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It’s the little things that count…

Posted by David Cunliffe on December 7th, 2010

Sometimes it’s the little things that tell a big story.

Parliament is sitting in the press-Xmas period under the shadow of urgency to pass a rush of “priority legislation”. 

Guess what one of the top priorities is?  Abolishing gift duty.

That’s right, at a time when Kiwi families are doing it bloody tough, when the recession is biting this year worse than last, when top earners have had two rounds of generous tax cuts, and when the government is confronted by evidence of large scale tax avoidance, their priority is abolishing gift duty.

Making it easier to transfer assets to the trusts or the kiddies (on lower tax rates) above the existing threshhold of $27k each per annum.

Surely not a prioirty in the Mana electorate, not a priority in New Lynn, nor quake-ravaged Christchurch.

Surely not an example of personal responsibility – where everone pays their fair share.

Surely not bringing relief to the squeezed middle. 

For National it is clearly a prioirty to bring yet further relief to the top. 

Sometimes it really is the little things that count.


Open Government – Not!

Posted by David Cunliffe on December 6th, 2010

An interesting piece on Radio New Zealand this morning:

The Government is refusing to release information about how individual departments and agencies are coping with continuing restrictions on their funding.

Radio New Zealand News asked all Government ministers for the advice they had received about how their agencies planned to meet the tougher spending restraints placed on them.

The requests were transferred to Finance Minister Bill English meaning the specific information requested had not been made available.

Chief Ombudsman Beverley Wakem says under the law she cannot require that the requests be referred back to individual ministers, but says the Law Commission recommended in its review of the Official Information Act that the anomaly be closed.

In other words, Ministers and departments transfer OIAs to English.  he uses a technicality to refuse to release normal budget documents.  Ombudsman says she cannot intervene.  Law Commission says it stinks.  Which it does.

Labour should support the Law Commisssion’s proposal to remove this anomoly. 

In the meantime it has to be asked – what is it that English and Co. don’t want the public to know?

How deep are those cuts that they say they will inflict on the country?  How are the tradeoffs being managed?

Enough of deliberate secrecy, of government in the shadows.  This is not democracy as it should be.


MartyG on PPPs

Posted by David Cunliffe on December 2nd, 2010

I guess it’s all in a day’s work, but MartyG on The Standard misintrepeted my position on PPPs in this recent post.

1.  His opposition to PPPs appears to be as blindly ideologically based as National’s blind ideological support for them.  Labour’s policy before and since the last election has been based on providing the best value for New Zealand taxpayers, regardless of ideology. 

2.  The vital point of difference between National and Labour on this issue is that National is committed to the private sector first and foremost, while Labour is committed to providing infrastructure in the way that works best for New Zealanders.

3.  That is why Annette King, when she was Transport Minister, set up a working group to look at the effectiveness of PPPs, particularly in relation to large projects like Waterview. 

4.  Labour has yet to be convinced of the value of PPPs for any particular project, but we are willing to weigh up the evidence. When considering the (de)merits of a potential PPP project we would take a range of critical factors into account.  I mentioned two in my recent speech:

“The project scale must be right and the PPP benefits must outweigh any increase in cost of capital”

5  Marty G and I should agree that this sets a high hurdle, because the Crown can always borrow at lower (sovereign) interest rates.  The offsetting benefits would have to be very clear, large enough in net terms (after deducting overheads like the cost of tolling), and not available by other means (e.g. non-PPP contracting) to clearly outweigh this cost of capital disadvantage.  

6.  It is also obviously necessary that whoever is evaluating a potential PPP for the state has to have the expertise and resources to really test the proposal and establish rigorous accountability.  I have not changed my view that setting a $25 million threshold for compulsory consideration of PPPs by all government departments, as Bill English has done, is ridiculous and bound to lead to bad decisions.

7.  Labour also has a longstanding policy that there needs to be a non-toll alternative before any toll-based transport projects could be approved.   That was reinforced recently in our tighter rules around foreign direct investment in monopoly strategic infrastructure.

