Red Alert

Posts Tagged ‘Budget’

Budget 2010: UK Tory Style

Posted by David Cunliffe on June 23rd, 2010

It’s official and  it’s a shocker. Cameron’s first Budget puts VAT up to 20%. It cuts company tax cut from 28 % to 24%. Govt dept spending is cut by a staggering 25%. Capital gains tax is up from 18% to 28%.

A budget suplus in 3 years? – dreaming.  The social dislocation will be too awful to describe.

This is an uber-Tory Budget that relies on neoliberal economic ideology.

Given that Brown had already cut spending by GBP 72bn and this cuts another GBP 40bn it contains real risks of stagflation/deflation. If that spreads through a Europe bound together by linked currencies, it could  contribute to a double- dip recession that mayaffect us.

And of course we are now more vulnerable after Mssrs Key anad English borrowed more for unaffordable tax cuts.

For now, here is David Milliband’s reaction:

The Tory-Lib Dem Budget is a hammer blow to families and business across the country – and to the future of the British economy. George Osborne’s measures are driven by ideology not economic reality. And the price will be paid in higher unemployment and lower living standards for the poorest and those on middle incomes.

When they asked for your vote at the last election, David Cameron and Nick Clegg said they would reduce the deficit without hitting the frontline or hurting the poorest – but they have already broken that promise.

Below I set out what I would do differently – read on and then sign up to my Broken Promises campaign – help me show David Cameron and Nick Clegg that we will expose and oppose their Broken Promises every step of the way.

  1. I would make reducing unemployment a top priority. We must oppose the Tories’ decision to scrap Labour’s job guarantee, which provided work to the long term unemployed. The Tories are making the same mistake they made in the 1980s, of letting unemployment devastate lives and communities.
  2. I would not increase VAT, which is a regressive tax that hits the poorest hardest. Don’t take my word for it, David Cameron said it. And the Lib Dems promised to fight against a VAT rise until they decided to support it.
  3. We should be supporting the industries that will drive jobs and prosperity in the future – like Sheffield Forgemasters who have been robbed of a loan that offered world-beating jobs for Britain.
  4. The Tories’ four pounds of spending cuts for every one pound of tax rises is extreme. Even Mrs Thatcher went for a pound of spending cuts for a pound of tax rises. I would strike a fairer balance between reductions in spending and tax rises to reduce the deficit. If we need more tax let’s look at measures like a Mansion Tax on £2m homes not VAT rises.”

Sound familiar?


BUDGET 2010: feedback so far

Posted by David Cunliffe on June 22nd, 2010

Hi RA readers – I’ve been off air a bit lately due to running around the country on the post- Budget speaking tour, and because my laptop died!

Today parliament shifted into a new stage of the Budget debate – the Appropriations Bill that legitimises the Supplmentary Estimates (amended spending lines) between Budgets 2009 and 2010.   It was remarkable for what it does not say – nothing about a plan for protecting  jobs or lifting incomes during the worst of the Great Recession.   No new ideas over there.

Quick feedback from the Budget tour: spoke to about 20 groups, a mixture of Labour-organised public meetings, community sector groups and businesses.  Hard to tote up exactly but would have seen close to 800 people face to face: groups of 160 down to about 25, plus individual business site visits.

The feedback was clear:  most Kiwis understand that by the time inflation of 5.9% next year eats away the tax swindle, and wage growth is held down, they will be worse off.   That includes increased govt charges like ACC and ECE, plus power bills, rent and higher mortgages.  The Government made the classic mistake of overpromising and under-delivering.   Kiwis hate the rise in GST.   They know the tax cuts aimed primarily at the wealthy are unjust and inefficient. 

Was it a coincidence the govt’s polling fell 5% in the week after the Budget?   

Second, businesses and commentators understand that the Budget lacks a real plan for jobs, incomes and growth.  Fiscal prudence matters, but it is no substitute for a strategy to address the yawning triple deficit around the savings gap, current account deficit and innovation deficit.  Gutting Kiwisaver, the R and D tax credits and NZSF prefunding made these worse.  The Govt’s innovation package, which represents only 39% of the value earlier striped out, has been almost universally panned.     

