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Great Recession in Oceania

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TheGreat Recession in Oceania was thegreat recession of the late 2000s and early 2010s inOceania. The Oceanic countries suffered minimal impact during this time, in comparison with the impact thatNorth America andEurope felt.

Australia

[edit]
This section is an excerpt fromEconomy of Australia § 2008 financial crisis.[edit]

Australia is one of the threeOrganisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries that did not experience two consecutive negative quarters of growth and one of the two that avoided negative year-endGDP growth during the global recession.[1] It was not affected by the crisis from 2008 to 2009 due to a number of factors such as government stimulus spending of $11.8 billion, its proximity to the boomingChinese economy and the related mining boom kept growth ticking over throughout the worst of the global conditions.[2] In fact, sources such as theIMF and theReserve Bank of Australia had predicted Australia was well positioned to weather the crisis with minimal disruption, sustaining more than 2% GDP growth in 2009 (as many Western nations went into recession). In the same year, theWorld Economic Forum ranked Australia's banking system the fourth best in the world, while the Australian dollar's 30% drop was seen as a boon for trade, shielding the country from the crisis and helping to slow growth and consumption. Australia's recession affectedNew Zealand's economy as Australia was New Zealand's biggest export market.[3][4] It is said that the term Great Recession as a description of the post-2008 slump is not recognized by Australians particularly those under 30 due to its mild, intangible impact on the country's economy.[5]

Some analysts had predicted the continuing decline of trade in 2009 could put the economy into recession for the first time in 17 years.[6] However, these initial fears were proved largely unfounded as the Australian economy avoided recession and the unemployment rate peaked at a much lower rate than had been predicted. To help address the anticipated slowdown, the Australian government also announced a stimulus package worth $27 billion to spur economic growth while the Reserve Bank of Australia introduced a series of interest rate cuts.[7]

While Australia's overall national economy grew, some non-mining states and Australia's non-mining economy experienced a recession.[8][9][10]

New Zealand

[edit]
Main article:Economy of New Zealand

The New Zealand Treasury defines "recession" as "consecutive falls in real GDP." The department said that New Zealand's real GDP fell 3.3% between the December 2007 quarter and the March 2008 quarter, and that this start, before any other OECD nation, was the result of domestic factors. It said that New Zealand's recession was among the first to finish and was one of the shallowest.[11] New Zealand Institute of Economic Research's quarterly survey showed New Zealand's economy contracted 0.3 percent in the first quarter of 2008.

There was a substantial number offinance company collapses between 2006 and 2012. Housing starts in New Zealand fell 20 percent in June 2008, the lowest levels since 1986.[12] Excluding apartments, approvals dropped 13 percent from May. Approvals in the year ended June fell 12 percent from a year earlier. Second-quarter approvals dropped 19 percent. The figures suggested a decrease in construction and economic growth. House sales fell 42 percent in June from a year earlier.[13]

TheNew Zealand Treasury concluded that the country's economy had contracted for a second quarter based on economic indicators, putting New Zealand in a recession.[14] New Zealand's central bank cut rates by half a percent arguing the economy was in recession.[15] New Zealand's GDP declined by 0.2 percent in the second quarter putting the country in its first recession in a decade.[16]

The economy emerged from recession in mid-2009, with the second-quarter GDP report showing the economy grew by 0.1 per cent on the March quarter.[17]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Braude, Jacob; Eckstein, Zvi; Fischer, Stanley; Flug, Karnit (2013).The Great Recession: Lessons for Central Bankers. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. p. 245.ISBN 978-0-262-01834-0.
  2. ^Junankar, P. (2013). "Australia: The Miracle Economy".IZA Discussion Papers 7505, Institute for the Study of Labor.
  3. ^Stutchbury, Michael (2008-10-11)."Calls for international community to flush the system".The Australian. Archived fromthe original on October 13, 2008.
  4. ^Yeates, Clancy (2008-10-11)."The fall of the little Aussie battler".The Sydney Morning Herald.
  5. ^Bryant, Nick (2015).The Rise and Fall of Australia. Sydney: Random House Australia. p. 3.ISBN 978-0-85798-902-4.
  6. ^Australia seen sliding into recession in 2009, International Herald Tribune, January 19, 2009
  7. ^Rosenberg, Jerry (2012).The Concise Encyclopedia of The Great Recession 2007-2012. Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Press. pp. 32.ISBN 978-0-8108-8340-6.
  8. ^"National economy grows but some non-mining states in recession".The Conversation. Retrieved22 March 2013.
  9. ^Syvret, Paul (7 April 2012)."Mining punches through recession".Courier Mail. Archived fromthe original on 16 April 2012.
  10. ^"Non-mining states going backwards". ABC. Retrieved22 March 2013.
  11. ^"Special Topic: Recession and recovery in the OECD".NZ Treasury – treasury.govt.nz. Retrieved29 July 2017.
  12. ^Evans-Pritchard, Ambrose (2008-07-29)."Australia faces worse crisis than America". London: Daily Telegraph. Archived fromthe original on 2008-07-31. Retrieved2008-07-30.
  13. ^"New Zealand Building Approvals Fall to 22-Year Low".Bloomberg. 2008-07-29. Retrieved2008-08-10.
  14. ^"New Zealand 'enters recession'". BBC News. 2008-08-05. Retrieved2008-08-10.
  15. ^"New Zealand slashes rates as economy lurches toward recession". London: Daily Telegraph. 2008-09-11. Retrieved2008-09-12.[dead link]
  16. ^"New Zealand Economy Shrank 0.2%, Confirming Recession".Bloomberg. 2008-09-26. Retrieved2008-09-26.
  17. ^Louisson, Simon (2009-09-24)."New Zealand's economy grew 0.1% in second quarter".The Wall Street Journal Asia. Vol. 34, no. 18. p. 14. Retrieved2009-11-17.

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