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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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Nowadays
budgets are not what they used to be when the public
crowded around their wireless or TV to hear the changes of the
day. For many, their main interest was in knowing the
increases in excise duty of smokes and beer. Modern
budgets are less newsworthy and announcements of any
significance are usually made well ahead of Budget Day. In
this regard, Thursday’s Budget delivered what it had
promised – very little. It was a prudent, steady as she goes
affair that reflected the difficult economic times we live in.
An annual budget is the main statement of the government’s
overall economic and social programme. In his budget speech
the Minister of Finance Bill English explained that the
National-led government has three main priorities: to build a
more productive and competitive economy, to deliver better
public services, and to continue the rebuilding of
Christchurch. He reminded us that since the recession, the
economy has expanded in nine out of the past 10 quarters, and
that with growth set to rise to more than 3 percent over the
next three years, New Zealand’s outlook is on par with
Australia, and stronger than in the Euro zone, the United
Kingdom, Japan, the United States, and Canada.
Fortunately for exporters, the growth outlook for our two
largest trading partners, China and Australia, remains
reasonably strong, and New Zealand is well placed to benefit
from closer relations and trade with the other fast-growing
economies in the Asia Pacific region.
Unemployment is forecast to drop below 5 percent by 2015, with
60,000 jobs already created and 154,000 new jobs forecast.
Employment stands at 68 percent which is amongst the highest
in the OECD.
Households and businesses have also responded to the difficult
economic conditions by saving and paying down debt. As a
result, New Zealand’s household savings rate is moving into
positive territory for the first time in a decade, and is
forecast to grow to 4 percent by 2016. This will help to
reduce our external debt, which is amongst the highest in the
developed world, making us vulnerable to external shocks.
The budget provides details of where the government revenue is
coming from and how it is being spent. According to the 2012
budget documents, next year core Crown revenue is forecast to
be $64.2 billion or 29.5 percent of gross domestic product
(GDP) – the measure of the value of all goods and services
produced in New Zealand. Individual tax should
contribute $25.9 billion, company tax $9 billion, GST $15.7
billion, other direct taxes $2.1 billion, indirect taxes $5.6
billion, interest and dividends $2.4 billion, and other
revenue $3.5 billion.
On the expenditure side of the equation, core Crown expenses
are forecast to total $73.7 billion or 33.8 percent of GDP.
Health is expected to cost $14.7 billion, welfare $13 billion,
education $12.4 billion, superannuation $10.2 billion, law and
order $3.6 billion, transport and communications $2.2 billion,
core government services $6.5 billion, finance costs $3.8
billion, and other expenses $7.3 billion.
Not only were those clamouring for more government handouts
disappointed by the ‘zero’ budget, so too were those
pushing for faster reform. The path taken by National is
continuing the timid course they have been following since
first elected in 2008, when the country was already in a
recession and the global financial crisis was rapidly
unfolding. Instead of tightening their belt as the public have
done, they opted to retain many of the previous Labour
Government’s big-spending policies such as interest-free
student loans and Working for Families - even though they were
election bribes that the country could no longer afford.
National reasoned that it was better to absorb the cost of
providing support to affected families onto their own balance
sheet during the difficult times, rather than pulling the plug
and causing more hardship. It was a course of action that also
enabled them to avoid major political fallout.
This week’s NZCPR Guest Commentator is Dr Don Brash, former
Reserve Bank Governor and leader of the ACT and National
parties. Dr Brash has provided an analysis of the budget and
makes the comment that Labour’s legacy has created an
unaffordable burden on the country:
“It is an enormous tragedy that this Government failed to
grasp the nettle when it first came to office in late 2008.
They had a strong mandate for action; they could legitimately
blame the Clark/Cullen Government for the explosion in
government spending which had taken place in Labour’s final
term of office; the international crisis was obvious for all
to see. Instead, they tinkered, and all New Zealanders
will pay the price for that timidity for decades to come.”
Not only did Labour introduce expensive social programmes,
they also undertook a massive expansion of the public service,
with the number of public servants rising from 30,041 in 2000,
to peak at 47,052 in 2009. Two years later, in spite of all of
National’s rhetoric about reducing government spending and
rationalising the public service, the numbers on the public
payroll had only reduced to 45,807. The salary cost of public
servants remains at an all time high of $2.8 billion, up from
$1.2 billion in 2000.[1]
As a result of National’s cautious approach of constraining
rather than cutting government spending, debt has escalated.
Over the last four years, gross debt has more than doubled
from $31.4 billion or 17.1 percent of GDP in 2008 to $80.1
billion or 38.5 percent of GDP today.