Third, the added debt from the unaffordable tax cuts has opended up $1.1 bn fiscal hole over 4 years, $9.2bn over 12 years, and that makes the job of turning the boat around ever harder.  National will seek to fill this “strategic deficit”  through asset sales and service cuts.  Don’t let them!

Future posts are going to broaden out somewhat to the rlated issues of monetary and fiscal settings that surround the needed economic strategy.


BUDGET 2010: English – A Fudge Too Far

Posted by David Cunliffe on June 1st, 2010

Good fun in the House today grilling Bill English here and here on why the Government’s online tax/benefit calulator leaves out the forecast inflation rate of 5.9% in 2010, and thus overstates benefits.  Its a blatant case of misleading the public.   The Speaker rules it is a straight question that deserves a fair answer: Bill English doesn’t get it, and digs a hole deeper than the original mistake…

…It would be funny except it has misled many average income Kiwis who were encouraged by the Govt to believe that the budget left them “better off”, when in reality it left them behind until at least 2014.   It will be no fun at the checkout queue for many hard working families.


BUDGET 2010: Jigsaw Pieces Click

Posted by David Cunliffe on June 1st, 2010

The jigsaw pireces of the Budget are starting to click in the public mind if recent polls are any indication.  In the last week :

  • The IMF described NZ’s savings gap and net international indebtedness as “among the largest of any advanced nation”
  • Analysis shows a $9.2bn additional fiscal hole in the Budget by 2023 arising from the tax changes
  • Budget documents show expenditure as a % of GDP falling from 33% to 28%
  • Bill English floats Kiwibank sale as one example of a number of SOEs ripe for partial privatisation.

In other words: give away taxes up front (very largely to their mates); run an out year deficit (deliberately); compress spending (as ‘prudence ” then demands); and flog off what is left of the family silver to fill the remaining gap (dressed up as mum and dad savings products, of course).

What does all this mean for the average Kiwi?

  • despite the govt spin, they are worse off for the next four years at least due to the toxic cocktail of GST, inflation, other govt charges and taxes, and slow wage growth;
  • public services like Heatlh and Early Childhood Education will be slashed as new spending lags inflation ($300m short in Health) or deliberate policy changes bite;
  • the outlook for public services gets dramatically worse as the National Party tries to resize the state to 28% of GDP – although they won’t want to talk much about that before the election;
  • the underlying economic problems reamin unresolved and get more intractable over time.   There is no credible plan for growth and jobs.

Moral of story: do NOT let National get a second term   Stop the malign juggernaut before it does irrepairable damage.


BUDGET 2010: Strategic Deficits and Fiscal Risks

Posted by David Cunliffe on May 27th, 2010

Budget 2010 was not fiscally neutral.  To fund its large tax cuts package of  $14.5 billion the government has borrowed an extra $1.1 billion over four years.

The Crown borrowing requirement rises and interest costs roughly double before declining around 2021.

The current account widens from 3% to 7% over the forecast period.  The trend in net internation investment remains negative.

Longer term the fiscal aggregates look even worse.  We will have more to say about this in due course.

Meantime the world around us is poised on the cusp of a potential double-dip recession.  Germany’s voters are tiring of socialising the Eurozone’s mounting deficits.  The US and UK are already running huge deficits and accumulating debt due in part to the last round of fiscal stimulus.

World markets are highly fragile.  Korea and the Gulf of Mexico mean we don’t need too much else to go wrong.

Why has National strained the fiscal envelope so far while achieving so little economic return?

Treasury forecasts less than 1% additional GDP growth from Budget 2010 measures accumulatng over 7 years.

(more…)


Kiwibank CEO resigns

Posted by David Cunliffe on May 26th, 2010

Bill English has got more explaining to do now than when John Key rang to tear strips off him after his gaffe on selling KiwiBank last Friday.

English was clearly guilty of saying what he really thought when there were no cameras in the room (sounds like an earlier National Party conference remark.)  Unfortunately there were print journos taking notes.  Ooops.

This morning Kiwbank’s highly regarded CEO Sam knowles announced his resignation.

We do not know why yet.

It may be coincidence that just days after the MOF says he wants to flog off the Bank, which has grown amazingly well within NZ Post Group and is now a significant competitive force in the market, its excellent CEO resigns.

