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No seriously.At Pak’nSave, shoppers recently spotted US butter selling for $6.99 a block, while locally made butter was priced at around $8.39.
So somehow a product travelling thousands of kilometres across the world, through shipping, freight, packaging and import costs… is STILL cheaper than the one produced by Kiwi farmers right here at home.
And people are confused.
But economists say there’s actually a bigger global story behind this.
Right now, America has a huge dairy oversupply. Their dairy industry has been hit by weaker exports and trade tensions with China, leaving excess butter flooding the local and international market at discounted prices.
Meanwhile in New Zealand, producers are facing rising costs almost everywhere:
Electricity bills are higher
Labour costs continue to rise
Farming operations are more expensive
Agricultural land prices have skyrocketed
Experts say New Zealand is now one of the more expensive places in the world to produce food — even though we’re famous globally for dairy and farming.
And it’s not just butter.
Imported frozen spinach from Belgium, overseas carrots and even fruit juice made from imported ingredients are now competing directly with Kiwi-grown products on supermarket shelves.
For many families struggling with the cost of living, cheaper imports might actually feel like a win.
Let’s be honest — when grocery bills are already through the roof, most people will look at the cheaper option first.
But others are asking:
What happens to local farmers?
Why are New Zealanders paying export-level prices for local food?
And how can a country known for dairy become too expensive for its own people to buy dairy products?
One economist warned New Zealand has become heavily dependent on volatile international markets.
Meaning if a massive country like China suddenly needs more dairy products, global buyers could push prices even higher here at home.
One expert even warned butter and cheese prices could become unaffordable if global demand spikes dramatically.
Imagine paying close to $100 for a kilo of cheese.
Butter becoming a “special occasion” grocery item.
Sounds crazy… but economists say it’s not impossible.
For now, shoppers are left standing in supermarket aisles comparing two blocks of butter and wondering:
“How is the imported one cheaper than ours?”
And honestly… it’s a fair question.
What do you think, New Zealand?
Would you buy imported butter if it saved you money — or would you still support local products? 👇🇳🇿
