Whaleoil Submitted by : Whaleoil on Mar 15, 2010

Don has asked my to re-post his letter that was published in the NZ Herald the other day. I have agreed to do so.

…over the last few weeks there have been a number of attacks on the directors of Huljich Wealth Management, the managers of the Huljich KiwiSaver Scheme.  Some of these attacks have been quite unfair, and have lacked objectivity.  I wrote the attached article for the New Zealand Herald, and it was published last Saturday.  I thought you might be interested to see it.

I think Gareth Morgan’s attacks were scurrilous, he runs and promotes his own Kiwisaver scheme and for him to attack another goes against almost any code of ethics you care to mention.

Download Don Brash Article

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Whaleoil Submitted by : Whaleoil on Mar 9, 2010

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Fiscally Conservative Kiwi Submitted by : Fiscally Conservative Kiwi on Jan 3, 2010

A while back I mentioned a report by Business NZ called “Setting New Zealand Apart” a blueprint for creating productivity growth and making the New Zealand economy more competitive internationally. Read alongside the “nuggets” of the 2025 Taskforce Report and Tax Working Group, the reports ought to provide a good basis for John Key’s Government over the next two years into the 2011 election. This is the first post in a five-part series on these “nuggets”.

We already know in the 70s this country fell behind Australia, and it was only in the 1990s and 2000s that we started to first tread water and then catch up, albeit slowly. Labour’s spending binge from early 2005 – 2008, relentless expansion of regulation and strangulation of business in general helped kill the growth off again. New Zealand’s productivity statistics 1978 – 2008 show some serious problems for our capital productivity, good growth for labour productivity (thanks to a lot of us working longer hours for less) and sluggish growth of ‘multi-factor’ productivity (that’s the two others – labour and capital – combined).

Productivity Growth

Productivity Growth

While productivity isn’t the silver bullet that will save our economy, it does matter a lot. Anyway, here’s the 50 recommendations Business NZ made, what the Government is doing to implement them, and what the 2025 Taskforce recommended:

1. Create a “New Zealand Productivity Commission” to keep on top of new regulation and review existing regulation.

While I’m generally opposed to new bureaucracies, the Productivity Commission (along the lines of the Australian Productivity Commission) would be a good thing. The 2025 Taskforce states such a body would have expertise in micro-economic policy.

2. Make regulatory bodies more accountable.

We should ensure that regulators get it right first time. An investigation into the possibility of a wider merits review process would provide a strong start. This could provide a framework to safeguard against inappropriate regulation and provide more accountability for decisions.

3. By mid 2010 deal to the top five areas of red tape for business.

The top five areas are:

  1. Tax;
  2. health and safety in the workplace;
  3. Employment Relations Act;
  4. ACC;
  5. the Holidays Act.

The Government is set to introduce legislation on the Holidays Act and has already amended the Employment Relations Act for greater flexibility. The two sticking points seem to be ACC and Tax. Key won’t want to scare the horses with further ACC changes, and tax is a no-go area thanks to Mr English’s determination that there won’t be further tax cuts. I suspect the Government won’t move on tax until 2011, hoping a tax cut might bolster its support in an election year.

4. Develop a national Infrastructural Plan.

This is already underway, as a part of the Treasury, and should be out in the next couple of months.

5. Develop a national Transport Plan.

There doesn’t appear to have been anything done on this yet. C’mon Steven!

6. Electricity

Gerry’s made good progress at cutting red tape and axing the useless Electricity Commission. But more needs to be done to create a more competitive environment.

7. Telecommunications

Business NZ recommends going back to a “light-handed” regulatory environment.

8. Phase two of RMA

The report recommends creating a technical experts group to deal with water issues, something which matters greatly in rural areas. Good stuff. Meanwhile they also proposed codifying the right to compensation for the removal of property rights and / or restrictions on land use. Again, this is a good thing, and something that is missing from the Bill of Rights.

9. Include property rights in a Bill of Rights Act.

This is a fairly simple change in law – however, its implications for Government and New Zealand’s constitution generally are wide-ranging. That doesn’t mean it’s not worthwhile. Perhaps National can get a proposal for property rights in the Bill of Rights Act in its Constitutional Inquiry this year?

