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Dr Muriel Newman
Contact Muriel:
Email: muriel@nzcpr.com
Phone 09 4343 836
or 021 800 111
PO Box 984, Whangarei
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14
November 2011
Election
2011 - storm
clouds
gather on horizon
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As
the Head of the International Monetary Fund Christine Lagarde
was warning about the bleak global economic outlook last week,
New Zealand politicians were digging deeper into taxpayer
pockets and promising to spend more. With our General Election
on Saturday week, it is disturbing that so many parties are
totally ignoring the dark clouds that are gathering as they
try to bribe voters with money they don’t have.
In a speech in Beijing on Thursday, Christine Lagarde spoke in
an uncharacteristically direct manner. "In
our increasingly interconnected world, no country or region
can go it alone. There are dark clouds gathering in the global
economy. If we do not act, and act together, we could enter a
downward spiral of uncertainty, financial instability, and a
collapse in global demand. Ultimately, we could face a lost
decade of low growth and high unemployment."[1]
New
Zealand’s prime export markets are already under threat as
growth slows in Australia and the US, and Asia’s
manufacturing base feels the pressure of falling European
consumption. This means surely, that ‘austerity’ should be
the benchmark for all parties contesting this election.
The Government’s latest financial statement - released last
Thursday – reinforces the need for prudence. While Core
Crown income for the three months to the end of September was
$14.1 billion, expenses were $17.2b, leaving a shortfall of
$3.1b to be funded through borrowing.[2] If we look back at
the state of the books just before the last election, the
impact on the country of the recession and the earthquakes
become more evident. Crown revenue today is $1.4 billion lower
than three years ago and Crown expenses $2.2 billion higher.
In 2008 gross Crown debt was $31.9 billion, or 17.8 percent of
GDP. Today it is $76.3 billion or 38.1 percent of GDP. While
this escalation in debt is nowhere near Italy’s dangerous
level of 119 percent of GDP, it is certainly high enough to
require political constraint. A browse through the Party
Manifestos – collected here
>>>
for your convenience – shows however, that constraint is not
the name of their game.
The worst offender is the Labour Party, which has promised
over $16 billion worth of benefits, all of which will have to
be borrowed until their tax increases – a capital gains tax
and an increase in the top tax rate - eventually kick in.
Their latest big ticket item - costing almost $2.6
billion – is an extension to Working for Families and Paid
Parental Leave. Working for Families is an expensive welfare
programme that was introduced by the Labour Party ostensibly
to provide an incentive for beneficiary families to leave
welfare. By expanding the scheme to cover beneficiaries, not
only would the work incentive be removed, but many families
would find themselves better off on welfare than they would be
in work. This would further entrench New Zealand’s
disastrous long-term dependency problem.
While
most of the National Party’s new spending promises have been
tied to the returns from the partial sale of state assets,
they have made a serious commitment to curbing the escalating
cost of welfare. By investing $130 million on restructuring
the benefit system so it pro-actively focuses on work as the
primary outcome, $1 billion is expected to be saved over four
years. These changes have been described as a fore-runner of a
series of reforms designed to reduce intergenerational
dependency and the damage it does to children.
The
Green Party plans to establish a $10,000
income tax free threshold, introduce a
universal child benefit paying $18.40 a week for the first
chid and $13 a week for others, increase social welfare
benefit levels, introduce new payments to beneficiaries doing
voluntary work, extend Working for Families to beneficiary
families, increase the minimum wage to $15 an hour, shorten
New Zealand’s working week to 35 hours, impose a new Code of
Corporate Responsibility for all businesses, write-off of all
student debt, introduce a new universal student allowance
equal to the unemployment benefit, and eliminate all student
fees. To balance their spending the Greens are proposing to
increase the top Income Tax rate to 39 cents, introduce an
Earthquake Tax levy of 1.5 percent rising to 3 percent,
increase the Company Tax to 30 percent, introduce a Capital
Gains Tax, establish new Eco Taxes on water, commercial
fishing, mining, pollution, and waste, and bring in a Tobin
Tax on international currency movements.
ACT
would lower the top rate of income tax to 25 percent and the
company tax to 12.5 percent, scrap the Emissions Trading
Scheme, reintroduce a youth wage, and consider the full sale
of State Owned Assets.
The
Maori Party’s spending plans include removing GST off all
food, making the first $25,000 of income tax free, increasing
the minimum wage to $16 an hour, lowering the age of
eligibility to superannuation to 60 for Maori, extending the
Working for Families package to beneficiaries with children,
introducing a universal student allowance equal to the dole,
subsidising domestic internet connections, establishing a
government-funded fishing fleet and fish processing plants,
and orchestrating a debt write-off of overdue rates on Maori
land. These promises would be paid for through a Financial
Transaction Tax.
