Name (English): Fine Food New Zealand
Exhibition dates: 13 June 2021 - 15 June 2021
Exhibition Venue: Oaks, New Zealand
Exhibition cycle: once every two years
Organizer: North Port Events Ltd.
Organizer: Beijing Zhonglv International Exhibition Co.
Industry Properties
Food, drink, alcohol, tobacco
FINE FOOD is a biennial event that is at the forefront of international trade in the New Zealand food retail, food service and hospitality industries and is the largest of its kind in the New Zealand food and hospitality industry. This show attracts a large number of quality visitors each year, bringing a steady stream of sales and other business opportunities to exhibitors, where interaction between buyers and exhibitors is enhanced, where sensitivity to industry trends is heightened and where buyers make their purchasing decisions.
FINE FOOD is a series of food exhibitions in Oceania organised by the Diversified Group of Companies, Australian Exhibition Company, and is sister to the Australian International Food Fair, Queensland Food Fair and New Zealand International Food Fair.
Scale of the last exhibition: more than 200 exhibitors, 6,404 visitors and 8,552 square metres of exhibition area.
New Zealand had a relatively advanced manufacturing and service sector and a highly efficient agriculture, forestry and livestock industry. Since the mid to late 1980s, the New Zealand government has shifted its macroeconomic policy to one of low inflation and fiscal balance, while allowing the exchange rate to float, liberalising controls on capital flows, removing agricultural subsidies and corporatisation and privatisation of state assets. Since 1998, despite the adverse effects of the Asian financial crisis and the economic downturn in the US, Europe and Japan, domestic demand, particularly in the property market, has expanded as a result of continued export growth, immigration and the consequent inflow of capital, The New Zealand economy has continued to grow at a relatively fast pace overall. In June 2003, New Zealand's gross domestic product (GDP) was $126.2 billion in annual terms, an increase of 4.0 per cent over the previous year. GDP per capita was $NZ 31,900 (approximately $18,200). The inflation rate (Consumer Price Index) was 1.5 per cent and the unemployment rate was 4.7 per cent. In recent years New Zealand has been one of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries with sustained economic growth, a low unemployment rate and a relatively strong exchange rate. The influx of immigrants in recent years, a favourable tourism market, strong education exports and a rising property sector have kept domestic demand strong. The New Zealand economy is expected to continue to grow in the coming period.
Source from www.yshows.cn