8. Labour is not soft on privatisation. Our opposition to private prisons and SOE sales underlines that.  My recent speech explicitly ruled out any dilution of any Crown equity in any state asset or existing subsidiary.  That bright line test restates our strong “no sale’” policy that provides ongoing strong differentiation form National.

Labour is committed to an active and strong state sector.  It takes seriously its responsibility to adopt policies and projects that deliver sustainable value to Kiws.  Clear thinking and evidence-based policy are even more important when funds are tight, if we are going to get this economy going again.


S&P: National on negative watch (part II)

Posted by David Cunliffe on November 23rd, 2010

Part one of this post showed that S&P placed NZ on negative watch because of the savings gap, the huge (mainly private) net international debt and our under-diversified export profile (and consequent vulnerability).  It all adds up to lenders perceiving potentially greater risks and seeking compensation through higher interest rates.

How did the Government react to the news?  Did it front the issues and explain its “plan”?  Not in your life.

Alex Tarrant at interest.co.nz did a great job of covering John Key’s rather bizarre, meandering post-Cabinet press conference here.  Interest.co.nz’s coverage if the political debate is here.

Mr Key manages to contradict himself three ways in two paragraphs:

“Nothing has changed from our point of view, in fact if anything, our position looks stronger from our point of view (really?)…

We accept that we’ve had to take the earthquake on our balance sheet, accept tax revenues have been a bit weaker this year than we had anticipated…(corporate was 22.4% below 2010 forecasts, gst 15.8% below!)”

So… nothing has changed, we are stronger, but we are weaker.  Classic.   He must have been eyeballing three different journos and guessing they wanted three different answers, so why not try to please all of them at once?

The coup de grace is his attempt to pass it all off as Ireland’s fault.  True, the Irish are in a bit of a bog, but lets assume S & P can tell the difference between the land of the long white cloud and the emerald isle. 

Back in the real world, one thing is for sure, S&P won’t be amused if Messrs Key and English try to talk their way out rather than addressing the fundamental issues: how about trying to grow savings, diversify and lift exports, and reduce private international debt?  Who knows, they could even turn it into a plan?


S&P: National on negative watch (part I)

Posted by David Cunliffe on November 23rd, 2010

National’s counter-spin on yesterday’s placement by Standard and Poor’s of New Zealand’s sovereign credit rating on negative watch shows increasing desperation, the latest of a torrent of bad economic news.  I comment in two parts: the announcement and the counter-spin.

First the announcement’s overview:

  • “We perceive New Zealand’s projected widening external imbalances and the country’s weakened fiscal flexibility as increasing risk to the sovereign.
  • New Zealand’s vulnerability to external shocks, stemming from its open and relatively undiversified economy, also raises risks to the country’s economic recovery and credit quality.”

The S&P Report’s rationale makes the drivers even clearer:

  • widening external imbalances
  • weakened fiscal position
  • under-diversified economy
  • high external liabilities
  • a return to high current account deficits averaging 5.9% of GDP over the next three years.
  • and crucially, that “net external liabilities … predominantly reflect dependance by households on foreign capital to fund consumption and property investments”

In other words: New Zealand does not save enough, it has too much private debt, and that debt was used to fund the wrong things (property speculation not real business investment).  New Zealand’s exports are under-diversified and New Zealand will continue structural bleeding on our external accounts after the immediate recession.

The logical repsonse to these problems should be;

  • strong action to close the savings deficit (if possible by building good household saving behaviour)
  • diversify and increase exports (presumably moving beyond a narrow range of bulk commodities)
  • managing the fiscal position to encourage sustainable growth, employment and healthy tax revenues without blowing the fiscal deficit.
  • ensuring monetary policy supports the direction of reform rather than acting against it.

