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24
October 2011
Fresh
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With
the Rugby World Cup now almost
behind us – and a HUGE congratulations to the All Blacks for
their win and to all of those who made the tournament so
successful – the country’s focus will soon turn to
politics. With the 2011 general election just four weeks away,
we should expect a flood of well rehearsed policy
announcements from all political contenders aimed at
attracting our votes. Since this is the season for new ideas
we thought we would share some of the initiatives that we have
come across during our NZCPR research work, that are being
used by countries around the world to address their public
policy challenges.
With the
state of the economy weighing heavily on everyone’s mind,
the US State of Texas might be able to teach us a thing or
two.
Texas has a small government, with a legislature that meets
for only 90 days every two years. Taxes are low and there is
no state income tax. As a result, its economy thrives as large
and small businesses generate new jobs. Unemployment rates
have been below the national average for more than a decade.
In spite of weak state sector unions, public services are said
to be superior, with education test scores higher than those
in many other states.
Americans
have been voting with their feet and moving to Texas at double
the rate of any other state. Texas is also a magnet to
families from abroad, who are attracted by a small, low-tax
government that encourages creativity and opportunity.[1]
Lesson for NZ: smaller governments create jobs, opportunity
and wealth.
Another
example of economic transformation comes from Canada. In the
mid-nineties, the country was an economic basket case -
described by the Wall Street Journal as “an honorary member
of the Third World”. But within three years the budget was
balanced and 11 years of budget surpluses followed.
This remarkable turnaround was achieved through reigning in
government spending, reducing the size of the public service,
tightening up on welfare, and slashing company tax rates. By recognising
that it is the business sector that creates economic growth
– not the government - Canada has continued to reduce
corporate taxes giving Canadian businesses a significant
competitive edge. Company tax in Canada - now at 16.5 percent
- will be reduced to 15 percent next year. This
rate compares favourably with the company tax rate in some of
the world’s economic power-houses such as Hong Kong with a
company tax rate of 16.5 percent and Singapore on 17
percent.[2]
With
Europe’s average corporate tax rate having now dropped below
25 percent, it is clear that New Zealand’s 28 percent rate
is out of step. Our high company tax is penalising exporters
who are already disadvantaged by our distance from world
markets. Imagine the boost to Kiwi businesses if New
Zealand’s company tax rate was reduced to 15 percent to
match that of Canada. What a boom in jobs and growth that
would create!
Lesson
for NZ - lower company tax drives economic growth.
Sweden’s
progressive approach to education has long demonstrated that
it is competition between schools to attract students, as well
as the ability of parents to choose the best school to meet
the needs of their children, that are the key factors needed
to improve the educational achievement of students, and the
working conditions of teachers.
School
choice was introduced in Sweden in 1992. It is based on the
concept of each child being issued with a virtual
‘voucher’, which is equivalent in value to the average
cost of educating a Swedish child in a state school. Parents
can then use this ‘voucher’ to ‘buy’ their child a
place at the school of their choice - either a state school, a
private for-profit school, or a private not-for-profit school.
With educational funding following students, state support
flows to the most popular schools. These virtual vouchers
cannot be ‘topped up’, so private schools participating in
the scheme cannot charge additional fees. Nor can schools
select students on any basis other than first-come,
first-served.
Before the voucher system was introduced into Sweden, there
were virtually no private schools, but by 2008 around 10
percent of all students attended private schools.[3]
Lesson
for NZ - educational achievement is improved through
competition and choice.
For
the past 10 years, public and private hospitals in Lombardy in
northern Italy have competed directly for patients. In doing
so, they are reported to have created one of Europe's most
efficient health-care systems.
Like many other countries, health-care in Italy is paid for by
the state, with patients charged a small co-payment. As a
result, most Italians don't buy private health insurance,
creating a virtual monopoly of state hospital provision. With
little incentive to improve services or rein in costs,
inefficiencies in the public hospital system were rampant,
with long waiting lists for non-emergency treatment a
tell-tale sign.
However, in 1997 the government decentralised the country's
health-care system to provide regional control over public
hospital funding. This gave regions the power to adopt their
own quality standards, to set their own reimbursement rates,
to decide which hospitals qualified for public funds, and to
withhold reimbursement if hospitals did not meet their
standards.
While
many regions essentially maintained the status quo, giving
public hospitals preferential treatment, Lombardy took a
different approach. It increased quality standards, set new
reimbursement rates, and made public and private hospitals
equally eligible for public funding. That meant that any
hospital that met their quality standards and charged an
accepted reimbursement rate, qualified. Patients were then
free to choose between state-run and publicly funded private
hospitals - their co-payment the same in either case.
