Next Up, Alert Level
2.25
As recently as last Monday, Auckland needed to stay at Level 3 for
another week to defeat the virus. Yesterday it turned out that Level
2.5 was sufficient. New Zealanders want to trust the Government, but
changes without rhyme or reason make it difficult. What new
information did the Government receive between Monday and Sunday?
Flying Over The Road Blocks
Have trouble getting to work through Auckland’s road blocks? You
may have chosen the wrong vehicle. 13,000 people found that an Airbus
A320 or an ATR72-600 were far more effective than any car. That's how
many left via the airport, according to Newshub. The Government cannot
even manage a border within New Zealand. This may be why the South
Island remains in Level 2.
A Better Approach
ACT has never been a party to just complain. As our co-founder, Sir
Roger Douglas, wrote nearly 40 years ago, ‘There’s Got To Be A Better
Way.’ On Covid, ACT’s
Wellbeing Approach to the pandemic shows how we can make
elimination affordable. We’d do it by learning from the best countries
instead of indulgently comparing ourselves with the worst, as the
Government has.
Let’s Talk About Debt
The Government has committed to borrow $140 billion on top of the
$60 billion debt it had pre-Covid. That’s an extra $140,000 on behalf
of a family of five making a total of $200,000. For many families,
their biggest debt will be the one the Government took on for them.
Amongst the Covid panic, people have missed the massive deterioration
in our fiscal position.
Why Have We Missed It?
We are being lulled into a false sense of security by cheap money
and low interest rates. Two years ago, the Government was paying four
percent interest. Ten years ago, it paid over six percent. Cheap money
won’t last, and the impacts of government borrowing will be felt
keenly by future generations.
Time To Show Some Interest
Even at current government borrowing rates under two percent, a
family of five will soon pay over $5,000 in interest on the public
debt each year. The Government has left New Zealanders with a debt
equivalent to having every family max out their credit cards. By the
end of Treasury’s forecast period, interest repayments will be larger
than education.
On So Many Levels
The Green Party voted to decimate the Taranaki economy with the oil
and gas exploration ban. The Green Party voted to destroy charter
schools that served disadvantaged students. The Green Party opposes
any funding for private schools. The Green Party gave $12 million to a
private school in Taranaki to help the local economy recover. The
Green Party now cannot reverse the situation because their ‘friends’
in Government are hanging them out to dry. The Green Party will not
make five percent. The Green Party will be gone from Parliament. New
Zealand will be better off without them.
ACT’s Approach
ACT has a principled approach to this problem. Student Education
Accounts would allow parents, not the Green Party, to take their share
of education funding to any public or private school that would enrol
their child. The Government spends $250,000 per citizen on education.
ACT would put parents in charge of how it is spent.
We Love What You Do, But...
We don't see enough of ACT on TV. ACT has massively
disproportionate influence for a single MP, but we take the point.
Fortunately, we live in a world where we can reach voters directly,
and a recent Newsroom analysis showed ACT is the fastest growing party
on digital media. The catch is we pay for the exposure. The extended
election has meant our budget has extended 30 percent. Please help us
reach more voters by donating
here. Every dollar counts.
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