New Zealand First
Promotes Capital Gains Tax
We couldn’t believe it either, but it
has set up a website to ask supporters if they want a capital
gains tax or a wealth tax. There are two possibilities. One, New
Zealand First has been set up, and someone is breaking the Electoral
Act by putting Winston Peters' name on it. Two, New Zealand First is
getting desperate and will do anything for votes.
How
Desperate?
Roy
Morgan has ACT ahead of New Zealand First in its May poll. ACT on
3.5 per cent would mean 4 or 5 ACT MPs. New Zealand First at 2.5 means
it is goneburger in September. Best of all, we have not spent $3
billion of taxpayer money trying to get votes. But New Zealand has
bigger problems.
We Are Not Invincible
If the world was a country, New Zealand would be the nice town
where nothing really bad ever happens. Events that consume weeks with
soul searching here are sadly commonplace elsewhere. The danger of
having so little trouble is that we’re not used to recognising it,
even when it’s right in front of us.
Here’s
Trouble
Let’s count it up. As a country, we have a huge net external
indebtedness. The Government is embarking on enormous deficit
spending. The Reserve Bank Governor is getting a little
entrepreneurial with the money supply. Combined, we risk paying debts
with a deflated currency. Add in a worsening geopolitical situation
and it is a recipe for servitude.
Net External
Debt
How much do five million New Zealanders owe through government and
private borrowing compared with how much they own? Depending on the
statistics you use, New Zealanders collectively owe almost $200
billion more than they own. This net position means that we are among
the most indebted developed countries. Only the PIGS (Portugal,
Ireland, Greece, and Spain) are worse than New
Zealand.
Government Deficits
The Government has embarked on deficit spending that will increase
public debt by 34 percent of GDP, or about $140 billion dollars over
the five years to 2024. Public debt will hit levels last seen in
tumult of the early 1990s. This occurs in part because of the COVID-19
crisis, but also because the Government has no intention of reducing
its business as usual
spending.
Monetisation
Adding fuel to the fire, the Reserve Bank is happily offering to
buy $90 billion of government bonds, effectively printing New Zealand
dollars and handing them to the Government. One usually sober old
Herald commentator describes this as making confetti out of
our currency. The real question is will the government ever buy the
bonds back? Once the Reserve Bank becomes a crutch for government
spending, voter expectations get baked in and it’s very difficult for
any government to stop.
Don’t Worry, Moody’s And
S&P Say It’s Fine
Some people might think that all of the above would lead to a blow
out. Investors lose faith in the currency when the Reserve Bank is
just printing it for political reasons. We end up highly indebted and
trying to pay it back with the new South Pacific peso. The Finance
Minister points to rating agencies keeping the New Zealand Government
at AAA, for now. These are the same rating agencies that thought
subprime mortgages were a good idea and gave New Zealand top ratings
right up to the 1984 currency crisis.
A Frontier
Society
New Zealand is a frontier society of people who moved to the end of
the earth for a better life. As such, the world doesn’t care about us
nearly as much as we sometimes like to think, but we depend on them
having confidence to invest in us. We have to live by our wits, and
that means having top quality institutions. We need a central bank
issuing currency independent of a government that is itself dedicated
to fiscal prudence, or things can go pear shaped very
quickly.
We Can Collectively Lose Our
Minds
Unfortunately, there is no law saying New Zealand has to remain a
first world country with a high standard of living. It’s possible for
a small democracy to collectively lose its mind and go off the edge of
a cliff. Lots of societies have done it before, and it looks like
that’s exactly what we’re doing.
Demagoguery Has Many
Faces
Jacinda Ardern at a personal level is warm and caring. That
probably makes her more dangerous than the nastier characters in
history who led their people to disaster. She’s easier to trust and
harder to oppose. The cost of the current folly is no less for it
though. Let’s call it kind danger.
We Need Critical
Thinking
New Zealand needs a strategy that is not blind to the danger of
overextending ourselves. We need a line in the sand about the Reserve
Bank’s independence. It must not print money to finance government
spending. We need a fiscal track that reduces our debt and gets us
back to surplus by 2024 at the latest. We need widespread regulatory
reform, starting with the RMA, to get private sector activity
happening faster.
We Have Such A Plan
ACT’s six point plan for investment, jobs and growth is contained
in our Alternative
Budget. We have been amazed at its quiet, widespread readership.
The most unexpected people have told Free Press, ‘your budget
sounds great, how can we make it happen?’ Well, here’s the
answer.
How You Can Help
The most powerful political advocacy is word of mouth. Believe us,
your friends, family and colleagues trust you more than any
politician. If you are worried this country is collectively losing its
mind, and there is not enough discussion confronting the real issues,
please forward this Free Press with its link to our Alternative
Budget. The future is counting on your actions.
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