It may be coincidence that John Key was apparently furious with English after Friday’s loose lips blew a hole in the Govt’s post budget spin, and spent much of the last two days in damage control.   The issue has reportedly widened the gap between the Beehive’s 9th (PM) and 7th (MOF) floors.

This is a gathering storm.

The economics of retaining KiwiBank in public hands are overwhelming.

The issue demonstrates with crystal clarity that the Govt has not got a strategic clue about our long term financial future.  We MUST have a stake in our financial system.  It is only some 7% of the market but it is crucial to assist the competitive dynamics and local capital formation.

Just how much pressure was put on Key, by whom?  On English in the last week?  On Knowles?  Over what period?

One thing is clear – the Govt has enraged 700,000 plus loyal cutomers of KiwiBank who CHOSE to belong.  My email is running white hot.

The Govt now has serious governance questions to deal with amidst the resignation of a stellar CEO.

Watch this space.


BUDGET 2010: The Sucker Punch

Posted by David Cunliffe on May 25th, 2010

We all know Budget 2010 was full of broken promises – from NOT raising GST  – to being “fiscally neutral” while borrowing an extra $1.1 billion to fund tax cuts - to being “fair” while giving a third of all those tax rebate $ to the top 5%.

Most people now realise that the gains they thought they might get are more apparent than real:  the proof – even on the Governmnet’s own numbers average gross incomes don’t catch up with inflation unitl 2014!  That’s two elections away!

 Most now know the results are economically desultory – the current account blows out to 7% of GDP, growth is static (taking 7 years to accumulate a measley 1% extra), and what empoyment growth there is is largely unrelated to Budget meaures.  

What has become clearer as the debate has progressed is just how cynically National has attempted to buy votes through a Budget increasingly seen as highly political.   John Armstrong - who is no Labour acolyte to say the least – politely nailed that in Saturday’s Herald.

The game afoot is this: fool middle income voters into thinking they have a win.  Push through much larger tax cuts for the upper end under this smokescreen.  Deliberately stretch the government balance sheet by borrowing more to fund the cuts.  Begin compressing public services, but slowly, and hope the rosy glow lasts until the election…

But Bill English could not help the Freudian slip about selling off KiwiBank.  (As if anyone believes that a mom-and-pop share issue would mean shares didn’t end up in institutional hands eventually – remember Contact Energy?)

This is important as a foretaste of things to come: extensive privatisation of assets the public already owns, and deep Budget cuts to balance the books that this Government has deliberately run up by cutting taxes too far.   Both add up to shrinking the state, and with it the essential services that all Kiwi families need.

Budget 2010 is not a step change,  and not a step up.  It’s a set up - a sucker punch for the full flowering of the Right’s agenda should New Zelanders allow them a second term.


English: Budget won’t alter inequality gap

Posted by Grant Robertson on May 23rd, 2010

The title of the post is the headline from the TVNZ story from tonight’s news.

Questioned by ONE News political editor Guyon Espiner, the Finance Minister said the government is concerned about the gap between rich and poor but admitted the Budget will not alter the current divide.

Such a missed opportunity to go beyond “having concerns” to actually doing something. It has been talked about on this site and elsewhere that The Spirit Level and other research shows that more equal societies are in fact more prosperous societies. It feels like common sense to me that if we harness everyone’s potential that our collective well-being will increase.

Sadly this Budget relies on some pretty out-dated views about tax cuts leading to growth. There is no certainty around that, and more than a little evidence that quite the opposite will occur. There is almost no likelihood of sustainable growth with this government’s approach, but given that the environment basically did not rate a mention in the Budget speech, perhaps that is no surprise.

This was not a Budget done in the shadow of the recession as last year. There was a chance to address inequality and map out a path to sustainable growth. Sadly, neither chance was taken.