10. Ensure that decisions that may result in access to resources being closed off have the value of their future use explicitly recorded as part of
their cost-benefit analysis.

Seems practical. Perhaps some sort of legislative “ratchet clause” on the value of the land’s resources?

Part II coming soon…

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Whaleoil Submitted by : Whaleoil on Dec 11, 2009

Brian Fallow is one of New Zealand’s best economic journalists. But his article on 10 December dismissing the report of the 2025 Taskforce as “1980s thinking”, under the headline “Old prescription unlikely to fix new ills”, misses the boat completely and demonstrates that he is out of touch with mainstream professional opinion. The arguments for reducing the tax burden caused by low quality and poorly targeted government spending, for privatisation, and for better quality regulation are absolutely consistent, for example, with the OECD’s 2009 report on New Zealand.

In his article, he cites at length the work of the economic geographer Philip McCann. McCann has argued that since the 1980s the world has changed profoundly – China has abandoned communism, India has abandoned autarky and the Soviet empire has collapsed. McCann accepts that over the past century transport costs have fallen by some 95%, while telecommunication costs have fallen by that much in just three decades. This has provided a huge advantage to “the geographical dispersion of activities which are not particularly knowledge-intensive and do not add a lot of value”. By contrast, what McCann calls “spatial transaction costs” have, he argues, become more important for knowledge-intensive high value-added activities because of the premium attached to face-to-face contact.

He argues that the increased importance of “spatial transaction costs” means that economic growth and globalisation over the past 20 years have favoured large urban centres in almost every country (large and small). But he goes on to argue that an implication of this is that, within the Australasian region, Sydney and possibly Melbourne are growing in wealth and size at the expense of the periphery – which in this case, he asserts, includes New Zealand. The further implication is that at this stage in the development of the world economy there are factors which drive us inevitably to have incomes lower than those in Australia.

Professor McCann is a serious researcher, and deserves to be heard respectfully. It is probably true that large urban centres attract a disproportionate share of a country’s innovation and entrepreneurship.

But one implication of his argument is that small countries, and especially those which are distant from world markets, are inevitably doomed to grow more slowly than larger more densely populated countries – and that simply does not seem to be borne out by the facts. Over the last 20 years during which Professor McCann claims the world has changed, small countries tended to perform a bit better than large countries – even New Zealand has grown slightly faster than the OECD average over that period.

Compared with large countries like France, Italy and Japan – all countries with large conurbations – New Zealand has also done better, increasing from 82% of the simple average of the incomes of those three countries in 1989 to 87% in 2007.

Moreover, if geography were really an important part of the story, no one would have predicted Australia’s impressive performance relative to the rest of the developed world in the last couple of decades.

Professor McCann and Brian Fallow also suggest that in the brave new world after 1989 capital is likely to be flowing out of New Zealand to places like Australia. In fact, of course, it is well-established that capital is flowing into New Zealand, especially from Australia. Thus, we have one of the largest current account deficits around – and, by definition, one might expect us to be running surpluses if capital were leaving New Zealand for ever better opportunities abroad.

The report of the 2025 Taskforce acknowledges that smallness and distance may indeed be impediments to our growth. But let’s suppose for the moment that our size and location have become a much more important barrier to the development of knowledge-intensive industries in the “periphery” than they were prior to 1989. Do we have to wait until the global economy changes, until, as Brian Fallow suggests, we get the benefit of our “combination of ample rainfall, temperate climate and skilled farmers” as the world’s population climbs and more and more people move into income brackets which enable them to afford the foods of affluence?

Or are there things we can do to actively lift our living standards? The 2025 Taskforce is in no doubt about the answer to that question. Distance is what it is. Our population is what it is. But we don’t need to have a company tax rate which is now well above the average of other OECD countries. We don’t need to discourage people who have dependent children with effective marginal tax rates of well over 50%. We don’t need to hobble our businesses with needless red-tape. We don’t need to inflate the cost of housing by tightly constraining the supply of residential land. Our government doesn’t need to squander capital in low-yielding but politically-popular projects. And we don’t need a size of government that is materially larger than that in Australia.

