
Kiwis believe job availability has continued to deteriorate, as the economic slowdown rolls on, according to a new survey.
The Westpac-McDermott Miller Employment Confidence Index fell by 2.2 points from 91.4 to 89.2 in the September quarter.
That was the lowest reading since the country was emerging from the first Covid-19 lockdown in 2020.
鈥淭he biggest driver of the weakness in confidence has been the perception that jobs are becoming much harder to find,鈥 said Michael Gordon, senior economist at Westpac.
鈥淛ob vacancies have been shrinking for some time, and in the last few months we鈥檝e seen a turn to outright job losses.鈥
Gordon said the softening jobs market follows a prolonged slowdown in the New Zealand economy over the past two years.
鈥淪imilarly, households recognise that it will take some time for lower interest rates to work their way through, and for businesses to find themselves back in the position of needing to find more workers,鈥 he said.
Employment confidence fell in 7 out of 11 regions, with Auckland recording the biggest fall this quarter.
鈥淲hile Wellington remains the most downbeat region, Auckland is now not far behind,鈥 Gordon said.
鈥淭his is a useful reminder that while public sector cutbacks have been well-publicised, it鈥檚 the private sector that has borne most of the pain in the jobs market to date.鈥
Falling interest rates may have boosted consumer and business confidence in other respects but households are taking a realistic view of how long this will take to flow through into better job prospects.
鈥淭he latest results suggest that the unemployment rate has continued to rise at a faster pace over the last year; we expect it to reach 5% for the September quarter,鈥 Gordon said.
鈥淗ouseholds also remained downbeat on the outlook for job opportunities a year from now, although that measure did tick slightly higher in the September survey.
鈥淭hat outlook is probably a fair reflection of how the labour market tends to lag the broader cycle. We鈥檙e now two years into an economic slowdown, and while job vacancies have been falling for some time, it鈥檚 only in the last few months that we鈥檝e seen outright job losses.
鈥淪imilarly, it鈥檚 likely that it will take some time for lower interest rates to work their way through the economy, and for businesses to find themselves back in the position of needing to find more workers.鈥
Earnings outlook in the survey was mixed.
Past growth in earnings slipped for a second quarter, consistent with the easing in wage growth that we鈥檙e increasingly seeing in the official figures (at least for the private sector). Expected earnings growth rose slightly, but it remains at an historically low level.
Liam Dann is business editor-at-large for the聽New Zealand Herald. He is a senior writer and columnist, and also presents and produces videos and podcasts. He joined the聽Herald聽in 2003. To sign up for his weekly newsletter, click on your user profile at聽聽and select 鈥淢y newsletters鈥. For a step-by-step guide,聽.
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