Costs pressures are constrained and are likely to remain so for the foreseeable future, Eaqub said. However capacity pressures are starting to come through and prices are beginning to rise with consumer price inflation heading towards 2.5 percent by the end of this year, he said.
Firms reporting a rise in average costs edged up to a net 20 percent from a net 19 percent in the first quarter while a net 23 percent experienced price rises, up from a net 16 percent in the first quarter.
The survey comes as the Reserve Bank is expected to raise the benchmark interest rate this month, following three rises this year. Eaqub said he doesn't think the bank should raise rates any further.
"We should hold here to see what is happening with the economy," he said.
A net 93 percent of financial services firms expect interest rates to rise, up from a net 87 percent in the previous survey.
Those firms seeing profit growth eased in the latest quarter, to a negative 4 percent from positive 3 percent in the previous quarter, as sales volumes slowed.
The survey showed capacity pressures building, with capacity utilisation increasing to a net 90.6 percent from 89.4 percent in the previous quarter. The NZIER said the pressures were most acute for builders and those facing the domestic economy, rather than exporters.
Read NZIER's release here: