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Hi Friend,
The Parliamentary Press Gallery had their end of
year knees-up that went well into the night on Wednesday, and most of
the major news shows have have now wrapped up for the year.
But the political year is far from over! Indeed, the real moment of
truth on whether Nicola Willis is serious about getting the economy
back on track by slashing the costs of government will come with her
so-called mini-budget, micro-budget, nano budget out on
Wednesday.
Grant Robertson's fiscal traps: How bad are the books? 🧾
At the same time we see the Nano Budget, we'll also get to see the
latest set of books from Treasury on the Government's true fiscal
situation. As
Jordan talked about on Newstalk ZB on Thursday with Heather du
Plessis-Allan, we
are hearing about more fiscal landmines all over Wellington –
with the KiwiRail Cook Strait mega-ferries mega-cost overrun
being just one
of many.
Your humble Taxpayers' Union will still be at work
and inside the Treasury lock-up to report to you the moment the
embargo is lifted on Wednesday. Just how large will the sea of red ink
be that Mr Robertson has left us (and our kids).
Tick
tock, tick tock... goes the national debt
clock... 👀
Taxpayer Victory Trifecta! Previous Government's
policies scrapped 🎉
Much of Wellington is already off on their pre-booked summer
fiestas because, by this time of year Parliament is usually winding
down. But the new Government's rubber is just hitting the road with
its 100-day plan, and announcement that the summer (at least for
Wellington) is to be cut short.
Not only will Parliament be back in January (we can't recall this
being the case in a generation), but Christopher Luxon is calling
Cabinet back to the Beehive to meet in the second week of January!
Earlier this week in a Wellington cafe, one of our staffers
overheard the grumblings of a very
grumpy mandarin who had made the usual seven week-long summer
holiday booking and was very upset at the prospect of having it cut
short.
Welcome to the real world, Sir Humphrey!
Reserve Bank refocussed on tackling
inflation 📈🏦
New Zealand was world leading with the creation in 1989 of a
Reserve Bank with a single mandate of keeping inflation down. Scores
of countries around the world have followed our lead. But the last
Labour government sought to tinker with the system and give the Bank
another target of keeping unemployment low. And
we all know how that worked out.
The problem is that Grant Robertson had effectively given Reserve
Bank one lever – setting interest rates – and asked the Governor to
pull it in two different directions. Up to bring inflation down or
down to bring unemployment down. Clearly the experiment failed and
inflation has spiralled out of control over the past two years – helped of course by Mr Robertson’s own fiscal
recklessness pouring money into wasteful projects that simply make
inflation worse.
The new Government's return to the single
mandate is a good first step towards getting inflation (i.e. the
rising costs of living) under control. But, if the new Government is
serious, the next step must be slashing wasteful
spending. That's why Nicola Willis's nano budget on
Wednesday is so significant.
Unfair Pay Agreements
scrapped 📄❌
Also this week we saw the repeal of Labour so-called 'Fair Pay
Agreements'.
This is the right thing to do. A bit like the 'Public Interest
Journalism Fund', 'Fair Pay Agreements' are the opposite of what it
says on the tin. Labour's scheme would have effectively forced
compulsory unionism across the entire economy, stifling productivity,
creating complexity and reducing labour market
flexibility.
You can’t sustainably increase wages by simply increasing costs on
employers. The only path to a high-wage economy is to ensure
productivity increases. The last government was putting the
cart before the horse.
Making it harder (more expensive) to employ people with
a 'one-size-fits-all' approach disproportionately harms the very
people that government claimed it wanted to help – such as young
people and those on the outer edges of the job market.
Workers have voted with their feet in rejecting unionism
over the past 30 years with membership reducing from almost 50% of
employees in the 1980s to less than 20% today. On the
other hand, there is one union that is both worth joining and is
making sure Kiwis can take home more after-tax income and
promoting policies that improve New Zealand's productivity and
prosperity. Maybe you should join up... 😉
We Axed the Ute
Tax 🪓🛻
And we celebrated a taxpayer victory following our
two-year campaign to 'Axe the Ute Tax'. Jacinda Ardern's tax unfairly
hit farmers and tradies in order to subsidize flash new Teslas for
Wellington and Remuera elites. The tax saw thousands of dollars piled
onto the cost of a new ute, and other emissions-emitting vehicles,
despite the fact that many people who use these vehicles have no other
option.
While Labour and the Greens loved to claim that this tax
was reducing emissions and preventing climate change, this couldn’t be
further from the truth. Our Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS) caps New
Zealand’s emissions at a set level that gets reduced over time. Any
emissions reductions in the transport sector brought about by
subsidized electric cars simply frees up emissions to occur elsewhere
in the economy.
The video Julie Anne Genter needs to watch! 📺 🚲
We can't tell whether the Green Party MPs flailing about
claiming that the scrapping of Tesla subsidies and the Ute Tax will
cook the planet, are being dim or dishonest.
We suggest they take a few minutes to watch this fantastic video by our Campaigns Manager, Connor
Molloy, on how the ETS works and the 'waterbed effect'.
Speaking of climate change, it seems the Climate Change
Commission has drunk the Kool-Aid too.
Put it out of its misery and cut it: Climate Change Commission swerves
out of lane to tackle social justice ✂️
You would think that the Climate Change Commission would have its
focus squarely on reducing New Zealand’s emissions right? Wrong.
Their latest report out this week – 2023
Advice on the direction of policy for the Government’s second
emissions reduction plan – dives headfirst into a range of issues
well outside their remit. Road injuries? Social justice? Population
health? You name it, it's in there.
Here we thought the climate change officials wanted us to
ride to work to save the planet. But now that electric cars are coming
along, that's still not good enough. We must ride to work (or take
public transport) because it's good for us. The Climate Change
Commission cites studies that suggest the new goal is to reduce crash
injuries. 🤦♂️
Sure, some of these things might be worthwhile causes
but we have literally tens of thousands of bureaucrats in other
agencies who are meant to be dealing with that stuff
To the extent that the Commission does focus on
emissions, they even get that part wrong. Rather than focusing
on net emissions (the total amount of emissions from things
like car exhausts minus any reductions such as from trees), they
instead focus solely on the total gross emissions without
looking at the other side of the equation. It should not matter if
emissions are reduced by someone sucking one tonne of carbon out of the atmosphere
or emitting one tonne less in the first place, the effect is the same.
The Commission's obsession with forcing people to change how they live
their lives and run their businesses is absurd, ineffective and
expensive.
This week ACT’s climate spokesperson called for the
Commission to be scrapped completely. We
agree.
Recession: GDP
figures make for grim reading 📉💲
The latest batch of GDP figures
were released on Thursday. It doesn’t take an economist to tell you
that Kiwis have been doing it tough recently, but this data backs it
up and then some. For four quarters on the bounce now, New
Zealand’s economy has shrunk on a per person basis.
While immigration has
kept our head nearly above water on the headline figures, on a per
person basis (which is the only measure that matters in the long term)
our standards of living are in free fall.
This goes to show the damage
that an anti-growth government can cause when they do everything in
their power to stifle innovation and growth, and drive investment
running for the hills. Grant Robertson made his bed but its the rest
of us that are having to lie in it.
It’s all well and good making
noises about responsible finances, but that’s not going to be anything
close to enough to turn the ship around. We say the new Government
needs to commit to shrinking the cost of government further and
faster, and to slashing the red tape which is holding our country
back.
Auditor General blasts previous government's
spending 💥💰
If there’s one thing in this life you can rely on, it’s that
Government projects will run over time and over budget. So it
shouldn’t be too hard to imagine what happened when Jacinda’s mob
created a multi-billion dollar slush fund to chuck money hand over
fist at any project that wanted it.
It’s not often you’ll find me taking the side of a
bureaucrat, but when even Wellington wonks are telling you that
perhaps spending vast sums of money without any idea what you’re
spending it on is a bad idea, you ought to listen.
Jacinda got her headlines and we got the bill. A $15.9
billion ($8,092 per household) bill to be precise.
The latest Auditor General’s report made
the wildly outlandish recommendation that
perhaps this shouldn’t be allowed to happen again. We have been
promised that Shane Jones's new Regional
Infrastructure Fund will be different this time, but you
can be rest assured that the Taxpayers' Union will be keeping
a very close eye.
The Interislander Ferry fiasco is another example of a
ludicrous Government cost blow out. The costs are
already four times what was originally quoted and we all
know the blowout wasn’t going to end there. So well done to Nicola
Willis for pulling the plug this week.
News in Brief ⏰
One more thing: Casey Costello’s maiden speech to
Parliament
Earlier this week, we had the pleasure of watching our former
Chair, now NZ First MP Casey Costello give her maiden address to
Parliament.
I know a lot of our supporters will be interested in Casey’s
path to Parliament and her words about the Treaty, public service, and
not tiptoeing around difficult conversations.
Watch
her maiden speech here.
Merry Christmas 🎅🏻🎄
I'm heading to the UK to visit family for a few weeks so this is my
last missive before the festive period. Jordan and Connor will be
holding the fort while I am away.
May I take this opportunity to thank you for your continued support
throughout the last year (and hasn't it been a big one?!) and wish you
and your family all the very best for Christmas and 2024 when it
comes.
See you on the other side!
Yours aye,
|
Callum Purves Head of
Campaigns New Zealand
Taxpayers’ Union
|
Media
coverage:
Wairarapa Times-Age Rates
relief is unlikely says review
Newstalk
ZB Tory
Whanau: Wellington's mayor on her drinking problem, commits to a life
of sobriety
The Spinoff Our
bold political predictions for 2023,
revisited
Newstalk ZB The
Huddle: Was it a good idea for the Government to scrap the
Interislander ferry project?
Newshub Leaving
presents for Department of Conservation's former director-general Lou
Sanson cost more than $5000
Press
releases:
Taxpayers’
Union calls for outcomes-focused mental health spending rather than a
cash splash
Government
Must Let Film Subsidies Fall Off Fiscal Cliff - Taxpayers’
Union
Too
Little Too Late From Meddling Treasury Mandarins
Bay
Of Plenty Paves Way For Councils To Sell Off Their Assets As Rates
Soar
Tory
Whanau Is Out Of Touch With Struggling Ratepayers
Poor
Leadership Putting Democracy At Stake In Wellington
Taxpayers’
Union Backs ACT’s Calls To Scrap Climate Change
Commission
Government
Applauded For Turning Off The Tap For KiwiRail’s Doomed
Ferries
Judith
Collins Crushing Taxpayers With Latest Round Of Corporate
Welfare
Scathing
Auditor General Report Backs Up What We All Saw Coming From Massive
Infrastructure Fund
New
Zealanders' Standard Of Living In Freefall
Taxpayers’
Union Welcomes Announcement Of Three Waters Repeal – Still Work To
Do
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