Yes, Australia and other developed countries also do some of these dopey things. But the Government has set a goal not just of holding our position on the OECD ladder – a position which has us well below the average of other developed countries – but of catching up with Australia by 2025. We won’t do that with policies which are merely as good as the average of other developed countries; we will only do that with much better policies. If distance is a significant impediment to our growth, that simply means that our policies have to be of absolutely top quality. Right now, they are not, and in recent years they have gone backwards in several important areas even as other countries have continued to reform. This slippage is totally omitted from Brian Fallow’s account.

Do we need 1980s thinking? Of course, where it is still relevant; absolutely not where it isn’t. The recommendations of the 2025 Taskforce are absolutely consistent with orthodox economic thinking about how to accelerate economic growth and, as noted, are consistent in particular with the recommendations made by the OECD report on New Zealand a few months ago.

Don Brash

Chairman of the 2025 Taskforce

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Whaleoil Submitted by : Whaleoil on Dec 7, 2009

On Thursday morning The NZ Herald published an ill informed tirade from Garth George about the 2025 Taskforce and its report. Don Brash dashed off a response to that tirade and submitted it to the Editor at the Herald Tim Murphy before lunchtime on Thursday. The response wasn’t published on either Friday or on Saturday and so Don Brash released his response to the blogs. I immediately posted it as did Home Paddock. Farrar finally got around to publishing it today after the Herald has published. A reader of mine emailed Tim Murphy on Saturday, who to his credit replied.

From: Tim Murphy <Tim.Murphy@nzherald.co.nz>

Date: Sun, Dec 6, 2009 at 12:31 PM
Subject: Brash
To:
Dear reader,

The post is wrong. Don Brash was encouraged to submit a letter and he did but three times the letters page length. Consideration was being given to  editing the letter drastically for Monday use or finding some other home for it – we run no oped contributions page on Saturdays – but it seems Don has opted to publish it elsewhere and that in itself may argue against it going in the paper as our letters and oped rules are clear on that.  We ran the shorter Lindsay Mitchell criticism of Garth George’s column in the meantime. There has been no refusal, and Don’s note about it not going in the paper, which he courteously copied to me, does not suggest there has been.
Regards
Tim Murphy
Editor

Tim of course obfuscates as repeaters are want to do. They asked for a response fron Don Brash, he supplied it, they then decide to apply their draconian “letters” policy to it and say it is too long. Then he says that The Herald has no oped contributions on Saturday, except of course he left out Friday which does. Further its his paper, he could have put an oped piece in on Saturday if he really wanted to. he like to quote all the rules and regs but he is the fricken editor, he could have made an exception in order to put a timely response to Garth Georges egregios errors, but as you can see from his explanation decided instead to do nothing.

Now don’t get me wrong here, Don Brash doesn’t say that the Herald refused to publish it, I did, and I stand by that accusation. Tim Murphy himself says they were going to drastically edit it for Monday. Except lo and behold today they publish the letter unedited contrary to Tim Murphy’s email.

I contend that Home Paddock and I shamed the Herald into publishing it. The evidence is right there in Tim Murphy’s email.

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Whaleoil Submitted by : Whaleoil on Dec 5, 2009

Don Brash wrote a letter to the Herald regarding the serious errors about the 2025 Taskforce report that Garth George had in his column. The Herald has refused to publish it, proving once again that the repeaters and the editors of our media are seeking to control the message.

According Don has asked that I and other publish his letter. I have agreed.

GARTH GEORGE HAS IT SERIOUSLY WRONG

Garth George was way off beam in his attack on the first report of the 2025 Taskforce.

Leaving aside the personal invective, he claims that the “biggest absurdity” in the report is the proposition that New Zealand can and should catch up with Australia.  He says that “there is just no comparison between the two countries”, with Australia having five times our population, 32 times our land area, and huge resources of minerals.  Well, those are factual statements about Australia, but they ignore some important facts which he would be aware of had he read the report.

First, there is no correlation between living standards and population – if there were, India would be super-rich and Singapore would be poor.

Second, there is no correlation between living standards and land area – if there were, Russia would be super-rich and Finland would be poor.

