Economists believe the Reserve Bank (RBNZ) will be heartened by new survey results that show business leaders and professional forecasters continue to see inflation tracking down.
On average, the 38 people surveyed as a part of the RBNZ’s quarterly Survey of Expectations saw the annual inflation rate falling to 3.22 per cent (from 4.7 per cent) by this time next year and 2.5 per cent by early 2026.
The RBNZ, in its latest set of economic forecasts released in late November, saw inflation falling faster. Indeed, if the survey respondents are right, and the inflation rate falls to 3.22 per cent by early next year, it would’ve been outside the RBNZ’s 1 to 3 per cent target range for nearly four years.
ANZ chief economist Sharon Zollner believed the RBNZ might’ve hoped for one-year ahead inflation expectations to have fallen more. Nonetheless, it would be reassured respondents’ longer-term inflation outlooks fell from when they were last surveyed.
While the RBNZ in November suggested it could hike the official cash rate (OCR) one more time this year, before cutting it in 2025, survey respondents saw the RBNZ cutting the rate from 5.5 per cent to an average of 4.74 per cent by this time next year.