As a result of the competition between public and private
hospitals competing for patients and funding, services
improved across the board. Patients in Lombardy receive among
the widest array of treatments in Italy, and are covered for a
longer list of prescription drugs than almost anywhere else in
Europe. Waiting lists are a thing of the past. Today,
it's difficult for people in Lombardy to even tell the
difference between public and private hospitals.[4]
Lesson
for NZ – patient care can be improved through competition
and choice.
As we watch the unrelenting rise in the price of power in New
Zealand - driven largely by politicians passing almost the
entire cost of the world’s most stringent emissions trading
scheme onto householders - we can see no relief in sight. With
the government’s commitment to renewable energy favouring
the use of expensive wind generation, the problem can only get
worse.
This
week’s NZCPR Guest Commentator is acclaimed author and
journalist Matt Ridley. Winner of a numerous literary awards
including the coveted Hayek Prize for 2011, Matt, a former
Science and Technology Editor for the Economist,
explains how technological advancements have meant an end to
power price rises in some countries around the world through
the discovery of enormous reserves of inexpensive shale gas:
“Which
would you rather have in the view from your house? A thing
about the size of a domestic garage, or eight towers twice the
height of Nelson’s column with blades noisily thrumming the
air. The energy they can produce over ten years is similar:
eight wind turbines of 2.5-megawatts roughly equal the output
of an average Pennsylvania shale gas well in its first ten
years.
“Difficult
choice? Let’s make it easier. The gas well can be hidden in
a hollow, behind a hedge. The eight wind turbines must be on
top of hills, because that is where the wind blows, visible
for up to 40 miles. And they require the construction of new
pylons marching to the towns; the gas well is connected by an
underground pipe.
“What’s
that you say? Gas is running out? Have you not heard the news?
It’s not. Till five years ago gas was the fuel everybody
thought would run out first, before oil and coal. But a chap
called George Mitchell turned the gas industry on its head.
Using just the right combination of horizontal drilling and
hydraulic fracturing – both well established technologies --
he worked out how to get gas out of shale where most of it is,
rather than just out of (conventional) porous rocks, where it
sometimes pools. The Barnett shale in Texas, where Mitchell
worked, turned into one of the biggest gas reserves in
America. Then the Haynesville shale in Louisiana dwarfed it.
The Marcellus shale mainly in Pennsylvania then trumped that
with a barely believable 500 trillion cubic feet of gas, as
big as any oil field ever found, on the doorstep of the
biggest market in the world.” To read Matt’s full article,
Gas against wind, click here
>>>
While
some exploration companies are looking at the shale gas
potential in New Zealand, at this stage it is unclear whether
any reserves of a commercial nature exist. But what Matt
Ridley has highlighted is that free markets provide powerful
incentives for innovation that can create ground-breaking
solutions to seemingly insurmountable problems. In the long
run technology-driven progress can provide enormous benefits
for consumers and economies alike.
Lesson
for NZ - markets free from excessive regulation can overcome
resource scarcity.
With
serious concerns that the welfare system was forcing taxpayers
to subsidise drug dependency, the US State of Florida passed a
law in June to require
recipients of the equivalent of the Domestic Purposes Benefit
to pass a drug test as a condition of receiving cash
assistance. Non-cash benefits such as food stamps and housing
aid are not affected by the new law. If a beneficiary fails
the drug test, they will lose their benefit for a year unless
they undergo rehabilitation (although their child assistance
can be paid to a third party to administer - as long as they
also pass a drug test). If they fail the test a second time,
they will lose their benefit for three years.[5]
Here in New Zealand, with many workplaces now drug testing
employees to ensure they are drug free, it has been suggested
that drug-testing of recipients of all work-tested benefits
should become law - since it is a condition of welfare receipt
that the recipient is ready and available for work. If they
are taking drugs, then they have broken their side of the
bargain, as many employees will refuse to give them a job.
If New Zealand was to follow Florida’s lead, then recipients
of all taxpayer-funded benefits would be drug-tested to ensure
that taxpayers were not being forced to subsidise drug
dependency.
Lesson
for NZ – taxpayers should not be forced to subsidise drug
dependency.
This
week’s poll asks: Should all beneficiaries be drug
tested as a condition of benefit receipt? Click here for poll >>>
FOOTNOTES:
1.Michael Barone, Low-tax
Texas beats big-government California
2.Wall Street Journal, Canada's
Competitive Edge
3.Mike Baker, Swedish
parents enjoy school choice
4. Margherita Stancati, Competitive
Care
5.Simon
Collins, Take
a drug test or lose benefits? Proposal raises fears
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