Book Reviews | Gordon Campbell | News Flashes | Scoop Features | Scoop Video | Strange & Bizarre | Search

 


Credit, debit card spending falls to 15-month low

NZ credit, debit card spending falls to 15-month low

Feb. 11 – New Zealanders’ spending on credit and debit cards fell to a 15-month low in January as a rising jobless rate and prolonged recession deterred consumers from opening their wallets.

The value of electronic card transactions with retailers fell 0.6% last month to the lowest since October 2007, seasonally adjusted, according to Statistics New Zealand. Spending on fuel fell as prices dropped and excluding fuel and auto-related items, core retail spending fell 0.2%.

“Core retail spending on electronic cards has flat-lined in recent months,” said Shamubeel Eaqub, economist at Goldman Sachs JBWere. “The annual growth rate of 2% is below the rate of price inflation and suggests volumes are contracting and the outlook for retailing is yet to show any evidence of life,” he said.

The card spending data gives an early snapshot of retail sales, with official figures for December out later this week. The economy has entered its fifth quarter of contraction, according to the Treasury, and retailers including Wellington department store Kirkcaldie & Stains are predicting a slump in profits and a tough outlook.

New Zealand’s unemployment rate rose to a five-year high of 4.6% in the fourth quarter and some economists are predicting it will exceed 7% this year, further denting consumer sentiment.

(Businesswire)

 
 
 
 
 
Top Scoops Headlines

Gordon Campbell: On The Law Commission Plan To Scrap Jury Trials

Chances are, scrapping the system of trial by jury is not the top priority for most New Zealanders. Not many of us woke up this morning and felt dead keen on dumping our centuries-old right to be tried by a jury of our peers, while yearning to adopt the French system of justice by a judge and a couple of court-appointed experts.

The French are admired for many things, but I haven’t heard many people acclaim their legal system as being so vastly superior to English law that we should quickly scrap one of the bulwarks of our legal system, in order to be more like the French... More>>

 

Keith Rankin: Asset Sales And Public Ownership

Based on the valuation ... the present government would gain 7.2 billion dollars, and lose two years' worth of dividends ($1.44 billion, assuming annual dividends are 10% of valuation). All future three-year governments would be about $2.2 billion worse off. More>>

Werewolf: Why State Capitalism Is Beating The Free Market

Gordon Campbell: Late last month, the Economist magazine published a debate on state capitalism, in which it proposed that state-led market economies are fast becoming a global rival to the old models of liberal, free market capitalism. More>>

ALSO:

Gordon Campbell: On Syria

So far, the fighting in Syria has largely been limited to its smaller cities – Homs in particular... All the same, Homs is a cautionary example of the dangerous fault lines that run through the entire society. More>>

ALSO:

Werewolf: Undaunted Oakland

It gets really tiring living in Oakland. Practically every television newscast is straight from the police blotter. Murders. Marches. Mayhem. Mayoral recall. (Oops! That last one’s not from the blotter but from the OPD to-do list.) ... More>>

ALSO:

Werewolf: Human Rights, Pinochet And Asset Freezes

Gordon Campbell interviews Baron Collins of Mapesbury, recently retired judge from the British Supreme Court. Politicians are always tempted to take pot shots at judges, who have relatively few friends among the general public. More>>

ALSO:

Mark P Williams: Waitangi – What Makes A National Day?

Should Waitangi Day be seen as a national day when it provokes such diverse and divisive responses? That depends on whether you think unity should overrule differences of perspective and opinion... More>>

ALSO:

mitt romneyGordon Campbell: On Mitt Romney’s Victory In Florida

So Romney now looks a certainty to be the Republican candidate against Barack Obama in November, after yesterday’s win in conservative Florida put paid to the claim that he was not really conservative enough to win the nomination. More>>

ALSO:

LATEST HEADLINES

More RSS  RSS
 
 
 
 
 
Top Scoops
Search Scoop  
 
 
powered by newsagent
NZ independent news