 |
|
Dr Muriel Newman
Contact Muriel:
Email: muriel@nzcpr.com
Phone 09 4343 836
or 021 800 111
PO Box 984, Whangarei
|
|
|
|
This
year’s budget is to be released on Thursday. It will be
delivered against a backdrop of increasing global economic
uncertainty, particularly in the Eurozone. Greece is unable to
form a government and a withdrawal from the Euro is looking
increasingly likely - maybe even from the European Union
itself. Youth unemployment has hit
50 percent in both Greece and Spain, while the number of
people out of work in the Eurozone as a whole is at a 15-year
high of over 17 million. There are concerns over Spain’s
banking system, Portugal is sinking deeper into recession,
Italy is still not out of the woods, and France has just
elected a socialist President who believes that he can spend
his way out of his country’s economic woes.
Dr Roger Bowden, a former Professor of Economics and Finance
at Victoria University and this week’s NZCPR Guest
Commentator, is keeping a close eye on events in Europe:
“Francois Holland, the President-elect of France got there
on a platform of renewed public spending. Things like 50,000
additional teachers and civil servants, restoring the pension
age, urban renewal, and infrastructure projects. All very
Keynesian and good, as a way out of recession. But how to
finance it? Yes, you can tax the rich, but there’s not all
that many of them, and they’ll make themselves even scarcer
once the tax is announced. How about printing money? That’s
hard, because the French central bank can’t do that without
the OK from the European Central Bank. So unless he can tap
into the Eurozone for the money, it will mean issuing more
French sovereign debt. But there’s already so much out
there; indeed the interest bill is the second largest sink for
government spending behind education, and the sovereign debt
ratio at 89 percent is well north of the agreed 60 percent
target.” To read Roger’s article, The
Euromess, click here>>>
The experience of Eurozone countries should act as a clear
warning to governments around the world that poor economic
management cannot be sustained in the long term. When
consumption is funded from debt, taxpayers will eventually be
forced to face the consequences.
In fact, poor economic management by political leaders should
not be tolerated by voters – simple as that. Just as
households must live within their means, so too must
governments because it is taxpayers, not spendthrift
politicians, that have to deal with the consequences. The
corrections that will inevitably be required - in the form of
spending cuts and a reduction in entitlement programmes - can
be ugly. Unfortunately
too, it is often not profligate governments that bear the
brunt of public anger at spending cuts, but reforming
governments that are forced to deliver unpopular
belt-tightening policies.
This was certainly the experience in Sweden. Originally a
wealthy, relatively low-taxed country, the foundations of
Sweden’s economic decline were laid in the 1930s through the
introduction of a cradle to the grave welfare system. Over the
years this was expanded to a point where the country had become a textbook case of ‘European economic sclerosis’ - economically
vulnerable to recession due to a very high taxes and a huge regulatory burden.
The inefficiency
of Sweden’s bloated
public service was renowned. It was said that if efficiency
was improved to match that of Ireland or Britain, public
expenditure could be reduced by a third for the same service.
Swedish doctors were reported to be seeing only four patients
a day on average - down from nine in 1975. This was less than
in any other OECD country, and less than half of the average.
One reason was that a Swedish doctor spent between 50 and 80
percent of his time on administration.[1]
By the time of the 2006 general election, Swedish voters were
finally ready to oust the Social Democratic government that
had been in power for 65 of the previous 74 years, in favour
of a coalition government led by The Moderate Party. Since
then, Sweden’s reforms have been on-going. Their focus has been to reduce the size
of government and balance the budget. Tax cuts have been at
the centre of the reform programme along with a reduction in welfare-spending.
Finance
Minister Anders Borg is using tax cuts to encourage Swedish
entrepreneurs - who had left in droves during the
big-government era - to return home. In a feature article in
The Spectator last month, Borg explained that economic
recovery depends on entrepreneurs. If cutting taxes for the
rich encourages risk-taking, it has to be done: “In most
cases, the company would not have been created without the
owner. There would be no Ikea without Ingvar Kamprad. We would
not have Tetra-Pak without Ruben Rausing. They are probably
the foremost entrepreneurs we have had in the last few
decades, and both moved out of Sweden.”[2]
He
explained that most entrepreneurs were not rich when they were
starting out: “No, but they were becoming rich. If you have
a high wealth tax and an inheritance tax, people emigrate
because it becomes too costly to own a company. Ownership is a
production factor. Entrepreneurs are a production factor. Yes,
these people are rich and you can obviously argue that we want
to encourage social cohesion. But it is also problematic if
you drive out entrepreneurs from your country, because they
are the source of job creation.”
By reducing government spending and lowering taxes, the
Swedish economy has rebounded, delivering 6.1 percent growth
in 2010 and 3.9 percent last year, when it ranked at the top
in Europe's list of fastest-growing economies. This sort of
recovery would be impossible under the stimulus spending and
higher taxes being advocated world wide by parties of the
left.
While Borg is now highly regard as an extremely capable
Finance Minister, New Zealand’s Roger Douglas held that
honour back in 1984, when he instigated a series of market-led
reforms that rescued New Zealand from a state of virtual
bankruptcy. In spite of the disingenuous rhetoric of the left,
most of the changes he introduced remain intact. Given the
backdrop of international economic turmoil, I asked Sir Roger
how we should judge Thursday’s budget. Following is his
response:
The 2012
budget day is nearly upon us. From what the Minister of
Finance Hon Bill English has said, it’s clear that he does
not intend to tackle New Zealand’s fundamental problems. Big
spending items like student loans, working for families,
superannuation, education, health, and welfare will be
tinkered with but not fixed. Once again there will be not only
a deficit of courage but more importantly a deficit of
imagination.
Here are ten principles the Minister of Finance Bill English
should take into consideration:
Principle
One: There is no free lunch
Each
dollar of government expenditure has come from your wallet.
Governments should only take an extra dollar from the private
sector if they can show that it will return more to New
Zealand than it would have returned had it been left in the
private sector. People change their behaviour in response to
taxes – they may work fewer hours, structure deals
differently to lower their tax burden, or even break the law
to avoid paying tax. These losses are known as deadweight
losses. The Treasury has estimated that raising $1 in revenue
in fact costs $1.20 at the margin. What this means is that
Government spending must deliver benefits over and above the
dollar value of the spending to be worth the cost.
Principle
Two: All spending has an opportunity cost
$1
for roads, is $1 less for health. When the Government spends
money, the question is not ‘does this spending have
benefits?’ but is instead ‘does this spending have more
benefits than any alternative way of spending money?’
Principle
Three: Incentives matter
After
free physiotherapy was introduced as part of ACC in 2004,
expenditure rose by 1400 percent. Promises of ‘free’
services, like doctor visits, healthcare, or transport for
superannuitants, always end up costing far more when paid
publicly than they ever would if paid for by the individuals
themselves. The thing we need to remember is that if we get
the incentives wrong, Government spending will be forced to
rise and cover the cost. But if we get the incentives right
– which invariably involves allowing prices to determine
consumption – then we can harness what individuals do for
the public good.
Principle
Four: Share the necessary adjustment equitably
We
must stop spending beyond our means, but the only way to do
that is to distribute resources away from domestic consumption
towards international exporting. That means less Government,
and more private enterprise.
Principle
Five: Demographics matter
The
costs attributable to one generation should be paid by that
generation, not loaded onto the next in an unsustainable way.
Steps need to be taken now to ensure that over the next 40
years appropriate levels of personal funds are put aside to
ensure that retired people can live with dignity from their
own personal savings. Unless this step is taken, the welfare
of retirees will depend on the whim of politicians in
Wellington.
Principle
Six: Focus on the dollars
We
need to ask the hard questions about big-spending items and
consider all the options on the table. That is best achieved
by asking: Does this department need to exist? If so, what are
its functions, and do they need to be continued? For those
functions that remain, can we make them contestable, with
private contractors able to bid and drive down costs, while
improving efficiency and productivity? If not, how can we
structure the department to achieve our goals without creating
waste and poor incentives?
Principle Seven: Productivity matters
The cause of wage growth is productivity growth.
Productivity growth is not a result of working harder or
longer – it is caused by one of four things: capital
investment, technology development, upskilling and education,
and quality public institutions. Encouraging people to produce
goods in more efficient ways and making businesses more
competitive is the key. In addition, Government needs to
realise that cutting a dollar of waste releases that dollar to
be usefully employed elsewhere. Cutting waste has real
benefits – be it in higher wages, better jobs, or better
goods and services.
Principle Eight: Reduce transaction costs
Reducing ‘transaction costs’ will enable New Zealand
to achieve higher levels of economic growth. Greater
investment in key infrastructure will allow us to expand our
productive capacity, and stripping away man-made barriers to
growth, such as tariffs, will enable us to gain from trade.
Excessive regulation often acts as a man-made barrier to
growth by preventing people from producing goods and services.
Once again the effect is to increase the price of goods.
Principle Nine: Reduce
tax
Tax is necessary to raise revenue for Government spending.
If we continue to indulge the whim of every special interest
group with tax money, then taxes will be high. But if
Government spending can be kept under control, then taxes can
be low. Tax reductions create better incentives for people to
work and save.
Principle
Ten: Place a real limit on government expenditure
The
basis of a free society is limited Government. The most
obvious interference in the life of the ordinary person is the
capacity for Government to forcibly take money from them and
spend it on projects – would you rather have subsidies for
the racing industry, or a tax reduction of $50 a year? Unless
we restrain that capacity, we can be sure that power will be
abused and the size of Government will expand.
In considering the forthcoming budget - and those that lie
ahead - there are two main options: a larger state, higher
taxes and more control for meddling politicians in Wellington,
or a future of low taxes, personal responsibility, personal
freedom and prosperity. Which do you chose?
This week’s poll asks: Do
you believe government spending needs to be cut further, kept
the same, or increased?
Click here for poll >>>
Footnotes:
1.Johan
Norberg, Swedish Models
http://www.johannorberg.net/?page=articles&articleid=151
2.Spectator,
Sweden’s Secret Recipe
http://www.spectator.co.uk/essays/7779228/swedens-secret-recipe.thtml
Skip to top Skip
to this weeks poll
Send to friend
Your
Comments:
Reader's
comments will be posted on the
NZCPR Forum page click
to view >>>
Skip to top Skip
to this weeks poll
Send
to a friend:
|