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Job cuts begin in New Zealand as economy shrinks
By John Braddock
28 April 2006
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A wave of job cuts has begun in New Zealand as the economy
declines for the first time in five years. Reports released in
the past month show record balance of payments deficits, deteriorating
terms of trade and a possible recession. The turn in the economic
situation is already generating a gathering assault on jobs and
living standards.
Statistics NZ figures released in late March showed the economy
shrank 0.1 percent in the December quarter, as high interest rates
slowed household spending and stalled business investment. Prior
to Christmas, Reserve Bank governor Alan Bollard increased interest
rates to a record 7.25 percentthe ninth rise since January
2004to curb spending.
The Institute of Economic Researchs quarterly survey
of business opinion released last week found levels of activity
consistent with another negative quarter in March, which would
mark a recession. ANZ Bank chief economist Cameron Bagrie said
the results reinforced evidence of a sharp and sustained
slowdown. With profit margins under pressure,
firms were likely to cut back on employment and investment.
Annual consumer spending growth has hit a three-year low, slowed
by fewer purchases by tourists and reduced spending on transport,
hotels and restaurants. Spending on cars and computers fell 1.4
percent in the last quarter while purchases on food and clothes
rose a meagre 0.1 percent. The Warehouse retail chain, which specialises
in cheap household goods, primarily in working class areas, saw
its sales fall 2.3 percent in the three months to January 29.
The official unemployment rate for the December quarter stood
at 3.6 percent, but higher at 7.6 percent for Maori and 6.2 percent
for Pacific Islanders. Full-time employment fell by 9,000 (0.6
percent) while part-time employment rose by 11,000 (2.4 percent).
The total labour force decreased by 3,000 (0.1 percent) over the
quarter, and actual hours worked fell by 1.5 percent.
Job losses are already accelerating in the current quarter.
Cutbacks announced since the beginning of March cover dairy processing,
manufacturing, printing, fishing, public services and education.
The dairy export company Fonterra is to lay
off 300 workers at its cheese-making plants in Dunedin, Auckland
and Taranaki. The work will be transferred to one remaining plant
in Eltham where automation is being introduced. Another 59 jobs
will go at the Clandeboye factory in a move that will end 20 years
of production in South Canterbury. Another 100 jobs are at risk
at the research and development centre in Palmerston North where
Fonterra employs 400 people. Cost-cutting has helped Fonterra
boost this seasons forecast payout to its farmer-shareholders
from an original estimate of $3.85/kg of milk solids to $4.07/kg.
New Zealand Post plans to lay off 80 head-office
workers in Wellington and Auckland as it strives to cut costs.
A spokeswoman said the state-owned enterprise faced continuing
pressure in the domestic letters business, from competition with
electronic mail and the economic slowdown. NZ Post is spending
$80 million on mail-sorting machines and technology over the next
six years. As many as 650 staff in Wellington and Auckland will
see their jobs affected.
Almost 200 jobs are on the line at Hutt Valley manufacturing
company, Southward Engineering, following the
loss of a major customer. The company is closing its automotive
business and rationalising its mild steel and stainless steel
tube sections. New Plymouth manufacturer Howard Wright,
which makes most of the countrys hospital beds, laid off
six workers, following the introduction of new technology. A spokesman
said the company had to compete with products that are ...
coming out of low-cost economies. Nearly all of printing
firm Wickliffe Ltds 150 staff in Dunedin
are set to lose their jobs, with most of the work moving to Auckland
following the companys purchase of Auckland-based Moore
Gallagher Ltd.
Up to 40 South Island-based jobs will be lost after United
Fisheries announced plans to reduce production and staffing
levels. The Christchurch fishing company is to cut jobs in its
factory in Sockburn, as well as closing its Dunedin operation.
The company, formed in 1947, employs 160 people in fishing, marine
farms, transport, processing and marketing. A spokesman blamed
decreased profits caused by cuts to fishing quotas and rising
production costs, claiming the cost of manufacturing in a labour-intensive
industry was becoming increasingly uneconomical. The
cuts are another blow in an already struggling fishing industry.
In December, Picton-based Nelson Ranger Fishing
made 30 job cuts, following layoffs earlier last year by the Sealord
Group that affected 160 workers at its Dunedin branch.
In the tertiary education sector, hundreds of staff at the
Maori training provider Te Wananga o Aotearoa
were given six working days from 12 April to justify their roles
or lose their jobs. Nearly a quarter of the Te Awamutu-based institutes
1,265 staff nationwide will be sacked in a restructuring drive.