More nasties in Budget 2010

Posted by Darien Fenton on May 21st, 2010

As we get into the fine print of the Budget documents, we are finding other nasty things that will affect workers. I’ve already posted on the cut to the redundancy tax credit, but here’s a couple of other things :

Employers who use the Job Opportunities subsidy will be able to sack workers in the first 3 months under the 90 day Act. Last year, when Paula Bennett introduced the Job Ops scheme, she and Kate Wilkinson quickly backed down when they were asked in the House about whether the 90 day trial period would apply to these temporary positions that the taxpayer is subsidising. Here’s the quote from the MSD Department’s web site :

A Job Ops opportunity cannot be accepted if the employment agreement attached to the job contains a 90 day employment trial provision. If the employer removes the 90 day employment trial provision from the employment agreement, then the opportunity can be accepted on the basis that this is a 6 month opportunity.

So what’s changed? I suspect that the government is readying itself to open up the 90 day trial period to all workers. But this one doesn’t make sense, when the jobs are fixed terms of six months only – it’s highly suspect and I am deeply worried about vulnerable young workers being treated like this.

The second nasty is the slashing of employment relations education funding from $2 million to $889,000 will deliberately undermine education for in areas such as employment rights, representative training, and health and safety.

This cut affects both employers and workers.  It shows that the government thinks there is nothing more to be learned about the importance of workplace relationships in improving productivity and that workers have nothing to contribute.

It also leaves wide open the question of health and safety training in the workplace.  With one worker a week dying in workplace accidents, and many more injured, I think the government’s commitment to ensuring workers are healthy and safe at work must now be seriously questioned.


BUDGET 2010: Pass the Berocca

Posted by David Cunliffe on May 21st, 2010

After the beehive-spin induced euphoia wears off and the hangover sets in, middle New Zealand will reach for the Berocca and try to work out what the Budget really means for them.

Not to add to the inevitable headache, but here are a few of the facts of life for the morning after.

  1. For at least 3/4, and maybe 90% of the country, by the time they eat a whopping 5.9% inflation next year (Treasury Budget forecasts, not NZLP numbers!) they will be worse off until at lesst 2012/13.   For a family with 2 kids on $72k for example, $55 a week worse off.
  2. That inflation will feed into mortgage costs and rent rises.  It will result, quite rightly, in pent up wage demands from workers who have gone without wage rises for the last two years. 
  3. While its ok that the middle income brackets got some income tax relief, and would have likely got more relief from us, the tax cuts are way too skewed to the top.  You just can’t get around the fact that someone earning a $million a year gets $1000 a week back.  That is going to make the haves/have nots gap wider.  And that gap will inevitably worsen over time, undermining the Kiwi dream and taking us further from the “fair go for all” kind of place we want to be.
  4. That is made worse by the underlying agenda of shrinking the state and the services it can provide.  We have already seen home help for the elderly branded “low quality” spend and cut.  Health’s new money in the Budget is, we reckon, about $270 m short of standing still given next year’s inflation forecast.  That means more cuts to the services and more pain for the vulnerable.
  5. My personal gripe is early childhood education.  What has the Govt got against quality preschool education?  Why is it swiping $100m pa from that?  Labour will lead in this area and every family with young kids will hear us. 
  6. Rebalancing the econmy is way undercooked.  Take away the smoke and mirrors of the tax switch, and we are still left with residual taxt incentives for property and LAQC avoidance mechanisms.   Proof:  LAQCs sheltered $2.3 billion of taxes in 2008.  The tinkering in the Budget trimmed only $70m p.a. of that.  
  7. There is STILL no credible plan for growth in this Budget.  The National Govt seems intent in relying on “passive” instruments. I have no problem with dropping the company rate – provided the fiscal balance can support decent public services (personal view – see “About” on the blog site) – but that cannot be enough to get the export sector going on its own.  What about the R and D tax credits?

The strucutral problem remains: we don’t export enough, we don’t save enough, and we don’t innovate enough.  As an economy we are short on capital, technology, skills and IP.  Budget 2010 does not fix that.  Time is short and the job is urgent.  When NZ wants positive action, Labour will be ready to lead.

As the bubbly wears off in the Beehive and the Berocca gets passed around the country; the poor, the forgotten middle class and the structural problems of the economy have not been moved forward by this Budget.

It remains a suger-coated tax swindle.

It remains a step back, not a step up, and certainly not a step change.


Another nasty little surprise in the budget

Posted by Darien Fenton on May 20th, 2010

Bill English didn’t mention it – and nor did John Key, in his comedy act called his budget speech.

