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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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Despite
political sideshows, the economy remains the key issue of
concern for most voters. It’s also top of the agenda for
most political parties - for their own
self-serving reasons.
Surprisingly,
it’s the Green Party that is gaining the most traction on
the issue – this is despite advocating policies that lack
credibility and realism. The economy is high on their agenda
because they want to broaden their constituency into
Labour’s left flank.
Labour,
of course, sees the tough economic times as an opportunity to
undermine National’s credibility.
Much
of what opposition parties are promoting does not stand up to
scrutiny. Between them, Labour, the Greens and New Zealand
First are trying to persuade the public to believe that the
Reserve Bank Act and the other economic reforms implemented in
the 1980s – are outdated and inadequate. But if the public
were to look past the scaremongering, all they would find is
political posturing and gross exaggeration.
The Labour Party is trying to claim that National’s economic
approach is responsible for job losses in the manufacturing
sector. Yet, it is the same approach they supported during the
nine years that they were in government. During that time they
were supported by the Green Party and New Zealand First.
Neither raised serious concerns, even though the country was
slipping into recession. Additionally, of course, Winston
Peters spent time as the country’s first Treasurer in 1996,
and failed to introduce reforms back then.
The
Labour Party’s mantra is that the high exchange rate is
damaging exporters and the manufacturing sector. Although our
dollar is nudging US$0.82, it is worth remembering that
movements in the exchange rate are cyclical. The value of our
dollar usually has more to do with what is happening in other
countries, than what is happening here. Back in 1979, our
dollar was on par with the US, and only six years earlier, the
New Zealand dollar was worth almost US$1.50.
Labour would like to broaden the Reserve Bank’s mandate to
include a focus on jobs, the exchange rate and growth. At
present, the Reserve Bank is charged with maintaining price
stability by keeping inflation near the 2 percent midpoint
of the 1 to 3 percent range. In addition, it has prudential
responsibilities with regards to promoting
the maintenance of a sound and efficient financial system.
With Labour’s main economic policy initiative being the
introduction of a capital gains tax, it is hard to rationalise
their approach, since a capital gains tax would be a new tax
on business that would have a negative impact on jobs and
growth - including in the manufacturing sector. In addition,
Labour wants to raise tax rates even though there is
overwhelming evidence from New Zealand and overseas that lower
taxes encourage enterprise and initiative which increases the
tax take.
The
Greens, meanwhile, have called for the Reserve Bank to start
printing money in a mutant
version of “quantitative easing” that would be very
damaging.
Quantitative
easing is a tool of last resort used by central banks when
they have run out of options. Normally central banks cut
interest rates to encourage more lending and spending, but
when rates are close to zero they may “print money” as
their only other option. This new money is then used to buy
Treasury bonds or long term securities from commercial banks
in order to pump money into the economy. This drives down
commercial interest rates and gives banks more money to lend.
The theory is that the ready availability of cheaper money
will boost borrowing, spending and growth.
In
a speech on Friday, the new Governor of the Reserve Bank,
Graeme Wheeler, explained, “We do not see any reason to
adopt quantitative easing in New Zealand. Quantitative easing
is being adopted by central banks that have little or no scope
to lower interest rates in economies experiencing major
deleveraging, and where deep concerns exist about generating
and sustaining economic growth. It is a sign of desperate
times for central banks, who in some instances are shouldering
the burden of domestic policy paralysis over fiscal policy.
Since the onset of the global financial crisis, the Federal
Reserve has expanded its balance sheet by 13 percent of GDP,
the European Central Bank by 16 percent of GDP, the Bank of
Japan by 10 percent of GDP, and the Bank of England by around
20 percent of GDP. In all four cases the official cash rate is
0.75 percent or less. In all four cases there is little
evidence of any appreciable impact on economic growth.”[1]
The Green Party’s quantitative easing plan would involve the
Reserve Bank printing a massive $14 billion of new money all
up - $7 billion to buy earthquake recovery bonds from the
government to fund the rebuilding of Christchurch, and a
further $7b to buy overseas assets to restore the Earthquake
Commission’s Natural Disaster Fund.
But
Shamubeel Eaqub, the principle economist of the New Zealand
Institute for Economic Research, points out that what the
Greens are proposing is not
quantitative easing aimed at “trying to provide liquidity to
banks to promote credit growth in the economy through the
private sector”. They are proposing the “monetisation of
government debt” by forcing the Reserve Bank to print money
to give to the government so it can “monetise its
liabilities through higher inflation”. He explains that,
“A policy like that suggested by the Green Party would see
the Reserve Bank’s independence thrown out the window…That
kind of stuff is very much a tool used by despot autocrats
around the world. It’s just one of the slippery slopes to
becoming Robert Mugabe. That’s what they do: ‘We’re
going to borrow all this money, and essentially we’ll get
the central bank to monetise it’. It’s
tax by stealth.”[2]
Apart
from wanting to print money, the Green Party also supports a
capital gains tax, higher progressive taxes, and a range of
new eco taxes – again it is difficult to see how these
polices can possibly boost jobs and growth.
