Cameron Bagrie

Independent economist • Straight-talking strategist • Chair, Transporting New Zealand
Overview
Cam Bagrie is one of New Zealand’s most trusted and engaging economic commentators. With over two decades of experience across the public and private sectors, he cuts through the noise to explain what’s really happening in the economy – and what it means for businesses, government, and everyday New Zealanders.
He’s the Managing Director of Bagrie Economics, a research consultancy known for independent, practical advice grounded in data, not dogma.
Career Highlights
Former Chief Economist at ANZ, where he led economic strategy for more than 11 years.
Held earlier roles at NZ Treasury, Statistics NZ, and the National Bank.
Since 2018, he’s led Bagrie Economics, offering frank, evidence-based insight to clients across business, government, media and industry.
Leadership Roles
Chair, Transporting New Zealand – appointed in October 2024 to lead the peak body for the road freight sector.
Independent Chair, NZ Apple & Pear Inc governance committee.
Board Member, Life Education Trust – supporting youth wellbeing and education.
Media & Public Commentary
Cam is a regular voice across national media, including TVNZ, Radio NZ, The Platform, and BusinessDesk.
He also produces a free economic update series, “Straight Shooting”, released three times a month and widely followed by business leaders and policymakers.
Why book Cam?
No spin, just insight – Cam delivers plain-English commentary backed by credible data and a deep understanding of economic forces.
Cross-sector relevance – From agriculture and infrastructure to finance and education, his analysis connects the dots between the macro and the meaningful.
Boardroom to newsroom – A proven communicator who speaks to everyone from frontline teams to government ministers.
Recent Activity (2024–2025)
Appointed Chair of Transporting NZ
Commentary lead for Budget 2025 across media platforms
Guest on REX Rural Exchange (July 2025)
Ongoing contributor to BusinessDesk on fiscal and structural reform topics