United
Future’s spending plans include income splitting for tax
purposes - a policy Treasury estimated to cost $500 million -
and a
$150 a year winter subsidy on the power bills of all
superannuitants.
The Mana Party would introduce tax-free threshold of
$27,000, abolish GST, increase social welfare benefits, extend
the Working for Families package to beneficiaries with
children, and increase the minimum wage to $15 an hour. This
spending would be balanced by a Capital Gains Tax, a ‘Hone
Heke’ Financial Transaction Tax, and an Inheritance Tax.
New
Zealand First would simplify New Zealand’s tax code, cutting
personal and company tax, reduce GST to 12.5 percent, remove
GST on rates, remove the double tax on savings, scrap
secondary tax, raise the minimum wage to $15 an hour,
introduce a government subsidy for the reduction of student
debt, introduce a raft of subsidies to support the elderly,
and scrap the Emissions Trading Scheme.
The Conservatives would scrap the Emissions Trading Scheme and
raise the top rate of tax.
As a property investor, NZCPR Research Associate Mike Butler
has a particular interest in housing-related policies. In his
Breaking Views blog Property
investors squeezed,
Mike has outlined the changes affecting property investors
that have been implemented over the last three years by the
National Party - largely without warning! In addition, he has
trawled through Party Manifestos to find out what the various
parties are proposing for the future.
In
the same vein Dr Ron Smith, NZCPR Research Associate and
co-director of International Relations and Security Studies at
Waikato University, has examined party manifestos for their
stance on defence. He finds the lack of political focus on
national security rather troubling – you can read his
analysis in his Breaking Views blog Sounds
of the election.
Finally,
there is no doubt that the backdrop to this 2011 election is
global unrest as world economies falter and a range of protest
movements emerge - from the regime changers in the Middle
East, to the riots in England, to the more recent Occupy Wall
Street movement. Starting in New York, OWS protest action has
now spread around the world with groups taking up residence in
major public spaces – including Auckland’s Aotea Square,
Wellington’s Civic Square, and Dunedin’s Octagon.
This
week’s NZCPR Guest Commentator Professor Roger Bowden, the
former Head of Economics and Finance at Victoria University,
has examined one of their major complaints, namely the
explosion in top level remuneration, to find that the
‘blame’ for these developments can be laid at the feet of
academics:
“Over past twenty
years or so, there has been a sea change in remuneration
relativities. The average CEO in the U.S. now gets paid 50
times the average wage and salary earner.
Just in case you think that’s just President
Obama’s problem, think again. Last year, the local NZ boss
of Westpac raked in about NZ$5.5 million, which is roughly 100
times the average, while the big boss in Australia pulled in a
package worth a whopping $55 million. Dynastic wealth in the
making, so to speak, and it’s a story repeated over a whole
range of companies, not just financials. How did all this
happen? As usual, you can blame the ‘academic scribblers’.
To read Roger’s article click here
>>>
In
a democracy, an election gives voters an opportunity to
have their say on the future direction of the country.
Elections should be are a contest of ideas – unfortunately
ours has become a bidding war. The socialists are pushing for
more spending and higher taxes to make society, they say, a
‘fairer’ place - instead of promoting improved savings and
productivity as the way forward. The separatists are proposing
more race-based privilege as they pursue their goal of
‘partnership’ with the Crown - instead of accepting that
one law for all and a united effort is what is needed for
progress in a modern economy. The environmentalists are driven
by a desire to punish human endeavour – particularly our
crucial dairy industry - instead of promoting a balanced
approach to care and concern for our natural environment. As
Martin Durkin, producer of the controversial documentary, The
Great Global Warming Swindle, writes in his Breaking Views
blog The
Green Superstate - what the global warmers really want,
“With terrifying
single-mindedness, the Green movement is waging war against
freedom, for more State
control. And they’ve been at it from the
start.”
But as you deliberate over who to vote for don’t forget
those dark clouds that are looming on the horizon and
Christine Lagarde’s warning that we could be facing a
“lost decade”.
This
week’s poll asks:
“Do you believe our politicians are taking the international
economic risks seriously enough?” Click here for poll >>>
FOOTNOTE:
1.Sydney Morning Herald, IMF
boss warns of 'lost decade' for global economy
2.Treasury, Financial
Statements of NZ Government – 3 months ended 30 September
2011
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