Third, there is no correlation between living standards and mineral wealth – if there were, the Congo would be super-rich and Japan would be poor.

In any event, a recent World Bank study showed that, in per capita terms, New Zealand has more natural resources than almost any other country in the world.

For most of New Zealand’s history, our standard of living has been very similar to that in Australia – sometimes a bit ahead, sometimes a bit behind.  And the Taskforce didn’t off its own bat decide that catching Australia again by 2025 would be some good idea: the goal was set by the Government itself, and the Taskforce was set up both to advise on how best to achieve the (very challenging) goal and to monitor annually progress towards achieving it.

Too often in the past, governments have announced grandiose commitments to lift living standards – such as the last Government’s commitment to lift us into the top half of developed countries within 10 years – but then totally ignored those commitments, hoping that nobody would notice it.  It is to the Government’s credit that they made a commitment and then established a mechanism to hold them to account.

Garth George accuses the Taskforce of recommending a whole range of things which we do not recommend.  For example, he accuses us of recommending a flat personal income tax, and notes that if such a tax were established a whole range of low income people would have to pay more tax.  But whatever the merits of a flat tax, the Taskforce did not recommend such a tax.  What we did say was that, if core government spending were cut to the same fraction of GDP that it was in both 2004 and 2005 (29%), the top personal rate, the company tax rate, and the trust tax rate could comfortably be aligned at 20%.  Under such a tax structure, all those earning above $14,000 a year would pay less income tax, while nobody would pay more income tax.

Nobody seriously argues that government was vastly too small in New Zealand in 2004 and 2005 (the end of the Labour Government’s second term in office), so why the ridiculous reaction when the Taskforce suggests reducing government spending to that level?

Mr George also suggests that we recommended abolishing subsidised doctor visits, and implies that we are advocating an American approach to healthcare.  This is again utter nonsense.  We suggested targeting subsidies for doctor’s visits at those who need them, either because they have low incomes or have chronic health problems.

He suggests that we favoured removing subsidies for early childhood education.  Again, not true.  What we said was that those subsidies – which have trebled in cost from $400 million a year to $1.2 billion a year over the last five years – should be focused on those who need them.

The recommendations of the 2025 Taskforce are actually totally in line with orthodox thinking in most developed countries, and are almost entirely consistent with the recommendations of the recent OECD report on New Zealand.

Don Brash
Chairman of the 2025 Taskforce

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Whaleoil Submitted by : Whaleoil on Dec 1, 2009

I have to ask myself, what was the point of the 2025 Taskforce if the Governments two top soft cocks say they are going to ignore it?

New Zealand is ill, it is bloated from 50 years of creeping socialism and sadly the change of government didn’t change anything except the seats on the Titanic. Worse instead of repealing and rolling back many of the idiocy of the Clark years Key and English have assured Kiwis that their “entitlements” will remain.

Except they are borrowing huge amounts daily to pay for those entitlements. The government commissioned a Taskforce to look at how we can catch Australia by 2025 in terms of prosperity, productivity and wealth, they have produced a sensible report and both John Key and Bill English have dismissed it out of hand.

Bill English has labelled it “too radical” this from a man who would seek Treasury advice about which side of a postage stamp to lick and then confirm the advice with another request to Treasury to confirm the advice so he could confirm which side he thought should be licked. The man is incapable of making a decision. Well I suppose he has made one here and very quickly by his usual standards which is a first but to label the plan as too radical shows just how timid this government, particularly the top two have become.

Bill English though goes even further;

A plan to close the wealth gap with Australia is “too radical” for Finance Minister Bill English, who says bringing the two countries to economic parity by 2025 is an “aspirational” rather than realistic goal.

FFS what is the point, why set the goal in the first place if you don’t think you can get there? He sounds like a NZ athlete who did their personal best at the Olympics and came dead last trying to say they are a winner. This is what is wrong with New Zealand. It pervades our sports teams, winning is an aspiration rather than realistic goal, it infects our schools and now it has infected our government.

We may as well give up and just become the eighth state of Australia, that at least would be one sure way of closing the gap by becoming Australians. The people of New Zealand voted for change not more of the same.

