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20
May 2007
A
Missed
Opportunity
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People
are getting sick and tired of this government telling us how
to run our lives - what we can and can’t eat, how to raise
our kids, and now, to add insult to injury, the key message in
the budget is that they know far better than you or I how to
spend our own money.
Like
you, I earn taxes for this government through long hours of
hard work. But our taxes in this country are now so big that
it takes the average Kiwi until April 30th – Tax
Freedom Day - to stop working for the government and start
working for him or herself.
The
problem that we all face is that Labour has turned New Zealand
into a very high taxed country. When they became the
government in 1999, we collectively paid $32 billion in tax.
That is the equivalent of around $7,000 for every man, woman
and child. The breakdown of that $32 billion shows that we
paid $15 billion in individual taxes, $4b in company tax, $8b
in GST, and, along with other stealth taxes, $1.4b in petrol
tax, road user charges and motor vehicle licences. (See Budget
Economic and Fiscal Update 2000 >>>)
This
year’s budget shows that the tax-take has risen a whopping
$20 billion since that time to $52 billion. That is $13,000
for every man, woman and child. This comprises a massive $25b
in personal tax, $9b in corporate tax, $11b in GST and $1.9b
in taxes from motorists. (See Budget
Economic and Fiscal Update 2007 >>>)
Further,
while Labour signalled that only 5% of us would ever have to
pay the top rate of tax, when they introduced the 39 cent rate
for income over $60,000, well over 12% of taxpayers are now
hit by the top rate. In
comparison, Australians do not have to pay their top rate of
tax until they earn $180,000 or over. The relief from this
‘bracket creep’ through the lifting of thresholds -
promised in last year’s budget - has now been scrapped.
According
to the latest OECD figures, New Zealand’s total tax burden
now stands at 36.6% of our economy - up from 24.7% in 1965. In
comparison, Australia’s is far lower at 31.5%. (See OECD
Tax Burden >>>)
The
Australian government has worked on the premise that it makes
good economic sense to return some of their tax surplus back
to the families that earned it. They realise that this will
stimulate growth in the economy as well as rewarding effort
and creating a stronger incentive for hard work. Five years of
tax cuts have contributed to a significant widening of the
income gap between our two countries with the per capita
income in Australia of $47,181 being 70% ahead of ours at
$33,682. It is little wonder that some 700 New Zealanders a
week are now moving across the Tasman. (See The
great trans-Tasman tax debate >>>)
Governments
force us to pay our taxes under threat of fines and
imprisonment. The problem is that when we pay record amounts
of tax we know that much of the money is wasted. Not only does
the deadweight cost of taxation render government spending far
more inefficient than private sector spending, but many of the
funding decisions are of dubious quality being based on
winning voter support rather than good public policy. Heavily
taxing high income families then returning money to them as
welfare payments through the Working for Families scheme is a
case in point. Having a lower tax rates for Maori enterprises
is almost impossible to justify. And how on earth does the
taxpayer benefit from a massive expansion in public service
jobs which now number 40,113 up from 29,055 in 2000? (See Human
Resource Capability Survey 2006 >>>)
In
fact, Treasury has been so concerned about the growth of poor
quality spending, including programmes that duplicate existing
ones or simply fail to deliver, that it issued the following
warning to Ministers:
“There
is little information to indicate that New Zealanders are
getting more services and better results from the public
sector for the large increase in resources provided. What
little information exists is not encouraging. Ministers and
the public are frequently surprised by poor performance. One
of the few output measures is the volume of hospital patient
discharges. In the three years up to 2003/04 these rose by
about 5%, compared with a 21% growth in hospital spending. It
is difficult to tell what improvements in health outcomes or
services have been achieved for the additional expenditure on
health, and whether New Zealanders are getting value for
money.” (See Briefing
to Incoming Government 2005 >>>)
In Budget 2007, the government had a clear
choice. They could have used the surplus for tax cuts or they
could keep the money to use themselves. Roger Kerr, the
Executive Director of the Business Roundtable and the NZCPR
Guest Commentator this week, in an article entitled “It’s
Not Your Money, Dr Cullen”, puts it this way:
“Dr Cullen has conned too many people into believing there
is no right time to cut tax: it only stokes the inflationary
fires and pushes up interest rates.
Or at best taxes can only be cut if the economy is flat
on its back, and can do with some life-preserving
‘stimulus’. This is absurd.
The Howard government In Australia has cut taxes five
years in succession without igniting inflation. Here the
government has raised tax burdens enormously, and reignited
inflationary pressures”.
(To read the full article click
>>>)
It
is government spending that is the key driver of inflation. If
the government reigned in its spending, tax cuts are not
inflationary.
The
recommendation to the government to cut taxes and reduce
spending have come from all quarters from Treasury, to the
OECD, and now to the International Monetary Fund, which in its
latest report recommended
“shifting the mix of fiscal measures toward greater tax
reductions and smaller expenditure increases”. (See IMF
Report May 2007 >>>)
But
rather than taking that advice, Dr Cullen has chosen to
increase spending and force another stealth tax onto New
Zealand, this time in the form of a payroll tax for
businesses. That is not to say that a compulsory savings
scheme does not have merit; but the underhand way in which the
Kiwi Saver scheme it is being imposed on the country without a
full and open debate, has no merit at all.
The
KiwiSaver scheme with its compulsory employer contribution,
coming hard on the heals of other employment cost increases
such as the rise in the minimum wage and the imposition of
four weeks holiday a year, is likely to force even more
businesses to move offshore. And while the much-heralded
reduction of company tax to 30% will help many in business it
will do nothing for the hundreds of thousands of small
businesses that operate outside of a company structure. All
they will gain from this budget is a payroll tax and
additional compliance costs.
As we
reflect on this budget of missed opportunity, readers of this
column have brought to my attention a survey published by the
Business Council for Sustainable Development which has given
the thumbs up for the budget from their research panel of over
600. They reported that 60% were in favour of employers having
to match employee KiwiSaver contributions of up to 4%; and in
answer to the question: “if personal tax cuts were to
increase interest rates would you prefer a tax cut this year,
prefer a tax cut introduced over time, prefer no tax cut or
don’t know”, 32% of their panel wanted a tax cut this
year, 38% wanted one over time, 25% preferred no tax cut and
5% didn’t know (Public verdict firms on
Budget
measures >>>).
If you would like an opportunity to express your view on
important policy issues, please register for the NZCPR Research Panel. While many
readers have already joined the panel we do not yet have enough volunteers to give
us the critical mass required. To
join the panel, please click here
>>>.
Here is the final word from Roger Kerr:
“The bottom line in the budget is that the combination of
excessive government spending, taxation and regulation is
dragging down the economy’s growth rate.
Far from GDP growth accelerating to Dr Cullen’s
target of 4 percent a year or more, necessary to haul New
Zealand back up the OECD income ladder, the medium-term
outlook is for an average growth rate of just 2.5 percent.
Dr Cullen’s legacy is likely to be that of a failed
finance minister who inherited the highly successful reforms
of the 1980s and early 1990s and largely squandered the
gains.”
The
poll this week asks: Do
you believe the budget should have included personal tax cuts?
Take
part in poll >>>
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