KEY INSIGHTS
New Zealand’s current account balance as a % of GDP is now:

  • The Worst in the OECD
  • Worse than it was during the GFC
  • Negative for every year shown above

KEY QUESTIONS

  1. Is this a problem? If not, why not? If so, how bad is it?
  2. Can we determine from this data that National-led Governments outperform Labour-led Governments on current account management?
  3. How do we improve it? Can we get into positive figures?

HAVE YOUR SAY


FULL DATA ANALYSIS
Please contact us if you would like the full data set and research.

NOTES:

  • The OECD data is showing Q1 2023 data comparisons at the time of publishing, which is why we used that.
  • Stats NZ data is for Q1 2003 to Q2 2023. We will seek a longer time series through their other data archives.
  • There are many variables that impact the current account balance, of course, e.g. the GFC, Covid, consumption trends, foreign exchange rates, import/export tariffs, free-trade agreements, weather impact on exports/imports.
  • We consider quarters that contain elections and Government formation negotiations to be neutral and have shown these separately.
  • For the OECD graph, we chose black for positive numbers (being in the black) and red for negative numbers (being in the red).
  • For the NZ graph, we chose red for Labour-led governments, blue for National-led governments, and purple (a mix of red and blue) for quarters where there was a transition between governments.
  • All numbers are provisional and subject to revision.

Thank you to the Factors who helped pull this together.

SOURCES:

Licensed for reuse under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International licence.

This work is based on/includes Stats NZ’s data which are licensed by Stats NZ for reuse under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International licence.

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