New Zealand First has been championing a change to the Reserve
Bank Act as a way of boosting export growth. The drawing from
the ballot of Winston Peters’ private members bill, “The
Reserve Bank of New Zealand (Amending Primary function of
Bank) Amendment Bill”, provided an opportunity to debate the
proposal. I asked Dr Don Brash, the former Governor of the
Reserve Bank for his reaction. In his NZCPR Guest Commentary, How
many times do we have to learn what monetary policy can and
can’t do, he explains that the changes being proposed
would not produce the benefits claimed:
“While the Reserve Bank’s monetary policy can undoubtedly
influence the nominal exchange rate it can have no …
enduring effect on employment. Yes, an unexpected burst of
inflation can reduce unemployment – it does that by
temporarily depressing real wages.
But as soon as workers realise that their wages are
rising more slowly than prices, they take steps to rectify
that situation, and unemployment returns to its previous
level.
“The reality is that monetary policy has an enduring effect
only on prices. Its
best contribution to real economic growth and employment
creation is to keep the price system operating free from the
distortions caused by generalised inflation. Yes, it would be
desirable if New Zealand’s real exchange rate were lower.
The best and quickest way to achieve that would be for
the Government to further tighten fiscal policy by cutting
government spending or increasing taxes.
This would dampen economic activity and enable the
Reserve Bank to ease monetary policy without fear of inflation
taking off. The
harsh reality is that a depreciation of the exchange rate only
works if it effectively reduces New Zealand real wages, though
neither Mr Peters nor the others who supported his bill were
keen to acknowledge that.” To read Dr Brash’s full
article, please click HERE.
In their six weekly review of the Official Cash Rate (OCR)
last Thursday, the Reserve Bank left the rate at 2.5 percent,
where it has been since March last year. With inflation
running at 0.8 percent - below the bottom of the Reserve
Bank's target band of 1 per cent to 3 per cent - the rate is
expected to stay on hold until September of next year.
The crucial point it that if the New Zealand economy stalls
and needs a boost, with the OCR at 2.5 percent, the Reserve
Bank has 10 unused notches for reducing interest rates. In
other words, the call by the Green Party to print money is
needless and reckless.
Compared with many other countries, New Zealand is not doing
too badly. While
many of our trading partners are still battling recession, our
economy is growing at an annual rate of 2 percent. In the year
to June growth averaged 2.6 percent, but is expected to fall
back in the second half of the year. We also have a number of
other major advantages. According to the World Bank, we rank
eighth in the world for natural capital - which includes our
farmlands and forests - with only oil-producing countries
ahead of us. New Zealand is regarded as the least corrupt
country in the world according to Transparency international,
and the World Economic Forum ranks us among the best for the
quality of our institutions and the efficiency of our product
and financial markets.
The
government also appears to be serious about growth, with many
new measures aimed at that outcome. The grievance-free 90 day
trial period is making it easier for businesses to employ new
workers. The 6-month youth wage will help younger workers to
get their foot on the first rung of the employment ladder. The
planned reforms of the Resource Management Act are meant to
speed up consent processes to encourage local development and
jobs. If new mining and mineral exploration ventures go ahead,
they will lead to new export opportunities and jobs. The
changes to improve home affordability should lower the cost of
building and encourage more families into home ownership. The
infrastructure development programme, which includes roads and
ultra-fast broadband, will not only help businesses to become
more productive and the economy to grow, but is also providing
thousands of additional jobs. And if the government’s focus
on lifting New Zealand’s productivity is successful, it
could significantly improve our long-term prospects.
The reality is that New Zealand is a small country located far
from our larger trading partners. The more the government can
remove bureaucratic constraints on growth, the better
businesses will be positioned to compete and grow – and
adapt to the global economic forces that buffet us.

Finally, a touch of realism. To bring down the dollar, the
Reserve Bank Governor explains what is needed – and it
doesn’t include a capital gains tax, an increase in the top
tax rate, a reduction in wages and living standards, nor
printing money: “In order to achieve a sustained reduction
in the New Zealand dollar it would be necessary to alter the
overall level and pattern of saving and investment in the
economy. In particular, it will be necessary to tackle our
addiction of depending on foreign savings to finance our
consumption and investment. This dependency means that we have
persistently needed interest rates above those in most developed
economies to maintain inflation at target levels similar to
those being followed elsewhere. Policies that increase
domestic savings, including reducing the government’s fiscal
deficit, and to reduce the flow of resources into the public
sector and other non-tradables sectors, would help to achieve
a sustainable reduction in the exchange rate.”
This
week’s poll asks: Do
you think the Green Party’s plan to print
money is necessary? Click here for poll >>>
Footnotes
1.Graeme Wheeler, Central
banking in a post-crisis world
2.Alex Tarrant, NZIER's Eaqub: Greens'
quake bond buying policy not QE; It's the sort of 'debt
monetisation' practised by Mugabe; Will see poor pay for quake
rebuild via inflation
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