major trading partners, China, recorded a “historic slump”, he says.
The International Monetary Fund’s World Economic Outlook Update for June projects the global economy will shrink by 4.9 per cent this year.
In terms of responding to the pandemic, NZ was ranked at the top of the list in a report by the Economist Intelligence Unit ranking 21 OECD countries, with an overall rating of 3.67 on a scale of one to four.
The only mark taken off came on provision of non COVID-19 healthcare.
“Given the relatively successful position of NZ in terms of the response to the pandemic, a natural question arises regarding the initial and long-term economic effects of COVID-19 on its economic activity,” Dr Ungor says.
Using two calculations of GDP growth from the OECD’s Quarterly National Accounts, Dr Ungor was able to compare:
Quarter-on-Quarter: Growth rate compared to previous quarter (seasonally adjusted)
Year-on-year: Growth rate compared to the same quarter of previous year (seasonally adjusted)
For the March quarter, New Zealand saw the largest quarterly fall in gross domestic product since the first quarter of 1991, he says.
Figure 1 below shows the quarterly growth rates of GDP for NZ between the third quarter of 1987 and the first quarter of 2020.
Figure 1. Q-o-Q (%), New Zealand, 1987:Q3-2020:Q1.
New Zealand’s GDP fell by 2.4 per cent in the March 1991 quarter, and contracted by 1.6 per cent in the March quarter of 2020.
The last time NZ had negative quarterly growth rate was the last quarter of 2010, when it contracted by 0.5 per cent.
It takes at least two consecutive quarters of negative growth for a country to enter a recession, Dr Ungor says.
“It is very likely NZ will record another negative growth in the June quarter of 2020.
“If this occurs, two consecutive quarters of 2020 will have negative growth rates for the country, and the last time NZ recorded two consecutive negative quarters for GDP was the third and fourth quarters of 2010.”
The quarterly figures also show China, one of NZ’s four main trading partners, has recorded a “historic slump”, as its GDP fell 9.8 per cent in the March quarter, Dr Ungor says.
In comparison, Australia’s GDP stayed resilient dropping 0.3 per cent, Japan fell by 0.6 per cent, and the US fell by 1.3 per cent.
“While China’s GDP plunged further during the first quarter of 2020 than during the 2009 global financial crisis, the situation is the reverse for Australia, Japan, New Zealand, and the United States,” Dr Ungor says.
Table 1 below, shows the year-on-year growth rates for NZ and its major trading partners during the GFC and the COVID-19 pandemic.
Table 1. GDP Growth Rates (%)§
Country
Global financial crisis, Q1 2008
Q1 2009
COVID-19 pandemic, Q1 2019
Q1 2020
Australia
3.4
1.6
1.7
1.4
China
11.5
6.4
6.4
-6.8
Japan
0.3
-8.6
0.8
-1.9
New Zealand
1.9
-2.4
3.0
-0.2
US
1.1
-3.3
2.7
0.3
§ Growth rate compared to the same quarter of previous year, seasonally adjusted.Source: OECD Quarterly National Accounts, Accessed 4 July 2020.
The year-over-year decline in China’s GDP experienced as a result of the pandemic (comparing growth in 2008:Q1 to 2009:Q1) is more than twice as large of that during the GFC (comparing growth in 2019:Q1 to 2020:Q1).
Studying the year-on-year growth rates could explain the historical importance of the decline in the Chinese GDP, he says.
Year-on-year data has been the preferred calculation for the National Bureau of Statistics of China (NBS), which only started to record quarterly growth rates in the first quarter of 2011.
In 1978, China was one of the world’s poorest countries and barely engaged in the global economy, while today it is the world’s second largest economy after the US.
“China exports to everywhere. Any global downturn naturally hurts Chinese firms who export,” Dr Ungor says.
When the GFC swept over the global economic activity a decade ago, manufacturing industries and business of export agents got hit the most among the Chinese enterprises.
However, China’s domestic market was big enough for national brands to continue their businesses, and this helped some national companies to survive during the GFC.
Economic activity contracted significantly in China in the first quarter of 2020, as virus containment measures saw hundreds of thousands of workers stranded far from factories.
China has emerged as the “manufacturing warehouse” of our planet, but the factory closures and reduced ability to export has created this dire picture for the first quarter, Dr Ungor says.
“Having said that, there may be a rebounding.”
“For example, as the World Trade Organisation stated on 22 June, car sales in China were up 5 per cent year-on-year in May after falling 79 per cent in February.”
The upcoming days will bring new data for different economic sectors, and new and updated data at the sectoral level will provide more light to understand the size of the economic contraction, he says.
“Are we going to see similar growth rates for the rest of 2020? This is something to watch closely.”
For further information, contact:
Dr Murat UngorDepartment of EconomicsUniversity of OtagoTel +64 3 479 8134Email murat.ungor@otago.ac.nz
Lydia AndersonCommunications AdviserUniversity of OtagoTel +64 3 479 8200Mob +64 21 278 8200Email l.anderson@otago.ac.nz

MIL OSI