But we spotted it. On page 69 of the 2010 Budget speech handed out to MPs this afternoon was this sentence :

“The redundancy tax credit will be removed from 1 October 2010.”

Labour introduced the redundancy tax rebate in 2007 to make the taxing of redundancy payments fairer for workers who were pushed into a higher tax bracket as a result of receiving lump sum compensation payment for redundancy. This applied to redundancy payments paid on or after 1 December 2006.

This was because it was simply not fair to have to pay a higher level of tax because a worker loses their job through no fault of their own.

But now National will ensure that workers who do receive redundancy pay can be overtaxed like they used to be.  Talk about punishment.

This comes on top of the government’s recent failure to support legislation that would have given all Kiwi workers minimum redundancy payments .

Now, thanks to National, even those workers who do receive compensation will also be penalised.

Mean, mean, mean.


BUDGET 2010: Broken Promises and Lost Opportunities

Posted by David Cunliffe on May 20th, 2010

Budget 2010 is a tax swindle, a lost opportunity and a massive broken promise to New Zealanders.

It rewards the wealthiest, but swindles the middle class by gobbling up their small change tax switch in the highest (5.9%) inflation in decades.

Most Kiwis tax cuts will be wiped out by inflation before they even get to the checkout.

By the Government’s own figures an average wage earner will be $30 a week worse off after inflation and a person on $70, 000 will be $45 a week worse off.

The tax cuts are unfair; a third goes to the top five percent and fifteen percent goes to the top one percent. People in the middle and bottom will go backwards after inflation.

The upper income tax cuts are unaffordable. The Government is borrowing an extra $450 m next year, and a billion over 4 years.

This Budget therefore breaks a string of hollow promises:

  • not to raise GST
  • to leave the “vast majority” of Kiwis better off – most won’t be after inflation and rent taxes
  • to be fiscally neutral: the Budget borrows $450 m next year to fund upper income tax cuts
  • to return to prefunding superannuation when in surplus (no prefunding until 2019, surplus 2016)
  • to compensate pensioners and Working for Families recipients for ST (this a one-off, not indexed)
  • to maintain Health and Education: wrong – Health is some $300m p.a short of keeping up. Education some $200m p.a short; including a savage $120m cut to Early Childhood Education.
  • to rebalance the property/business tax divide: this is underwhelming – building depreciation is partially taxed, but there is no ring fencing of losses; and the changes to LAQC and PIE rules are minor.

Overall the Budget fails both tests of fairness and growing jobs and incomes.

Lower and middle income earners are left behind while the top end reaps a windfall.

The old, the young, the sick and frail are left worse off.

The Government is borrowing to favour its mates, once again.

It is a tax swindle, a lost opportunity and massive broken promise.


BUDGET 2010: Neither Fair Nor Fixing

Posted by David Cunliffe on May 20th, 2010

It’s Budget Day.  You’ll be hearing lots from us over the next few days and I hope many of you will join our Finance Team live here on Red Alert tonight at 8.30 pm.

Most New Zealanders already understand that a Budget that (at best) delivers only marginal gain to middle and lower income earners and a whopping great windfall to the top end, is not fair.  It is however, precsely what you would expect from National.

Equally important, the Budget as it has been foreshadowed will not fix the underlying problems of this economy: lack of savings, skills, innovation and exports.  These are exactly the themes Labour is pushing – as reflected in todays Dominion and Herald (note the Herald got the headline wrong).

If you don’t believe me on this – just refer to Swtizerland’s IMD World Competitiveness Ranking, which shows NZ slipping back for exactly the reasons Labour has been saying. 

Think about it, if the problems are insufficient savings, exports, skills and innovation, how on earth is raising GST and an income tax windfall for the wealthiest possibly going to address that?

It proves our underlying critique of this visionless National Government -  they had “nine long years” to think up policies to take the country forward, to deliver on the step change they campaigned for – and so far, nothing.


BUDGET 2010: Will they fix the rorts?

Posted by David Cunliffe on May 19th, 2010

Interesting piece in the Dom front page today about the tax avoidance around trusts – but mostly interesting for what it does not say. 

