Willis said Prime Minister Christopher Luxon had confidence in her to keep growing the economy and she had spoken with him about her ability to hold the finance portfolio.
MacCulloch said Willis kept saying the country was returning to surplus.
Former Finance Minister Roger Douglas is calling for Nicola Willis to resign after a GDP slump. Photo / Paul Taylor
“The books are not improving. And this surplus she talked about today, that’s a creative accounting trick. She changed the way the accounts were being measured… she keeps saying they’re getting better, it’s not true.”
The Stats NZ data showed the economy shrank more sharply than expected in the June quarter, down 0.9%.
It is a longer and sharper downturn than that experienced in the Global Financial Crisis.
Willis blamed the slump on global turmoil and uncertainty driven by the United States’ tariff rollout.
“The economy had been growing strongly in the previous six months but suddenly had the stuffing knocked out of it,” Willis said.
“I feel for people and businesses who have been affected.”
Willis stressed the data was “backwards looking” and there were signs the economy was growing again as interest rates fell.
Economists agreed the outlook for the third quarter was better but said, given the sharp contraction, activity was still lower than had been expected.
MacCulloch said it was disingenuous to blame the global situation.
“She mentioned the tariffs hitting much harder here – that makes no sense at all. In fact, most countries overseas had far higher tariff uncertainty than New Zealand.”
Willis told RNZ she would not take up the pair’s advice to quit.
“Sir Roger and Professor MacCulloch want me to immediately slash Government spending. I’m not going to do that.
“International evidence is that reducing deficits is best done over the course of several years. That is what the Government is doing. We are on course to return the books to surplus in 2028/29.”
Labour’s deputy leader Carmel Sepuloni said Australia’s economy grew 0.6% over the same period.
“Where to next, you know? Is it the fault of the butcher, the baker, the candlestick maker, but not Nicola Willis? It’s her responsibility – she’s the Minister for Finance.”
– RNZ