It obviously should NOT include:

  • borrowing more for tax cuts to upper income earners that neither create powerful stimulus nor correct the underlying imbalances
  • reinforcing exisitng bulk commodity exports while reducing investment in innovation and R&D to divesify and add value to the export base
  • cutting back Kiwisaver; cancelling prefunding for the NZ Super Fund; and taking two years to set up a Savings Working Group (and even then proscribing a range of strong policy options)
  • pretending monetary settings are ideal when exporters face extreme currency volatility

Bill English and John Key declared S&P lifting their previous negative outlook as a” verdict’ on Budget 2009.

They should be straight-up enough to accept that S&P has now reversed its verdict.

After 18 months of National Government policies National can have only itself to blame.

In part II of this post we’ll check whther their rhetoric matches this reality.


Currency Wars: Seismic Shift Approaching?

Posted by David Cunliffe on November 18th, 2010

There is a very interesting article carried by today’s Dom post from Edmund Conway at the Telegraph: “Lurching between extremes at epoch’s end”

Conway argues that the failure of the recent G20 meeting to resolve the current impasse on currency imbalances might be seen as an important marker point of the century -a moment when the global financial system tipped from order to instability.

Underlying this are several crucial factors:

  • US and Chinese inability to see a middle path on quantitative easing (”QEII” -driving down the value of the dollar to rebalance the US economy away from its yawning trade deficit) vs Chinese determination to hold the value of the yuan down to maintain export competitiveness (and the resulting buildup of surpluses available for reinvestment in Western assets).
  • The increasing strain faced by the largely (but not entirely) free floating exchange rate system as more countries explore altrernatives.  Conway likens this to the end of the Bretton Woods system – a once-in-50-year-shift.
  • The underlying shift in economic power from West to East, from the US toChina.
  • The increasing polarisation in US politics as it tries to cope with adjustment – notably the anti-free trade positioning of the Republican Right “Tea Party”.

He predicts two possible endgames;

  • another financial crisis leading global leaders to forge a new economic concensus (a ‘coherent international monetary system”).
  • or a period of chaos as “hegemonic stability”underpinned by the US breaks down.  That would indeed make the GFC look like a tea party.

If Conway is right, and there is a non-zero chance that he is, then New Zelanders must ask the question “what is our plan B” on international finance?  What if the assumptions of normality no longer hold?

Labour has already proposed a moderate but definitive programme of monetary reform, including a rewrite of the Reserve Bank Act, complementary monetary policy tools and more tactical exchange rate intervention (a “dirty float”).  This is predicated on continuity of something like current international conditions.

If chaos breaks out and the tradeability of our dollar is in jeopardy, or if there were huge capital flows into NZ (as a safe haven or a punt outside the USD), or of capital flight as risk averse traders retreat to the greenback or gold, what forward planning has been done to anticipate this?  I would guess, none in the Beehive and not much at the RB.  At the very least some transparency would be helpful.

Once again it looks like it is left to Labour to ask the tough questions and come up with some answers.


Currency intervention: Two clips

Posted by David Cunliffe on November 11th, 2010

As the Kiwi dollar rises past 80c US and  70c TWI to unsustainable levels, the debate about currency intervention will become white hot.  Our manufacturing exporters are being killed out there.   Here is John Walley (MEA CEO) from TV1 Breakfast this morning.

Labour is calling for the Govt to get off its butt and use its armies of bureaucrats to get thinking about options.  It is not OK to cry “TINA” – ‘there is no alternative’.  There has to be, or manufacturing is finished in New Zealand and farmers are in for a rude shock when the commodity price spike ends.  

In this interview on TV1 Business (at the bleary hour of 6.10 this morning!) I advocate for tactical currency intervention by the Reserve Bank to knock the top off the spike, and monetary reform to help chart a manageable adjustment path.  That must be done alongside a clear stratagy for domestic industry adjustment – investment in the jobs of tomorrow and transitional assistance for displaced workers.   I wouldn’t usually post one of my own clips, but as no-one watched it and at that hour and as TV1 called it a stinging attack, RA viewers might find it interesting…


More bad economic news

Posted by David Cunliffe on October 21st, 2010

No amount of National trying to reinvent the historical record can detract from the ongoing evidence that the “recovery’ is in trouble and that they have no plan for growth and jobs.  Here’s the latest data:

“Consumer confidence has fallen in the latest ANZ-Roy Morgan Consumer Confidence survey and a nosedive in confidence has been recorded in responses to a question regarding whether it is a good time to buy a major household appliance.

The survey’s main confidence measure eased three points to 113.6 and its current conditions index dropped 11 points to 92.3.

The current conditions index has dropped below the 100 mark for the first time since December 2009 and is at its lowest point since August 2009….”


Judicial Inquiry into SCF now urgent – NZ Herald

Posted by David Cunliffe on October 20th, 2010

Fran O’Sullivan has written a very strong opinion piece on SCF in the  NZH here.

“The credibility problem that Feeley faces is that after four months investigating Hubbard’s smaller entities, he has still to make a decision on whether to file fraud charges against the SFO founder on that score.

When Feeley announced his initial Hubbard probe he went in with all guns blazing. But after several weeks of saying the SFO was close to making a decision, nothing has materialised.

Hubbard has major beefs with the process.

He has also taken issue with the way the statutory managers who have control of his own affairs as well as Aorangi Securities and other small entities are managing affairs. “It is like the way the Nazis treated the Jews; they grabbed all their assets under trumped-up charges. You have to wonder who the National Government will pick on next.”

There are too many layers of regulators, too may issues around the statutory management process, too many issues about the role of the Securities Commission, and frankly too great a contrast between the government’s handling of SCF and the plethora of other finance company failures, many with much more obvious concerns apparent to all.

One commentator to Fran’s piece says as follows:

“Just as intriguing. Why isn’t Feeley taking the same approach to Hanover, BridgeCorp, Hanover, Blue Chip, Hanover, Strategic, Capital & Merchant, and . Hanover? These are all prima-facie, far more obvious instances of self interested activity and related party dealings. Keep up the good work Fran.”

Or  is there something else going on?   Selective leaks from inside sources to settle old scores?  A sad attempt to bury a frail old man while he is still alive?

Of course we cannot know everything about SCF.  No-one does. 

Only a full, independant judicial inquiry can answer these questions.


Cactus Kate on FDI

Posted by David Cunliffe on October 20th, 2010

Two good posts yesterday from Cactus Kate here, and  here, explaining why John Key’s response to NZ’s new foreign investment policy on land sales is nonsenisical.   (Acks to Les for the heads up).

” So what Key is saying is that his policy is to avoid anything that does not keep land prices as high as they are even at the moment (forgetting the peaks of two years ago) to avoid negative equity situations. Same with residential housing as well we can assume because we wouldn’t want the market to move up and down would we?

Little wonder New Zealanders keep buying more land. There is absolutely no risk attached to it when the leading politician comes out with intentions such as that. Where is Key’s worry about negative equity when it comes to SME’s? Silence.”

We need an export led economy and an ownership society.

Just ask any sharemilker wanting to work their way into owning their own farm.

Little wonder a poll running on interest.co.nz is showing a healthy majority of support for the policy.


Truth, English and Growth Stats

Posted by David Cunliffe on October 13th, 2010

Truth is the first casualty when Bill English tries to reinvent economic history. 

This afternoon at question time Bill English claimed that the NZ economy has grown more in the last 9 months than it did in the full four years from Sept 05 – Sept 09.

The figures compare growth rates between quarters as opposed to annual changes.

English claims growth between the Sept 2005 and 2009 quarters was 1.0%, and 1.7% between September 2009 and June 2010. 

English’s figures aren’t cumulative and so aren’t particularly representative of what happened.

When you compare GDP annual figures you get different results:

For the years ending Sept 2005 to Sept 2009: GDP growth was 2.5%.

For the years ending Sept 2009 to June 2010: GDP growth was 1.1%.

If you take a more representative time period of years ending Sept 05 – Dec 08 then the GDP increased by 4.4%.

Point is, here we have a Minister of Finance who repeatedly shows he is willing to twist, misuse and abuse data for political point scoring. 

New Zealand deserves better than that!


$300+ million wasted on SCF bailout?

Posted by David Cunliffe on October 13th, 2010

New information indicates at least $300 million of taxpayers funds may have been wasted by Bill English when he turned down recapitalisation offers of SCF, leaving the taxpayer with a much larger liability.

If there were good reasons for this apparent fiscal lunacy, lets hear them rather than hide behind mock commercial confidentiality and ”public interest” grounds.

Part one of today’s House question is here and part two is here.


Unlocking Our Potential

Posted by David Cunliffe on October 4th, 2010

The Canterbury Earthquake, terrible though it was, reminds us of the courage and resilience of New Zealanders in a crisis. 

 If only the same courage and strength could be tapped as part of our normal ‘economic development’, NZ would be able to unlock enormous untapped potential.

 That same courage was evident in many of our forebears: those who voyaged to NZ by waka or ship, and those hacked down the bush to form arable pasture (often on slopes so steep it should not have been touched, but their courage was undeniable).  

 Tapping into that same strength of character to unlock future potential is part of the task that lies before us. 

 Our world is changing.  The old solutions will not work for tomorrows problems.  The old certainties have gone.   The era of guaranteed markets in the UK for our sheep and beef has gone.   The era of free and easy credit has now gone.  

 We are told we face a ‘decade of deleveraging’.  All around us we see growing signs of despair.  

 Just as in the 70’s we were called upon to diversify our markets, in the 80’s to deregulate our economy, and in the 00’s to rebuild our torn social fabric, Labour is now called upon to rise to a new challenge in a new era. Just as Mickey Savage did in the 1930s, we are being called upon to find a better way.

 NZ is currently meandering through the aftermath of the global financial crisis.  We are beset by malaise.  We lack confidence.  We appear unable to define our own future, and even lack awareness of our own potential and character.

 So NZ falls back passively on its proximity to larger Asian growth centres, its traditional bulk agricultural base, and its relationship with its nearest neighbour Australia.

 These are undeniable strategic advantages, but if any are a substitute for owning our own future, they will ultimately undermine our national wellbeing and identity.  

 Our relationship with foreign investment has to change.  As it stands we are becoming more and more deeply indebted to foreigners.  We have been through a phase of selling state assets to cover the interest.  We are now selling our land at the rate of dozens of rugby fields a day.  But still our national debt keeps rising. 

 It was not primarily ‘the government’s’ fault.   Most of this debt is private debt.  Most of it fuelled the private binge on property consumption (it was never really ‘investment’ despite the temporary up-cycle in which much of it happened).

 That we need more foreign investment is undeniable, but it must be channelled into genuinely value-creating and productive activity and not simply transfer the ownership of existing assets to foreigners making our future income deficit worse.   

 A new conversation must begin – one that starts from the proposition that we wish to own and govern our own affairs.


Systemic Market Failure?

Posted by David Cunliffe on September 22nd, 2010

When this country is in recession and Kiwi families are doing it bloody tough, I cannot bear to stand by and see rich and powerful private interests – whom I will not name at this point and this post is not about SCF – rorting the rules and using their clubs and networks to finesse processes.

It makes Godzone look like “the coldest banana republic in the world”.

For goodness sake interests associated with the Natural Dairy Crafar farms bid (potentially with Nat links) reportedly gave $200,000 to the National Party while the Natural Dairy application was still before the OIO and while National has a ministerial policy review underway. 

National should IMMEDIATELY reject that bid – otherwise what is left to separate this from complete corruption?  Brown envelopes?  Is David Garrett really the only sick or crooked puppy on the Govt benches? 

Was it OK for the OIO-overseeing Minister of Finance to lease his (trust’s) house to the govt for a staggering ministerial rent, or accept hours of free TV for his “Plain English” ads?  Isn’t it time we Kiwis stood up and demanded that the tories do sweat the small stuff like the rest of us?  Isn’t it time John key held SOMEONE to account for SOMETHING rather than smile, wave and make excuses?

The Fendalton and Queen St methods are different from the Crafar one but they are even more dangerous and subversive: very polite circles of influence in the clubs and boardrooms - with massive flows of funds through anonymous trusts that violate the intent of the Electoral Finance Act.  Prestigious law firms and lobbyists.  This is up with the worst sort of influence peddling  I saw in Washington D.C. -  One dollar one vote:  permanent plutocracy unless we fight back.

Beyond political donations, look at the ability of the rich and powerful to get their way while the poor and middle struggle: $2 billion a year of tax avoidance through LAQCs and trusts that National in government has refused to touch.  Half the top 100 welathiest NZers are still not on the top tax rate!

This post is not about SCF, but researching that issue has opened my eyes to the complexity of the company and accounting structures in daily use around the markets.   One prominent international investment broker told me he tells his clients never to invest in NZ other than through an ASIC-regulated (Australian) vehicle, because our market is a wild west.

Well what is the point of getting our savings rate up (and asking hard working families to go without consumtion) if the investment vehicles we need to get the money to our struggling firms are being milked and siphoned by fees and sweet deals to the cronies in the markets?  Why would any sane Kiwi sweat 80 hours a week to build a real business here?  Where will our kids choose to live?

We are talking the need for a full scale root and branch reform.  For example, is the Trustee model not a fiction?  Issuers want tame trustees; trustees want clients.  How do you prevent a race to the bottom?  I will wager now the FMA Bill will not do the job.  We have BIG problems here folks. 

It might have been cool to point the finger at Labour when the champers was flowing during the bubble hype days; but corporate influence peddling is about as attractive as a bucket of sick in the middle of a recession.

There is a real risk of systemic market failure in the NZ financial markets.     They remind me of telecommunications markets in the 1990s – time for a big cleanup.

It is not right and not fair on the silent majority who play by the rules and who are getting absolutely screwed. 

It will only get worse until we have a Govt with the guts to stand up to it.   The smiling millionaire from Bankers Trust is hardly likely to do that!


Mr Botherway Must Step Aside

Posted by David Cunliffe on September 21st, 2010

The Chair of the Financial Markets Authority Eastablishment Board, Simon Botherway, now has no choice but to step aside pending the outcome of the Ombudsman’s inquiry into the mangament of his potential conflicts of interest in placing Allan and Jean Hubbard into statutory managment.

The public cannot understand how the Securities Commission took this step reportedly on the basis of a single anonymous complaint, timed shortly after Mr Hubbard transferred the bulk of his remaing assets into SCF to protect investors.  

Further, the Ombudsman must widen the terms of its inquiry to include questions around any potential or perceived conflicts of interest around Mr Botherway’s long standing business relationships with Mr George Kerr, Director of Torchlight Fund, one of the primary beneficiaries of the taxpayer funded bailout of South Canterbury Finance depositors.

These associations are reportedly of long standing and reportedly included at Spicers Portfolio Management and at Brook Asset Management, as well as in relation to several other funds.  Mr Kerr is also a Director of Pyne Gould Corporation, which has announced that it is seeking to set up a “heartland bank” centered on rural South Island lending. 

It must be totally transparent that neither Mr Botherway nor any of his interests have any ongoing relationship whatsoever with this proposed new bank.      

In short it is imperative that if wide ranging financial markets regulatory powers are to be concentrated in the hands of a single regulator, the holder of that office must be beyond reproach, with an impeccable record, and no possible or perceived conflicts of interest with former, current or potential business associates.

Mr Simon Botherway, who was John Key’s former Deputy at Bankers Trust, must now step aside from from the FMA Establishment Board Chair pending the outcome of a broadened Ombudsman’s inquiry.

Furrther, the Key Government cannot now clear the air on SCF withut a full and independant judical inquiry into the circumstances leading to its recievership and New Zealand’s largest investor bailout.


Politics With, Not For

Posted by David Cunliffe on September 15th, 2010

This post is a bit different from my usual – it’s not about economics.  It’s a  personal reflection, about stuff to learn and why stay in politics:

Politics For separates the politicians from the people.

It does not begin with those it seeks to serve. 

It does not build trust, but breeds cynicism.

Politics With starts with being.  Not doing, not telling.

It comes from the heart.  The gut, not the head.

It is grounded in relationship

It is built through partnership.

It is about the We stuff, not the Me stuff.

About a fair chance for every Kiwi kid.

Whatever their situation or the size of their parents’ wallet.

It means working together for a better future for all of us.

Politics With is worth fighting for. 

It is in our DNA. 

And how we must be.


SCF: What Kiwis Think

Posted by David Cunliffe on September 15th, 2010

Kiwis are asking a lot of serious questions about about the SCF debacle. 

Down South, Cantabrians think their favourite financier was royally shafted by an at best uncaring or incompetent, and at worst cunniving and self-interested Government.

Elsewhere around Godzone, Kiwis are gobsmacked by the scale of the mess, how it could have been left to fester for so long, and the huge bill that they have been left to pick up.  

All are left wondering how come “moral hazard” means hard up uninsured home owners cannot be covered, but senior debt holders in SCF can be paid out millions of interest, fees and profits.  They want to know just who gained and who lost, how and how much.

For goodness sake the Government even widened the payout retrospectively to include non-residents and non-citizens!  Kiwis want to know for whom, and at what cost, and why?

Make no mistake, this is the biggest bailout in NZ corporate history.  It dwarfs, for example, Treaty settlements that were agonized over for years.

Others have contacted me to ask how come Hubbard was treated (they perceive) more harshly than other finance company heads that appear more self-interested.

Kiwis are fair minded.  They want to know this kind of catastrophe can never happen again.  They want reassurance their hard earned taxes have not been wasted through either incompetence or competing agendas. 

As they are now paying the bill, they are entitled to real answers.


Tony Judt is dead; his ideas arn’t.

Posted by David Cunliffe on August 12th, 2010

Few writers have impacted me as much as Tony Judt in his recent book “Ill Fares the Land“.  He died last Friday, and I mourn his loss.

Ill Fares The Land picks up where The Spirit Level leaves off: asking why equality and social democracy have declined as drivers of political change. 

Judt suffered from the rare Lou Gehrig’s disease, and Ill Fares the Land was dictated literally from his sick bed.   It is not a robust peer reviewed academic treatise, but in places it is pure inspiration.  Read it.  Buy it.

He traces the crises of the early 20th century – two world wars and Great Depression.  he charts the rise of post-war Keynesian economics and the politics of social democracy that were determined famine and war should not again stalk the earth.

He  notes the rise of Hayek’s Austrian economics – and its Western political manifestations in Reagan and Thatcher’s administrations. 

He notes the rise of the Third Way under Blair (and by another name under Clinton, and could we add locally Clark/Cullen?)  as a triangulated response against the rise of right wing political hegemony.    

He argues that with the end of those administrations the ideas of the Right once again hold sway.  He asks what is worth saving of the social democratic project, and what is now to be done.

He concludes that nothing short of a strong and clear reclaiming of the values of equality, community and social democracy will equip the Left for the fight it must now win.

He notes that genuine politics must take place alongside those it seeks to serve, and I am sure that he is right about that.  

Ill Fares the Land is  far from a perfect work.  (And for the trolls out there, I did not agree with every word).  But it is a poignant lament for the decline of values most Kiwis treasure, and a challenge to us all to fight for a better future. 

RIP Tony Judt.


The Naked Economist; Part 3

Posted by David Cunliffe on July 28th, 2010

Part 1 of this post noted the end of the “Washington Consensus” in economics. Part 2 noted that newly naked economists need some new clothes. In this part I want to stimulate discussion about priorities for the NZ debate going forward.

In the 2010 Budget debate I reckon Labour won the argument that average Kiwis will be worse off after 5.9% inflation next year devours their “tax switch”.

The next stage of the debate will focus on which policies deliver on rebalancing our economy and leaving NZ families better off.

