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22
March 2008
Is
our Government too Big?
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How big should our government be? To what extent do we want
politicians to decide how we should be living our lives? That,
one hopes, may be an issue in this year’s general election.
In 2000, Dr Yegor Gaider, the director of the Institute of
Economies in Transition, and a former acting Prime Minister of
Russia, visited New Zealand and spoke about the challenges of
moving from totalitarianism to a free market economy. In his
speech “The Struggle for a Free Economy and Society in
Russia” he explained how after three generations of living
under communist rule, the tipping point for the people was
“the right to be free – to run their own lives, to be able
to travel where they wanted, choose the government they
wanted, read the books they wanted, and have many other basic
liberties. They wanted an end to totalitarianism”.
He went on to describe how “Real socialism, as opposed to
imagined socialism or the textbook socialism of some thinkers,
is, above all, totalitarian rule. A functioning socialist
society and socialist economy requires a very strong,
relatively well-organised, extremely cruel, totalitarian
political regime. Such a regime eliminates the complicated,
delicate mechanisms that evolved over a period of centuries to
create the modern market economy. It eliminates civil society
because civil society is itself an enormous threat to
totalitarian control”. (To read this fascinating speech, click
here >>>)
Dr Gaider’s insight highlights the stark contrast between the
political extremes. From those who believe that governments
cannot be trusted to act in the best interest of individuals,
to those who believe that individuals cannot be trusted to act
in the best interest of society. The question that each of us
needs to be asking ourselves is whether we think that we have
the right balance between state control and individual freedom
and liberty in New Zealand?
The present Labour Government has been described as the most
socialist government in our history. During their time in
office there has been a massive expansion of the state.
Government spending is now more than $20 billion dollars a
year higher than when they first came to office in 1999, the
core public service workforce has increased by 55 percent over
that time from 29,000 to 45,000, and under their command the
state now intrudes in unprecedented ways into our private
lives, directing how we should raise our children, what we
should be eating, and what we can and cannot say in election
year.
Dr Graham Scott, a former Secretary of the Treasury and Prime
Ministerial advisor, is the NZCPR’s Guest Commentator this
week. In his paper, “Some Concerns about the State of the
State in New Zealand”, Graham questions whether this
expansion of state influence is desirable.
“The public service is under more pressure to conform
to political direction than it has been since the professional
apolitical civil service was established almost a century ago.
This pattern of deeper political control was signalled early
and has been implemented. So we are headed for an election
debate not just about the usual tussle over policy settings
but also about whether this expansion of state influence is
desirable or whether it is undesirable”.
Graham goes on to warn that “There
is enough evidence around to suggest that the sum total of the
way in which the government has expanded the use of state
powers and the particulars of how it has done this, is doing
more to hold back the development of the economy than to
promote it. Its drive to transform the economy might be much
assisted by more focus on transforming itself”.
And he reminds us that in spite of the political spin,
government is not a benevolent force: “it is wise never to
forget that behind the rhetoric about partnership and
stakeholder consultation, governments are using the coercive
powers of the state for much of what they do. Nothing matters
more in an advanced democracy than the rights and constraints
the government has in the use the coercive powers of the
state. A good government uses them sparingly, effectively and
wisely”. To reac his article click
here >>>
Let us never forget that it is people that create
wealth and governments that consume it. When people create
wealth at a rate greater than government consumption, living
standards increase. But when governments impose impediments to
growth and expand the state sector too rapidly, living
standards decline.
When Labour became the government, out of the 30 OECD
countries New Zealand ranked 20th in GDP per capita
(Gross Domestic Product measures the value of everything
produced in the country). Since then both Spain and Greece
have overtaken us and we have fallen two places to 22nd,
just ahead of Korea, Portugal and the Czech Republic. Once
Labour implements their proposed climate change policies, our
slide will undoubtedly escalate.
Can anything be done? Of course it can.
In a free market economy, wealth is created when
motivated individuals are able to pursue their dreams through
working hard and making money. Having a positive attitude to
wealth creation within a country is absolutely essential to
our social well-being.
The ability to create wealth is a function of
productivity. The more productive an enterprise, is the
greater the wealth that will be created. The problem for New
Zealand is that our productivity has been steadily declining.
Our latest figures are dismal. They show that since Labour has
been in office, productivity has averaged only 1.1 percent.
That is less than half of the productivity growth of the
1990s. To move back up the OECD ladder, productivity growth
would need to be 3 percent or more. (For more information see “Dismal
Productivity Figures” >>>)
Australia’s productivity and GDP per capita OECD
rankings are higher than New Zealand’s. In effect,
Australians are a third richer than New Zealanders. Imagine
what a difference it would make to your life if your weekly
income was a third larger. It would undoubtedly improve your
quality of life and that of your family. You would invest,
purchase goods and services provided by others, and support
worthwhile causes. All in all the increase in your own wealth
would create wealth around you, helping to make the country a
more prosperous and productive place. Perhaps it would also
reverse the outflow of 30,000 Kiwis a year going to Australia.
Of course productivity gains can only occur if
government puts the right incentives in place. Such a
framework would need to include lower taxes, less regulation,
and a reduction in red tape and compliance costs. There are
many other factors, of course, but these are a good start.
Key amongst these is a reduction in the top personal
tax rates. The main driver of wealth creation in any economy
is the small business sector which can account for 95 percent
of all enterprises and employ between 65 and 70 percent of all
workers. A large proportion of small business owners pay tax
at the individual income tax level. Cutting the top rates of
tax flows on as a direct incentive for small business owners
to expand and grow their business, creating wealth and jobs in
the process.
The reality is that in a free country, people only make
the extra effort to create wealth if it is rewarding. If it is
too hard, with the hurdles too great and the returns too
small, then many people with good ideas will not bother to
even try to get their enterprise off the ground. Unless this
situation is turned around, there is nothing to suggest that
New Zealand’s slide in living standards will not continue.
None of this is rocket science. Treasury has advised
the Labour Government of this each time they have won an
election. Their recommendation has always been to reduce the
country’s tax burden. A lower tax environment would give the entrepreneur more money to expand and grow his
business, thereby increasing the country’s productivity. A
lower tax environment would give consumers have more money in
their pockets to demand more goods and services, increasing
the country’s productivity in order to meet that demand.
While the private sector is instrumental in increasing
productivity and creating wealth, most of the money consumed
by government neither improves productivity nor increases
wealth. It does the opposite. That’s why the size of
government is such a big issue in the run up to the 2008 election.
The
poll this week asks: Do you think the government in New Zealand is too big,
too small or about right?
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to Poll >>>
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