CAFCA – Who Really Owns New Zealand?

Release by Campaign Against Foreign Investment in Aotearoa

Below is the executive summary of Ed Miller’s exhaustive and much appreciated work on updating CAFCA’s annual Key Facts.

The full details (both in text and graphs – Powerpoint and PDF) are on CAFCA’s Website at: http://canterbury.cyberplace.co.nz/community/CAFCA/key-facts.html

This is the second year that I have supported CAFCA by updating this foreign investment information, work that was previously performed by Bill Rosenberg. This time I endeavoured to complete this much earlier in the year, however there were numerous delays from agencies in publishing data compared to previous years. In most instances this data is current to March 2021. Any errors are of course my own.

– Foreign direct investment (ownership of companies) increased $10.8 billion to $140.6 billion in the year to March 2021, a more than ninefold increase since March 1989. NZ ownership of overseas companies is only $39.1 billion, meaning a net liability of $101.4 billion.

– Foreign ownership of the NZ sharemarket fell to 37.8% in December 2021, its lowest point in five-years after reaching 39.3% in 2020. At March 2020 foreign owners owned an estimated 24.5% of all corporate equity and 29.3% of privately owned corporate equity.

– While the overall scale of foreign investment remains unchanged at $481 billion, foreign investors share of NZ net wealth declined 5% to 18% in the year to March 2021. Here we can see the impact of covid-related monetary policy, with rising asset prices resulting in a half-trillion dollar increase in total net wealth, including a $215 billion increase in the value of owner-occupied housing and land, a $268 billion increase in household wealth and a $42 billion increase in Government net worth. This 24% increase brought total wealth at March 2021 to $2.63 trillion. It will be interesting to see whether tighter monetary policy and declining asset prices have the opposite effect in next year’s data.

– In the year to December 2021 the OIO (Overseas Investment Office) approved $19.6 billion in new investment, the highest amount since 2006 and almost double the average figure for the last decade.

In the year to December 2021 the OIO approved the sale of 25,863 hectares of freehold rural land to foreigners. While this is higher than 2020 it remains well below the trend from the last decade, in which the average was 113,036 hectares. The sale of 47,156 hectares of leases, forestry cutting rights and other major interests in land approved in the year to December 2021 was also well below the average from the previous decade.

– Australia remains our largest source of FDI (foreign direct investment), accounting for $66.1 billion – 50.5% of all FDI – in the year to March 2021. 

– One in every five dollars in FDI in New Zealand at March 2021 is owned through a tax haven ($12.7 billion in FDI is owned through tax havens Hong Kong, British Virgin Islands, Cayman Islands) or a jurisdiction used to help avoid tax ($11.9 billion in FDI comes through the Netherlands, Singapore and Switzerland).  

– The financial and insurances services sector (including the big four Australian owned banks) accounted for $51.2 billion (39.1%) of foreign ownership in the year to March 2021, followed by manufacturing ($16.9 billion). 

– In the year to March 2021 TNCs extracted $8.1 billion from Aotearoa,. In the decade to 2012-2021 this totalled $88 billion. In the year to March 2021 a further $6.2 billion left the country in investment income, making a total of $14.4 billion. 

– Almost one in every two dollars that left New Zealand in the year to March 2021 went to the owners of New Zealand banking sector: $7.1 billion out of $14.4 billion.

– Employment in foreign owned enterprises fell almost a percentage point in the year to March 2021, down to 17.2%.

– Foreign ownership has not improved New Zealand’s foreign debt problem, with total private and public foreign debt reaching $289 billion at March 2021, equivalent to 88.6% of New Zealand’s GDP.








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2 Responses to CAFCA – Who Really Owns New Zealand?

  1. Rupert Pye says:

    The sellout of New Zealand has been going on for decades. Dr Bill Sutch’s book “Takeover New Zealand” was published in 1971. Every government except for the Norman Kirk led 1972 Labour government has been selling out to foreign investment.

  2. Frank Henry says:

    Quite correct Rupert Pye. In fact in the early 1990s with Bolger as Prime Minister the National government held an APEC conference in Auckland to woo foreign investment.
    No wonder today sectors like vineyards/wine and forestry are 80% owned by foreign corporates. Carbon farming is a sellout of productive sheep and beef farms to speculative foreign corporates who then in most cases, lock it up, with public access barred.

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