The Nation: Reserve Bank Governor Adrian Orr
On Newshub Nation, Saturday June 2nd: Lisa Owen interviews Reserve Bank Governor Adrian Orr
Lisa Owen:
Adrian Orr took up the role of Reserve Bank Governor in
March this year after a long stint as chief executive of the
New Zealand superannuation fund. Shortly after joining the
reserve bank, he spoke about his frustration at the super
fund not being able to invest in the Christchurch rebuild. I
asked him how he feels about plans for the fund to invest in
light rail in Auckland.
Adrian
Orr: I think any opportunity to be able to invest
in infrastructure for third-party capital is welcome. My
frustration was taken out wrongly. It wasn’t about
Christchurch per se; I used that as an example. It’s a
global challenge to find the ability – you know, large
pension funds, the Super Fund. Really, really hard to be
able to invest into infrastructure. So we’re in this funny
situation with a big infrastructure
deficit.
Lisa Owen: Yeah, they want
money.
Around the world, this massive
capital surplus trying to get into these types of
investments, and it’s people that get in the way. We have
this hang-up about third-party capital. And so it means that
councils, governments rely on debt and tax rather than
equity.
Why do we have a
hang-up?
I think there’s a fear of
control. But there’s property rights; you can lease a
building and use it for whatever you like. That’s why
governments don’t tend to do that more. You can build a
road; you can toll a road. Politicians are scared to use the
word ‘toll’ – you know, user-pay-type things. The user
always pays. It’s either directly or very indirectly,
through the tax system.
So do we need to get
over that?
We truly need to get over it. And
when I say ‘we’, globally. I sat on a stage last year at
the World Bank in Washington with the good and the great.
The African nations – the emerging markets – are all
screaming for capital. They’re saying, ‘Why won’t you
invest?’ And I said, ‘Well, show us the deals.’ And so
it is a political economy problem, not an investment or
economic problem.
Okay. Well, speaking of
politics, after you made those comments, the National
leader, Simon Bridges, suggested that you should stay out of
political debates.
I am out of political
debate. That is an economic point. We’re saying,
‘Economically, why aren’t you investing? This makes
sense. These can make sense,’ so it’s absolutely fine.
What I did was I reminded– Because I’m not stepping back
from that. I spoke directly to Minister Gerry Brownlee –
or, sorry, Gerry Brownlee – just to say, ‘Apologies. No
personal offence intended at all.’ In fact, I was talking
very positively about him.
So you doubled down
on your comments, didn’t you?
Well,
doubled down in a sense that part of my mandate is to
contribute to maximising sustainable employment. That means
having an efficient economy. It means having investable
opportunities. You know, the light rail itself, subject to
the maths, should stand on its own feet. But the wider
economic benefit that that then brings to all of the
businesses – corridors, productivity, you know, rather
than sitting in cars – these things are incredibly
important for maximising sustainable
employment.
Well, you talk about that, and I
want to talk about it. What’s the sweet spot? Because
there could be some conflict there, couldn’t there,
between that and inflation. Where do you think the sweet
spot is between the two?
I would say that
the sweet spot, to be honest, is probably—They are aligned
99.9% of the time in the sense of if you’re trying to
maintain low and stable inflation, then a key part of that
is making sure you don’t have excess demand or supply in
the key markets. One key market is the labour
market.
Yeah.
And so if
inflation’s running too hot and we have to lift rates,
well, part of it will be reflected in the employment game as
well.
What’s the magic number for
unemployment, then, that takes you to the happy
place?
We don’t have a magic number. That
is the real challenge, and, by the way, there never will be,
because there are so many things other than monetary policy
that impacts on employment.
So is it a totally
unachievable goal, then, if there’s no
number?
No. It’s contribute to maximum
sustainable long-term employment, so there is some long-term
sense. There’s a natural rate of unemployment, which is
how many people are actually actively looking for jobs but
don’t have the skills or meet— there are inflation rates
of unemployment. There is the amount of people actually in
the labour force – people willing to
work.
But you’re a smart man; you must have
a number in your head around about where you think it
falls.
We published in our Monetary Policy
Statement quite a range of different measures, and we
purposely did that because we are calling out for
assistance. Across the good and great, we don’t have the
monopoly on knowledge. We’re saying, ‘Hey, look,
here’s half a dozen reasonable measures of employment
levels,’ and we showed the band there was somewhere,
anywhere, between— There was probably about a 1 per cent
unemployment-rate difference between some measures, or
employment-rate difference around what is maximum. And we
said, ‘Here’s a mid-point. Here’s a range. Come and
talk to us about how—’ They all tend to move together,
but there are different drivers.