The National government has spent much of the last year cutting “low quality” services like home help for frail elderly because of the supposed fiscal crunch.

Tomorrow they will announce billion dollar plus tax cuts, overwhelmingly benefitting the wealthy few, while the many just tread water in the face of rising GST, rent, power and food costs. 

They lamely justify the top end tax cut as either a growth stimulant (which is nonsense – much more stimulus results from good investments or tax cuts at lower income bands)…

…or a way or retaining talent (branding Kiwis as “envious” is rubbish, as not all talented people are wealthy and NZ already has the third lowest taxes in the OECD!  Our real need is to lift wages and sustainably grow the economy)….

….or a way of stopping the $300 m tax fiddle arising from the abuse of Trusts.  Ironically the way they plan to do that is by giving all top rate earners the same rate as if they too werre fiddling.  (Of course, without sin there would be no sinners)….

But here’s the real rub: even that trust tax avoidance is puny compared with the writeoffs around loss attributing companies (LAQCs) – $2.3 billion in 2008 alone.   Plus a $500m writeoff around rental property losses.  Plus more around the abuse of savings vehicle (portfolio investment entities – PIEs). 

Not to mention the wider issue of the income/capital boundary and the incentives created to hock off small companies too soon, taking the tax free proceeds to buy the bach and the BMW rather than to grow the business.

Does this government have the nerve to address these issues, which have spiralled out of control since the election?   Or will it just continue to take home help off oldies and special ed services off crippled kids?  Will it penny pinch on night classes while boosting private schools? 

Will it stop the rorts?  Is it capable of governing for the many not the few? 

Increasingly, Kiwis are coming around to the view that it cannot, but Labour can and will.


PM – “Don’t be jealous – rich are crucial to economy”

Posted by Stuart Nash on May 18th, 2010

Who is as insulted as I am over PM Key’s statement, reported in today’s Dom Post, around why the highest earners will get the tax cuts in this week’s budget, at the expense of the 92% who earn under $70k/ann (http://tinyurl.com/23natqb)? ”We can be envious about these things, but without those people in our economy all the rest of us will either have less people paying tax or fundamentally less services they provide”

Well, my daughter is taught by a teacher earning under $70k, most of the police who put their lives on the line for us earn under $70k, nurses who fix us up when we fall over earn under $70k, and the vast majority of people who actually make this country tick – the backbone of the nation – earn under $70k.  Are these people any less deserving?  Do they not ensure that the wheels of industry are well oiled, the streets are safe and our citizens are provided with the services required of a first world country?  Of course they do.!

How bloody insulting.!  As I blogged earlier this year, there are a myriad of reasons people live and work in New Zealand – and tax is way down this list.  These changes will, if anything, drive middle NZ across to Australia and further afield.  Mr Key – just be honest with Kiwis and stop feeding us your propaganda: these tax cuts are not about creating equality of opportunity, driving higher productivity, developing a fairer tax system or building more equitable society – because they will not achieve any of these goals.  If you believe they will, then I suggest you start studying your economic and financial text books and reading your case studies –  those published this century – not last.!

Don’t get me wrong, I am not saying that our high achievers are not deserving – they are – but so is everyone else.  The increase in tax through the GST hike to 15% is broad and all-encompassing – so should the tax cuts be.!


Beware English Bearing Greeks

Posted by David Cunliffe on May 5th, 2010

In terms of the daily cut and thrust of the House today, Bill English backfired (IMHO).  Comparing the New Zeland economy to that of Greece was wrong on every level.

First, there is no comparison.  Greece is far and away one of the most indebted countries in the OECD.  NZ is in the bottom third or quarter by various measures.  Greece has gross crown debt of 115% of GDP.  NZ had net crown debt of zero % under Labour in 2008, rising to 5% by election time due to the GFC.   NZ gross crown debt today is about 29% .    

Second, to the extent that NZ hit troubled waters in the GFC, most of that is on National’s watch.   That is not to blame them for the international crisis, but then theycannot blame Labour either – the whole argument is silly and circular, and patently so.

Third, NZ stacks up very well on the other aggregates too:  Greek unemployment nearly 11%.  NZ now 7.3%   NZ under Labour 3.4%.

