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New Zealand central banker says Q1 core inflation was stable within target band

By Thomson Reuters Apr 28, 2026 | 8:44 PM

WELLINGTON, April 29 (Reuters) – New Zealand’s top central banker on Wednesday said that measures of core inflation in the ​first quarter had remained stable within ‌its target band of 1% to 3%, adding that it remained focused on balancing inflation control while supporting an economic recovery.

• “We remain ready to act ‌decisively ​and in a timely manner ⁠if there are ⁠signs that short-term inflation is feeding into more persistent pressures, to ensure inflation settles sustainably at 2% over the medium term,” ​Reserve Bank of New Zealand Governor Anna Breman said in a speech.

• Breman said ⁠the monetary policy committee continues ⁠to keep a “close watch” on ​what is happening in the Middle East and incoming ​data to assess what that means for ‌the New Zealand inflation outlook.

• New Zealand’s central bank held the official cash rate at 2.25% at its last monetary policy ⁠meeting in April but noted it was balancing the potential benefits of responding pre-emptively to the risk ⁠of higher ‌medium-term inflation against the cost ⁠of unnecessarily stifling the economy. Since ​then, ‌New Zealand’s first-quarter inflation has ​come in ⁠at 3.1%, slightly higher than the RBNZ’s expectation and outside the central bank’s target band.

(Reporting by Lucy Craymer in Wellington and Renju Jose in Sydney; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman and ​Thomas Derpinghaus)