Dear Supporter,
Another busy week fighting for lower taxes, less waste, and
more transparency on your behalf.
Revealed: Shane Jones’ hypocrisy over regional Jetstar
services
Last month, Regional Economic Development Minister Shane Jones
claimed he was “incredibly disappointed” that Jetstar cancelling
its regional services.
So we wondered what the self-proclaimed
"champion of the regions" has done to support those services while
crisscrossing the country as Minister for Regional Development, so we
asked his office. Twenty-eight days after our original
information request (the maximum time allowed under the Official
Information Act), we can now confirm Shane Jones has not flown
with Jetstar since he was elected in 2017. It seems the
'regional champion' is too good for cattle class. If
politicians insist on using the swanky airline for all their
taxpayer-funded travel, they shouldn't cry crocodile tears when the
budget option scales back services. We’re
calling on Shane Jones and all MPs to save money by using Jetstar for
travel. The Government’s massive travel budget could have quite an
impact on Jetstar’s capacity to serve the regions that Mr Jones claims
to champion.
Another IT boondoggle...
The Government has signed off on a $13 million
taxpayer-funded research grant for Te Reo voice recognition
technology. According
to the Ministry for Business, Innovation, and Employment, the
project is hoped to allow people to ask Siri or Alexa things like how
to “find a choice as kai of panipopo”. This will “ensure a New Zealand
identity is firmly embedded in the digital world”. It's a
classic case of taxpayer money being poured into a shiny, fashionable
IT project that is a nice-to-have at best. We say these projects
should be left to private companies who have an incentive to keep
costs under control and develop technology that people will actually
use. Someone on the median wage would have to pay
income tax for 1,500 years to cover the cost of this project. We say
the money could have been used to provide more much-needed measles
vaccines, or tax relief. This is the same "Strategic
Science Investment Fund" that last
year allocated $5.4 million for research into shoe leather.
The fact Minister Megan Woods is proudly putting
out press releases about this kind of corporate welfare leads us
to wonder whether she has taxpayers’ interests at heart.
Corporate welfare for Rio Tinto would be
disastrous
The previous Government’s $30 million bailout for Rio Tinto (the
$36 billion corporate that owns the Tiwai Point smelter) was meant to
be final. Now the company is angling
for another handout.
This would be a disaster for taxpayers. The last thing we
need is for international corporates to see New Zealand as a soft
touch for corporate welfare. There’s even a risk that
companies will make false threats of closure in order to secure
taxpayer dosh.
Rather than doing favours for individual
companies, Government could make it more affordable for anyone to do
business, by cutting regulatory taxes and lowering the company tax
rate (which, at 28 percent, is one of the highest in the OECD).
ETS delay is good news
The Government has made the right decision by allowing farmers to
develop their own emissions pricing system, instead of forcing them
into the Emissions Trading Scheme.
Bringing agriculture into
the ETS quickly would have punished the economy and hurt farming
communities – even while agricultural production shifted offshore,
with only a minuscule net impact on global
emissions.
Politicians must not allow their desire to
combat to develop into an "at all costs" mentality. The
Government should also continue to monitor developments overseas to
ensure climate action isn't simply pushing domestic farming to other
countries.
Are lower taxes, less waste, and more transparency worth
the price of a weekly coffee?
The Taxpayers' Union relies on your financial support. An
easy way to support our work is to set up a monthly
donation – even just $20 a month. That’s a cup of
coffee a week.
To
set up a monthly donation so the Taxpayers’ Union can fight on your
behalf click here.
Your support allows us to spend less time fundraising, and more
time fighting for taxpayers like you.
Have a great weekend,
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Louis
Houlbrooke Communications Officer New Zealand
Taxpayers' Union
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