The institute faces an operating deficit of between $13 million
and $27 million, with forecast enrolments for 2006 down from 30,000
to between 18,000 and 21,500 students.
At Canterbury University more than 20 academics
from the College of Arts will lose their jobs amid $1.6 million
in budget cuts. University management has not ruled out cutting
entire subjects from the college despite the university holding
a surplus of more than $9 million. Up to 30 jobs will be axed
at the Christchurch College of Education as part
of restructuring aimed at cutting $1.5 million from next years
budget. Fifty-one staff have already been made redundant from
the teachers college, which is expected to merge with Canterbury
University. The colleges business school is also being wound
up. Further redundancies are expected. Job losses are also being
negotiated as Taranakis Western Institute of Technology
loses its science and maths department. The closure will
affect seven staff members and involve the de-commissioning of
the polytechnics four science laboratories.
St John Ambulance is to centralise its administration
in Auckland, leading to jobs being lost in human resources, marketing,
education, and corporate services. The restructuring will see
80 jobs cut nationwide, with some new jobs to be created in Auckland.
Jobs are also under threat at the Accident Compensation
Corporation in a review of the management structure intended
to make it more flexible and customer-focused.
While the trade unions have issued a few meaningless protests
over the job cuts, not one has moved to oppose them. The sole
complaint of the unions is that that they had been insufficiently
consulted and involved in the sackings.
The Dairy Workers Union said it was upset at Fonterras
rejection of a union plan for scaled-down production, which it
claimed would have saved 120 jobs. The chairman of the union representing
the Maori wananga staff said the union understood jobs had to
go. If theres no redundancies theres no wananga,
he said. The National Distribution Union, representing St John
Ambulance staff, said only that the restructuring plans were secretive
and a month-long consultation period woefully inadequate.
The current sackings are only a foretaste of what is to come.
According to the latest IMF forecasts, New Zealand is expected
to grow less than any other advanced economy except Portugal this
year. The IMFs latest World Economic Outlook, released last
week, slashed the forecast for the countrys economic growth
in 2006 to 0.9 percent from the 2.5 percent issued last September.
It said a high exchange rate had hurt exports and now there were
signs that domestic demand was beginning to slow and the housing
market was cooling.
Other recent reports show that the country will struggle to
finance its current account deficit next year. The deficit for
calendar year 2005 widened to $13.7 billion or 8.9 percent of
GDP, from $13 billion and 8.5 percent of GDP in the year to September.
It is the largest deficit relative to the size of the economy
for 30 years. New Zealand has the third-worst deficit as a percentage
of GDP in the OECD, ranking ahead of only Iceland and Portugal.
The trade balance has gone from a surplus of $400 million in 2002
to a deficit of $3.9 billion over the past year.
The figures are fuelling claims in ruling circles that New
Zealanders are living beyond their means. Ordinary
people are commonly held to blame, accused by commentators and
politicians, as well as the Reserve Bank, of pursuing a borrow-and-spend
philosophy. It is a sure sign that further attacks on jobs
and living standards are on the way. Calls for further sales of
public assets are also on the rise.
However, the countrys deteriorating economic position
has deeper causes. World Trade Organisation figures show that
New Zealands exports are growing more slowly than the world
average and are still dominated by primary exports, which represent
59.7 percent of total exports. Since 1980, the countrys
share of world exports has fallen from 0.27 percent to 0.22 percent.
International agriculture exports are growing far more slowly
than non-agriculture trade and remain dependent on the vagaries
of world commodity prices. By comparison, over the past 25 years,
the southern hemispheres two other major agriculture countries,
Argentina and Australia, have reduced their reliance on the primary
sector from 71.6 percent to 49.6 percent and from 44.8 percent
to 25.6 percent of total exports respectively.
According to New Zealand Herald economics commentator
Brian Gaynor, a principal contributor to the current account problem
is the investments deficit, which grew from $6.9 billion in 2002
to $10.8 billion last year. The investment figures reflect the
difference between earnings from offshore investments and the
earnings and interest attributable to foreign investors in New
Zealand.
Overseas investors, attracted by the countrys high interest
rate regime, achieved an after-tax return of 10 percent on investments
in 2005 whereas New Zealands direct offshore equity investments
realised just 0.9 percent. Profits extracted by the four major
foreign-owned trading banks, ANZ National, ASB, Bank of New Zealand
and Westpac, alone contributed an estimated $2.5 billion to the
2005 deficit.
See Also:
Unions collaborate in ongoing
destruction of Air New Zealand jobs
[9 March 2006]
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