New Zealand household saving falls in March quarter: statistics

WELLINGTON, July 22– Saving by New Zealanders in the March 2021 quarter fell to its lowest level in two years after rising sharply in 2020, the statistics department Stats NZ said on Thursday. “Household spending increased in the March 2021 quarter, after having been kept in check for much of 2020 by COVID-19 restrictions,” national accounts senior manager Paul…

WELLINGTON, July 22 (Xinhua) — Saving by New Zealanders in the March 2021 quarter fell to its lowest level in two years after rising sharply in 2020, the statistics department Stats NZ said on Thursday.

Increases in household spending outpaced income growth, leading to a decline in household saving from the elevated levels that prevailed throughout 2020, Stats NZ said.

“Household spending increased in the March 2021 quarter, after having been kept in check for much of 2020 by COVID-19 restrictions,” national accounts senior manager Paul Pascoe said in a statement.

Government support measures including the wage subsidy meant that households were able to maintain relatively stable levels of disposable income through 2020. This was despite the COVID-19 restrictions, which constrained household spending. As a result, high levels of household saving were seen throughout 2020, Pascoe said.

“With households spending more in the March 2021 quarter, the household saving ratio has fallen back from the quite high levels experienced through 2020,” he said.

The household saving ratio, which compares saving with net disposable income, was 0.4 percent in the March 2021 quarter, down from 3.2 percent in the December 2020 quarter, statistics showed.

Net disposable income represents the money that households have available to spend on goods and services after accounting for things like taxes, Stats NZ said.

In the March 2021 quarter, net disposable income rose 3.1 percent, but a 6.1 percent increase in household expenditure reduced household saving to 200 million NZ dollars (139 million U.S. dollars) in the quarter, it said.

The increase in net disposable income was driven by a rise in compensation of employees, and income of self-employed business owners, Pascoe said.

The increase in household spending was driven by increased spending on accommodation, restaurant and cultural services, and durable goods, he said. Enditem