Dr Brash said if the Government ignored the recommendations, “there may be some other cunning plan, but I’m not aware of it”.

He said the Prime Minister had “enormous political capital” and should use some of it to implement the suggested policies, which would be unpopular.

Without them, the Government’s goal of catching Australia could not be achieved.

“A little tinkering at the edges ain’t going to do it,” Dr Brash said.

And that is the point isn’t it, the polls suggest that there is plenty of political capital there to give some things a go, the Taskforce doesn’t recommend doing them all at once, so why not take a third of them and do them now, a third next term and a third the term after that.

Either grow some balls Bill or fuck off and let someone else have a crack.

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Fiscally Conservative Kiwi Submitted by : Fiscally Conservative Kiwi on Nov 30, 2009

John Key has predictably stated that the Government will “keep its promises”, and therefore won’t be implementing the report of the Taskforce 2025. The Standard gives the cookie-cutter response of the left – Dr Brash is evil, ridiculous and silly all at once. One quote really says it all for me:

The neoliberal agenda has never been about growing the pie. It’s about taking a larger slice for the rich; stealing from the poor. Look at the ‘nuggets’ and you see that’s exactly what they want do. It’s all about weakening workers’ rights, lowering their wages, and cutting the social wage to enable a transfer of wealth to the wealthy.

Herein lies what I think is the key contradiction of social democracy: if you want better wages, better conditions for workers and better social services, you need a wealth-generating economy to pay for it. While The Standard might whine that the “neoliberal agenda” is about taking a larger slice for “the rich”, the fact of the matter is that wealth disparity has been getting worse in New Zealand since our economy began to under perform – at least a decade before 1984 (albeit, things did get worse post 1984 – when we had to pay for the previous ten years’ pissing around). Labour might’ve talked about getting New Zealand into the top half of the OECD, an admirable goal, but they did precious little to go about reaching it. Their lack of fiscal restraint has pumped up inflationary pressures in the economy.

Anyway, here’s the reports recommendations, from the NBR:

  • Replacing the top tax rate of 38 cents in the dollar and business rate of 30 cents in the dollar with a top tax rate of between 20 and 25 percent;
  • Limitations on some universal benefits. Those included interest-free student loans and subsidies for early childhood care education;
  • The Government to reduce operational spending to 29 percent of gross domestic product by 2012-13;
  • Use the NZ Superannuation Fund to pay back borrowing and change the age of entitlement;
  • Impose congestion charges in cities to pay for roads;
  • No capital gains tax.

These recommendations are made on the report’s following principles:

  • Sharpening private incentives to invest, to save, and to work;
  • Minimising the regulatory obstacles the government puts in the way;
  • Managing the public sector’s own huge assets much more effectively;

All good starting points. The report also recommends that some policies not be implemented:

  • Greater research and development support (i.e. tax credits for R&D);
  • A new government financial institution;
  • “Sectoral-based” growth strategies (i.e. tax credits for certain sectors of the economy)
  • Initiatives to lift workplace productivity;
  • Compulsory private superannuation savings scheme;
  • Exchange rate regime; (we’re looking at you Labour)

All interesting proposals. I’ll comment further once I’ve had a chance to read the report in full.

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Fiscally Conservative Kiwi Submitted by : Fiscally Conservative Kiwi on Nov 29, 2009

As you’d imagine I’m rather excited about the Taskforce 2025 report’s announcement tomorrow at 1:30pm. It appears some of the recommendations have already been leaked to the media – apparently there’s plenty of spooky tax cuts, spending cuts and privatisation.

This looks like Politricks 101 to me – leak the “extreme” recommendations of the report (i.e. what Espiner has reported) and disassociate yourself from them, only to accept the more moderate recommendations (perhaps some tax cuts and base re-allocation, sinking lid spending cuts, etc). Key’s argument that National campaigned on not privatising or cutting spending is credible from this perspective, but not if he wants to close the gap with Australia. The moderate path will be enough to win National another term in office – but then what?

Key ought to use the Taskforce report, and the Tax Working Group, to form the basis of his campaign in 2011. That would give a National-led government a mandate to make change, inject vitality into business and the economy at large.

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