Let’s cut to the chase on “rebalancing”.

The NZ economy is “unbalanced” because:

  •  we borrowed too much from overseas lenders, building a huge national debt
  • we spent it on bidding up property prices, not making things we can sell
  • we export too little and keep bleeding on our current account
  • we are slipping behind in innovation, technology and productivity

The heart of the rebalancing process therefore requires:

  1. lifting savings
  2. growing exports
  3. innovating more
  4. reducing (mainly private) international debt

Policies that would logically achieve that include:

  • boosting (not cutting) Kiwisaver and other savings vehicles
  • pre-funding (not suspending) the NZ Super Fund
  • monetary reform to improve exports (not over reliance on the OCR)
  • modernising and strengthening (not cutting) economic development
  • comprehensive innovation policies (including R & D tax credits)
  • fiscal responsibility and credibility (not more borrowing for tax cuts)

We need a government that has a credible and coherent economic strategy. Confidence is eroded by stop-start, poll-driven initiatives.

Our future is weakened by an underlying agenda that will worsen inequality, driving wedges between Kiwis, their communities and their environment.

Time for a reality check.  This is not only a government that has no coherent plan to credibly achieve the rebalancing NZ needs. 

Its short-termism and flip flops mask  an underlying  agenda – whether made explicit or kept implicit – that is individualistic and materialistic. 

It does not reflect the Kiwi way, nor embody our highest aspirations.

Their policies are flawed.  Their vision is narrow.  Their time is limited.


The Naked Economist: Part 2

Posted by David Cunliffe on June 30th, 2010

So what does the end of the Washington Consensus mean for economic policy?

Firstly, borne out of the Great recession, there are no certainties – including whether the recession is yet over or, as increasing numbers of pundits from Krugman and Stiglitz on down are warning, we are in for a further deflationary spiral. 

Assuming no immediate major further meltdowns, we can probably draw some interim conclusions.

First, stable inflation will continue to matter, but should not be the only policy target.  It follows that monetary policy cannot rest on one tool, the OCR.  The number of tools should always exceed the number of targets.  

The OCR is a poor tool to target excess risk taking or asset bubbles.  IMF Chief Economist Blanchard recommends combining monetary and regulatory policy, such as countercyclical liquidity and prudential ratios, and directly targeting problem sectors such as housing. 

If this sounds familiar, no wonder.  The Governor of our own Reserve Bank has been quietly moving towards this in line with the other G20 central banks.   Isn’t it ironic that in New Zealand the only institution really defending the old status quo is the Beehive. 

Second, realistic stable exchange rates are crucial to small, open, trading economies.  This is what our export sector has been saying for years.  Now the IMF recommends central banks use reserve accumulation and sterilised intervention to do just that.  Labour has pledged to investigate reasonable means to help reduce the volatility of the NZ dollar, one of the most outrageously over-traded currencies on the planet.

Third, when investors desert key markets, the case for publicly supplied finance (liquidity provision) can be compelling.  However that implies that there is monetary and/or fiscal headroom available to offset a major recession (not necessarily true of some of the major western economies, worryingly).

It also implies that once recovery is firmly in place stimulus can be eased off in a way that is scially and economically sustainable.  Arguably Cameron’s Tory Budget violates that principle with slash and burn polices that could tip the UK back into recession, and even deflation.

Finally, Blanchard recommends counter-cyclical fiscal policy, augmented where appropriate by automatic fiscal stabilisers such as cyclical investment tax credits or enhanced transfers to low-income households. 

Counter-cyclical fiscal settings are not new to us and were used successfully under the last Labour Government (which reduced net debt to zero alongside full employment).  But automating that process would require careful thought.  One option used in other small open economies like Singapore is a countercyclical savings policy.   

This is all food for thought.  It is high time for our government started thinking.  But increasingly New Zealanders are looking for fresh ideas in the absence of a Beehive that seems capable of new thinking.

In Part 3 I will point to some of the areas, post Budget 2010, where Labour believes a new emphasis is needed.