[This article was first published at https://www.interest.co.nz on 7 December 2025]
Inflation lies at the heart of economic thinking and decision making. What are the fundamental causes? Is inflation distorting our economy? Can we do better? The new Governor of the Reserve Bank seems to think we can do better and plans a ‘laser focus’ on inflation.
It is widely recognised that inflation can be either cost-push or demand-pull. It is also widely accepted that inflation expectations influence both purchase and pricing decisions, with this feeding back at a macro level to self-fulfilment of the expectations.
These explanations, despite being correct, are superficial.
Simply knowing that the above explanations are true, in itself does very little to help policymakers prevent inflation. If the solutions were simple, we would not be in our present New Zealand situation with inflation at three percent per annum despite a stagnant economy.
Three percent per annum of compounding inflation does not necessarily sound very much. However, it means prices double every 24 years. In 100 years, prices increase 19-fold.
In the last five years since September 2020, our inflation rate, using official CPI data (Reserve Bank series M1), has actually averaged 4.6 percent per annum. This is despite the Reserve Bank mandate to keep inflation between one and three percent in the medium term, with a specific focus on the midpoint of two percent. Continue reading