Fourth, a Minister has no responsibiity for opposition policies anyway, and especially when he is simply making them up, as Mr Speaker confirmed.  That is simply outside Speakers Rulings. 

So what exactly was Bill English’s point?

Underneath this attempt at deflection is of course a deeper issue:  English is desperately trying to convince Kiwis they need to swallow savage service suts in health and education because the alternative is “Greece on steroids”… Really?  Or isn’t that just a teensy bit exagerated, Bill?

Of course prudent fiscal managment matters.  We have always said so.  Labour’s record on this is unimpeachable: Gross debt cut in half, net debt to zero; historic lows in unemployment; higher average growth over the decade than under National; the longest post war expansion on record etc etc etc.

Point is: fiscal prudence is a necessary but not a sufficient condition for a coherent economic strategy for good jobs and living standards and the other things that really matter to ordinary Kiwis.  That’s why labour is challenging National at the heart of the economic debate: on jobs and growth.   Why we are emphasising the need to close the other deficits in exports, savings, innovation and social issues.  On boosting valued added and clean technologies.

See the post below (Building to the Budget) for more detail.


Tax and the Budget Policy Statement

Posted by David Cunliffe on March 4th, 2010

Parliament’s Finance and Expenditure Select Committee has just released its report on the half-yearly Budget Policy Statement.  This  politely worded document contains some useful nuggets of information that arose from Bill English’s testimony to the committee, and summarises FEC members’ views of what they heard.  Some of it was reported at the time, but it is worth reiterating in the context of the broader tax reform debate.

  1. English reiterated that the tax pacakge will be fiscally neutral.
  2. Raising GST to 15% is the government’s intention.
  3. This was not presented as a “revenue raiser on its own” but was needed to help pay for cuts to tax rates.
  4. The main rate change would be at the top end, with likely alignment with the Trust rate at 33%.
  5. Although there was talk that middle and lower income earners would be “no worse off”, committee members pointed out the huge inequity of top rate reductions for the few, versus standstill at best for the many.  There is no disguising the relative shift of the tax burden.

FEC members pushed on how the government would achieve fiscal neutrality given its stated intentions to compensate for GST – the numbers did not appear to add up.    Mr English first disputed the Tax Working Group’s estimates (funny how when he agrees he quotes them) that show full compensation costs almost all the extra revenue increased GST raises; then said rate cuts woul be largely funded from taxes on property.

Having excluded a comprehensive CGT, Land Tax and RFRM, the amount able to be raised from changing building depreciation rules is insufficient (only $0.3 to $1 bn compared to a revenue requirement of $1.2-$1.5bn ).  So if the government cuts the top rate as much as they’d like, it doesn’t leave a lot left over for the great majority of taxpayers.

Mr English then wriggled around on what a partial CGT might look like – discussing a bright line test to change the “intent” rules around property speculation.  English has also proposed “ring fencing”, a measure that he has ridiculed in the past as a ‘disastrous’ proposal.(http://www.hansard.parliament.govt.nz/Documents/20070621.htm )

It is very debateable whether that would fix the tax inequity between investment classes.  It is even more dubious to suggest that the additional property taxes would all be borne by top tax rate individuals – what about retirees and middle income earners with one or two investment proprties who may need to sell up? It looks like the intervention into the property market will really be a revenue gathering exercise to pay for tax cuts to the top rate, rather than a principled approach to addressing distortions as English claims.

And nowhere in the MOF’s presentation was there any talk about closing down the other tax planning rorts.  Funny that.

More broadly, the government cannot escape the contradiction that:

  1. It says it has enough revenue to deliver big top rate tax reductions for the few (but not the many).
  2. But it will drastically reduce new spending to $1.1 bn in Budget 2010 and onwards - inevitably resulting in real front line service cuts to Health and Education.
  3. There was no discussion of restoring superannuation pre-funding, Kiwisaver incentives,  restoring contributions to the SuperFund, or R and D tax credits, even though Treasury has previously advised all are prudent and necessary.

My impression of Bill English’s presentation was that no matter how it is dressed up, the government’s intentions are stark and predictable: raise taxes for the many and cut them for the few, and cut services for the many to pay for it.