All right.
Well, let’s move on to whether we need a Royal Commission
into Banking Practices. Now, you’ve said that you don’t
think we need that. But Australian leaders thought the same
thing, so how can you be so sure we don’t need
it?
The important part here was we need to
do the work we are doing – ‘we’ being the Financial
Markets Authority and ourselves, the Reserve Bank. We are
very, very embedded in these banks, looking at their
governance, looking at their consumer care, looking at their
remediation efforts for bank complaints. That work is
necessary. At the end of that work, we may be able to say,
‘Now is a Royal Commission necessary or
not?’
So you’re leaving the door
open?
I, well—
Depending on
the outcome of that initial work. I know you don’t call
it; you’re not the one who gets the ultimate say, but you
could make a recommendation, so you’re leaving that
open.
That is right. That’s right. I mean,
our recommendation might be, ‘Hey, there needs to be
legislative change here,’ or, ‘Hey, we don’t believe
we’re getting the real oil that’s going
on.’
Do you think you are getting the real
oil?
To be tested. We have a very good
insight into the banks anyway, and the insurance, but what
we’ve done is we wrote to all of the banks and said,
‘Please explain across these areas what you’re doing
with regard to your conduct and behaviour.’ And we’ve
got those essays back. We’ve had our first
prelim—
But not everyone responded, did
they?
We asked 10 specifically to write, and
they all responded. An 11th offered it up. So we went first
of all just to the 10 large banks – and we did that
deliberately, because you know it’s the best place to
start – four of which were Australian.
So
what have they told you, and do you believe it
all?
We are going to be getting right under
the skin, because they’ve told us—It’s a mixed series.
The larger, more sophisticated banks have given us big
essays. They’ve had a lot of practice from years and
years—I think there’s been 55 investigations in
Australia on different practices. So we’ve got a pretty
clear guide as to where we now need to lift the lid and see,
‘Well, they said this; is it real? Show us how it happened
in practice.’ We need to be talking to staff, to
customers, to chairs of the boards, and that’s what
we’ll be doing over the next few months.
So
you’re not just taking their word for
it?
No, far from it.
Which lid
are you lifting? What areas will it be specifically, do you
think?
Across the four main areas – that
is around, I suppose, governance – how serious are the
boards about understanding conduct and behaviour; and how
does good news and bad news travel up to them; and are the
policies being put in place. There’s the actual code of
conducts within the management teams – how are they
incentivised to sell, to behave, and—
So are
they giving bogus advice to get their numbers
up?
Well, in some cases, that is clearly
conflicts of interests if they have to sell more and more
products to people who don’t need them. By the way, this
is across many industries.
Well, 75% of cases
in Australia that are before the Commission were found to be
giving unsound advice, obviously giving advice that
benefited them, because they were selling products. Do you
think that’s an issue here in New
Zealand?
I think there will be some of those
issues. I would say that’s what the banks are working on.
Are they working on it quick enough, deliberately enough?
The FMA put out some conduct guidelines. There was a
Sedgwick report that came out—
So do you
think it’s widespread, or do you think--? Because
there’s been talk – one-off, individual’s behaviour.
But when it comes to that—
All the
indicators we have at the moment is it’s not widespread.
By the way,…
Even when it comes to financial
advice?
…so there’s the
conduct—Financial advice, I’d say, would be one of the
trickiest areas. One of their main concerns, to be honest,
around financial advice is that people don’t get enough of
it. It’s very hard to access, and banks are very good at
delivering it. They’re one of the few places with the
economies of scale, scope that they can afford to provide
the advice. So we need to tread really carefully there. We
don’t want to say, ‘Hey, stop providing advice,’
because then there is none. So it’s about – how do you
get good advice out there, non-conflicted with the products?
And that’s all around the conduct behaviours we’re
looking at. Is it perfect yet? No.
Okay. Very
quickly, the two other areas; you said there were
four.
Yeah, so their consumer focus, I
think, is a really, really important one. We touched a
little bit on that. But just – how is the consumer being
treated? What is their overall experience? And the last one
is remediation. If I’ve had a problem, who do I go to? Am
I treated fairly? Is it happening? Across those two,
particularly the remediation, there’s very low measurable
indicators of problems – you, know, the Banking Ombudsman.