However, there is some good news. The size of government
relative to the rest of the economy, which has reduced from
35.2 percent of GDP last year to 33.5 percent, is forecast to
continue to decline, falling to 30.2 percent in 2016. This is
heading back towards the more acceptable level of 29 percent
of GDP, that it was before Labour embarked on their reckless
spending binge in 2005. It is widely accepted that limiting
government spending to around 25 percent of the overall size
of an economy, provides ample room for the private sector to
create the jobs and growth needed to drive up living standards
and create a prosperous society.
In his article, Dr Brash explains that a key reason for New
Zealand’s failure to prosper in recent decades is that the
fundamentals necessary to improve productivity have not been
in place. “An acceleration of our growth rate is crucially
important. Over several decades, our productivity growth
(which ultimately drives changes in living standards) has been
slower than that in most other developed countries (a brief
period following the reforms of the late eighties and nineties
excepted). Over the six years to 2011, productivity grew
on average by just 0.2% annually, comparable to the
productivity growth achieved by Portugal and Italy in the
decade prior to the Global Financial Crisis. As a
consequence, our living standards continue to drift down
relative to those in other developed countries, and more and
more Kiwis leave for greener pastures abroad.” To read Dr
Brash’s commentary Another Missed Opportunity, please
click here
>>>
So what does the government plan to do about the crucial
need to improve our productivity ratings? Plenty, according to
John Key and Bill English. They point to moves to free up the
labour market and improve its flexibility by making it easier
to hire new workers and by restraining the power of the
unions. They claim that they are lifting workforce skills
through a raft of new initiatives in education and welfare.
They highlight the boost to research and development, not only
through direct grants, but through the tertiary sector as
well. They explain how their investment in key infrastructure
will help: better highways to reduce productivity-killing
gridlock and improve regional opportunities, high speed
broadband to enable New Zealanders to improve their efficiency
and output as well as take better advantage of global
opportunities, upgrading the electricity network to ensure
security of supply. They point to reforms of the Resource
Management Act, claiming they will facilitate development and
remove barriers to growth. They explain that their proposed
reform of Local Government will reduce the cost burden on
local communities and remove the brake on progress. And they
see their moves to increase the opportunity for oil and
mineral exploration and mining as a key industrial development
for the future. After all, they say, Australia’s economic
success is based to a large extent on their mining sector, and
with New Zealand being rich in mineral wealth, they argue that
facilitating development in that area will provide some of the
jobs and growth that this country so desperately needs.
Whether these measures go far enough to successfully improve
productivity growth, remains to be seen.
There is no doubt that National’s mantra has been to get the
country back into surplus as quickly as possible so that debt
reduction can begin in earnest. With their aversion to radical
reform, this will not begin for 3 years and even then, the
surplus is so small, that unless there are further reductions
in government spending, or unprecedented economic growth, the
surplus is unlikely to be achieved. However, this approach
appears to have satisfied the credit rating agencies - and the
financial markets, which barely blinked at the budget
announcements.
What is clear is that New Zealand will not prosper unless the
government sector continues to contract to make more room for
the private sector - for it is private enterprise that creates
jobs and growth, not the government. The role of government is
to establish a suitable framework so businesses will want to
invest in New Zealand. With companies being increasingly
mobile these days, there needs to be a far greater focus than
ever before on ensuring that the government has got the right
fundamentals in place to encourage business success.
One factor that is of key importance is company tax.
Governments around the world are continually lowering company
tax rates in order to attract businesses to their shores. As a
result, New Zealand’s company tax rate has become
uncompetitive. Set at 28 percent, it is now the 10th
highest amongst the 34 OECD member countries. The OECD average
has dropped to just over 25 percent.[2]
When Canada reduced its federal corporate tax rate from almost
30 percent to 15 percent, it found that company tax revenues
did not fall, they increased.[3] If our government was to take
the bold step of lowering our company tax to match Canada's 15
percent rate, the estimated cost would be in the region of
$2.3 billion. But that does not take into account the sort of
incentive effects that Canada experienced - and if there was
still a tax shortfall, there is no shortage of government
waste that could be pruned to cover it.
Just imagine, not only the boost to Kiwi businesses that such
a low tax rate would bring, but also the impact on Australian
businesses. If New Zealand had a company tax rate of 15
percent - half their 30 percent rate - many would beat a path
to our shores to set themselves up in our more tax-friendly
environment. Now that would be a very positive way of
reversing the exodus of skilled workers from New Zealand –
“Mr English, are you
listening?”
This week’s poll asks: Do
you believe the budget is going in the right direction or the
wrong direction?
Click here for poll >>>
Footnotes:
1.Human
Resource Capability Survey 2011
http://www.ssc.govt.nz/hrc-survey-2011
2.Tax Reform Trends in OECD Countries
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/9/23/48193734.pdf
3.The Washington Times, Corporate tax madness
http://p.washingtontimes.com/news/2012/apr/23/corporate-tax-madness/
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