English Confirms Jobs Didn’t Matter in Budget

Posted by Trevor Mallard on July 24th, 2009

Bill English answering for John Key yesterday exposed the gap between the rhetoric and the facts when he confirmed that they knew that 3,000 jobs would be lost when they cut the Enterprising communities scheme in the budget.

The savings average about $8m over 4 years.  Seems silly thing to do especially when compared to the $50m no jobs so far cycleway to nowhere.

 

1. Hon ANNETTE KING (Deputy Leader-Labour) to the Prime Minister: Does he have confidence in the Minister for Social Development and Employment?

Hon BILL ENGLISH (Deputy Prime Minister) on behalf of the Prime Minister: Yes the Prime Minister does, and he has a lot more confidence in the Minister than a certain Charles Chauvel had in a former Minister when, as president-

Mr SPEAKER: The question did not ask “if so, why”, it simply asked whether the Prime Minister had confidence in the Minister.

Hon BILL ENGLISH: I raise a point of order, Mr Speaker. That question was open-ended. I am allowed to give reasons, comparisons, analogies, and anecdotes that back up my answer. Surely you are not going to rule that out.

Mr SPEAKER: The Speaker is the sole judge of those matters, and where the Speaker perceives that it will lead to disorder the Speaker may ask the member to desist.

Hon Annette King: Did the Minister for Social Development and Employment advise the Prime Minister that her decision to cut the Enterprising Communities scheme would lead to 3,000 job losses; if so, how can he have confidence in a Minister who is creating more job losses than job opportunities?

(further points of order)

Hon BILL ENGLISH: Yes

(further points of order and other supplementary questions and answers)

Hon Trevor Mallard: Why did Cabinet decide to cut the Enterprising Communities scheme, given the fact, as the Prime Minister has told us today, that there will be 3,000 job losses?

Hon BILL ENGLISH: In the course of the Budget, Cabinet looked at a whole range of schemes, including many misguided and ineffective schemes put in place by the previous Government. Given the fiscal constraints, we have made decisions about priorities, and we stand by those decisions.


Banks off the hook

Posted by Brendon Burns on July 1st, 2009

There will be no inquiry into bank interest rates by the Finance and Expenditure Committee. This afternoon  it voted by a majority Government decision not to proceed with an inquiry into bank  rates, notably short term.

No real surprise here. After breathing hot on the issue a few short weeks ago, the Government has for some days been blowing cold. I was at John Key’s Christchurch forum only three weeks ago today when he stated banks could try harder to cut rates. Bill English was saying similar things. Cue to Parliament a few days later and English was praising the banks to the hilt. Questioned as whether he’d met the banks in recent days, he agreed he had.

So Reserve Bank governor Alan Bollard might say the banks are not doing all they could to assist New Zealand’s recovery, but English just said in the House that these are not matters that a Parliamentary committee of ‘backbenchers ‘could assist. Much better to leave it to him and his various positions, obviously


Deceit is settling

Posted by Pete Hodgson on June 2nd, 2009

The budget is now five days old and a sense of deceit is starting to settle around it for two reasons. The first is the obvious one that today’s government cannot guarantee tomorrow’s super at the same time as, rightly or wrongly, they elect to create a $34B hole in the NZ super (Cullen) fund. The government’s assurances that such a hole has no consequences are patently wrong. Less obvious, because it requires insider knowledge, is the nature of the government’s advice when it chose to pass tax cut legislation for April ‘10 and ‘11 in the middle of Dec ‘08. The pace of deterioration of the government’s books in the closing months of ‘08 was startling. On Nov 8 Labour ministers stopped getting advice and National ministers started getting it. By mid December they would have clearly understood that their tax plans could not be afforded. But they passed them anyway and now folk are wising up to that. Brian Rudman did a piece in the Herald last Wednesday which nailed that issue and (according to usually reliable sources) the editor got a bollocking on the phone from Mr Key for his troubles. Not v primeministerial. So the 100 days of action have ended and the 100 days of retreat are upon us. It is pertinent that while many NZers are understanding of the case for breaking a promise, a growing number are reflecting a view that legislating for that promise in the first place was less than honest. In the government’s defence there was and is uncertainty around, but it is not plausible that they couldn’t see the direction and pace of change by the second week of December.