Health care spending revives in June

Monthly card spending on medical and other health care services reached a record high in June 2020, Stats NZ said today.

In actual terms, spending on medical and other health care services was $261 million in June 2020, up 20 percent ($43 million) from June 2019.

Health care services include GPs, specialists, physiotherapy, optometry, ambulances, and dental care.

"New Zealanders couldn't make face-to-face health care visits during lockdown, so they had to wait until June to return to doctors, dentists, and other specialists," retail statistics manager Kathy Hicks said.

"Spending on health care services during the level-4 lockdown in April was almost non-existent. However, there was a slight recovery in May as we moved through alert levels 3 and 2," Ms Hicks said.

Medical and other health care services
Jun-18215783000
Jul-18226920000
Aug-18238345000
Sep-18212245000
Oct-18232118000
Nov-18243841000
Dec-18196815000
Jan-19194529000
Feb-19213136000
Mar-19233914000
Apr-19214348000
May-19259123000
Jun-19217913000
Jul-19245712000
Aug-19245805000
Sep-19231257000
Oct-19248571000
Nov-19251001000
Dec-19213743000
Jan-20207517000
Feb-20228282000
Mar-20194554000
Apr-2029144000
May-20153938000
Jun-20260690000

Furniture, hardware, and other long-lasting goods

Spending on long-lasting goods (ranging from furniture to cosmetics) continued to rise in June, following a bumper May.

IndustryJun-18Jun-19Jun-20
"Furniture571586000586081000745214000
electrical and hardware retailing"107197000111074000152626000
Recreational goods275610000293482000351560000
Department stores282628000294515000346193000
Pharmaceutical and other store-based retailing

In actual terms, all four durables industries reached record highs for any June month. Furniture, electrical, and hardware retailing had the largest dollar value increase, up $159 million (27 percent) from June 2019.

"The increase in spending on long-lasting goods could still be the effect of pent-up demand following alert levels 3 and 4, when retailers were mostly shut," Ms Hicks said. "New Zealanders might have been using the wider shopping options on offer at COVID-19 alert levels 2 and 1 to buy equipment to help them work better from home or hardware for do-it-yourself jobs."

Eating out recovers, but accommodation still relatively low

"Restricted border measures continue to impact hospitality, with accommodation affected more than restaurants, bars, and takeaways," Ms Hicks said.

MonthAccommodationFood and beverage services
Jun-18161844000796672000
Jul-18188980000827724000
Aug-18184597000826055000
Sep-18186626000822126000
Oct-18215131000837449000
Nov-18238334000860472000
Dec-18256489000947912000
Jan-19283262000872199000
Feb-19258163000824297000
Mar-19259200000928857000
Apr-19221331000857441000
May-19177381000869461000
Jun-19163244000844267000
Jul-19186658000865520000
Aug-19186649000886725000
Sep-19186976000858385000
Oct-19213478000897189000
Nov-19239510000924391000
Dec-19258089000988596000
Jan-20284443000928529000
Feb-20262212000892875000
Mar-20162500000662446000
Apr-201281900043743000
May-2054687000564614000
Jun-20109696000823808000

Spending at restaurants, cafes, and takeaways (food and beverage services) is nearly back up to pre-COVID-19 levels but is still down 2.4 percent on the June 2019 level.

Spending on accommodation, including hotels, motels, and camping grounds, is still at low levels, down 33 percent on June 2019. This reflects the lack of international visitors as a result of COVID-19.

See Electronic card transactions: June 2020 for more information and to download data.

/Stats NZ Public Release. This material from the originating organization/author(s) might be of the point-in-time nature, and edited for clarity, style and length. Mirage.News does not take institutional positions or sides, and all views, positions, and conclusions expressed herein are solely those of the author(s).View in full here.