It’s nothing like in Australia. I don’t know if we just
complain less or if it’s buried more. And so that’s what
we want to find out. The measures say it’s not an issue.
Is it not an issue because we’ve just given up
complaining?
Right.
Or is it
not an issue because they are being well dealt
with?
So you’re leaving your options open in
that regard. I want to move on to mortgages –
income-to-debt ratios for people holding mortgages in your
Financial Stability Report. It’s topping up to nearly 350
per cent for mortgage holders. That sounds scary to me. Does
it scare you?
Yes, it does. And, you know,
we shout out, ‘Hey, we’re scared.’ That’s why we put
in a regulatory impost – this loan-to-value ratio. But
households… Looking from the baking sector, wearing my
banking hat, the banks are very well capitalised, highly
liquid and very diverse, so it’s not a systemic risk to
the banking. Looking from the consumer side, understand
leverage is very, very high, and prices do fall just as they
rise. And so—
How many people are at risk of
tipping over? And what’s the pinch point in an interest
that would push them over the edge?
So,
we’ve done lots of scenario tests. The good news is that
it’s a very low-interest-rate environment. The thing that
tips people over is unemployment – if they’re without an
income.
So how many are at risk, do you
think?
Well, it just depends on what happens
to the employment. And it’s not a big proportion, but it
becomes herd in market behaviour. If someone tips over, then
they start selling. Our biggest concern, I’d
say, was in the investor market. This is where
people—
So people buying second homes for
rentals?
Yeah. This is where people have
five times their income leveraged in these mortgages, and
you’re saying, ‘That is just too high.’ And that’s
why we put a very high loan-to-value ratio restriction on
the investors, and that’s worked. It’s disappointing
that we have to do that. You know? Why are banks lending at
such an extreme level?
So it should be them
that puts the handbrake on – not
you?
Well, in an ideal world, if banks are
thinking over the long-term, sustainable customers, you
know, they want you to—
So their lending is
dangerous, is it?
Their lending practices
can get dangerous, yeah. And that’s why regulators
exist.
So are they acting
irresponsibly?
Well, that’s going to be
part of our question as well – how responsible are your
lending practices? And at times, we know that they haven’t
been responsible. You know? We’ve had a global financial
crisis recently.
But are they still being
irresponsible?
It seems to be seasonal.
People get excited; we forget the last crisis; and then we
go back to very high credit growth. More recently, people
have become, in the banks, far better behaved. So credit
growth has slowed a lot, but a lot of that is because
we’ve made it happen as opposed to it happening
naturally.
Talking about the LVRs – the
loan-to-value restrictions – and you say that they’re
having some influence, but have they had any influence on
the price of a house?
No. But house-price
growth has slowed, so they’re probably indirect, i.e. it
influences credit
growth,…
Yes.
…and it
means if credit is harder to get, well, then there’s going
to be less demand for housing, and hence house prices should
ease. And we have seen house-price inflation easing. It’s
gone from double digits down to low single. We want to see
house-price growth remain at a much slower—and take the
pressure out.
Do you need to be putting the
screws on harder, then, rather than considering easing LVRs
over the next, what, 18 months?
So, it’s
forward-looking. We’re saying, ‘Hey, if the trends and
inflation pressure comes out of the housing and, more
importantly, if credit growth remains very low and
measuring, basically, income growth, then over time, we may
be able to remove the LVRs.’ But our nervousness is – if
we remove them, do banks just go back to pumping the credit
again? So we need to get confidence.
So around
that, then, will KiwiBuild properties be exempt from
LVRs?
I can’t answer that,
sorry.
What do you
think?
Uh…
Why can’t you
answer it?
Because I don’t know the
answer.
Right. So, but pondering it now, what
are your thoughts?
Uh,
exempt.
Exempt them?
I would
be thinking if you’re trying to get low-income families
into homes and whatever, so…
Won’t you
just throw fuel on the fire?
It’s about
adding supply, not demand, so that’s what I’m saying. If
it’s about getting housing out there very quickly and
having people able to access them – people who should be
in that access space. So whether it’s an LVR exemption or
some kind of income restriction or whatever, if the aim is
to get affordable houses out there to people who can’t
afford them presently, then make them
affordable.
Great to talk to you. Thanks for
joining us this morning. Much
appreciated.
Thank you.
Thanks.
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