(The Budget Speech is released on a rolling embargo this is part 1.)
Budget Speech
Introduction
Mr Speaker, I
move that the Appropriation (2000/2001 Estimates) Bill be
now read a second time.
It is with a sense of honour and
privilege that I present today the Labour-Alliance
Coalition's first budget. The Budget 2000 does not try to
do everything at once. But it does mark out a new
direction. It points the way to rebuilding a fair and
sustainable social and economic order.
For too long, New
Zealanders have voted for one set of policies and got
another. This Government will continue to honour its
election commitments and thus restore faith in the political
process.
For too long, New Zealand governments have
ignored the growing gap between rich and poor. This
Government is committed to closing the gaps.
For too
long, governments have neglected provincial New Zealand.
This Government will invest in the regions.
This Budget
is about a new start for a new century.
All New
Zealanders depend on a thriving economy. It delivers the
incomes needed for personal development and fulfilment, and
for active participation in society. Within the economy,
markets are vital channels through which individuals make
choices about employment, production, saving and
consumption. The liberating power of the market mechanism
must be recognised.
It is important, though, to see
economic life as more than materialistic consumption; an
economic system as more than a set of markets. It is in
this wider context that the Budget 2000 has been
constructed.
The Budget moves us, as a society, a step
closer to the destination we set for ourselves through the
six goals laid out in the March Budget Policy
Statement.
These are to:
· develop an innovative
economy which creates jobs and provides opportunities for
all New Zealanders
· foster education and skills
·
close the gaps that now divide our society
· restore
trust in government and to promote a strong public
service
· treasure and nurture our environment, and
·
celebrate our identity as a people who defend freedom and
fairness, enjoy arts, music, movement and sport, value our
cultural heritage and who are committed to the Treaty of
Waitangi.
These are the values that drive this
Government. They will continue to create the context for
our decision-making. They are the framework within which I
will present the Budget announcements.
A generation ago,
the 1972 Royal Commission on Social Policy defined the task
of public policy as enabling all citizens to feel they
belong to, and can actively participate, in society. That
definition is just as relevant today as it was then.
We
cannot, as individuals, as families and as communities,
celebrate our identity if we are locked out of participation
and made outsiders in our own land.
This means that the
Government has to recognise that there are rights of
citizenship that exist alongside rights to own and trade
property. Honouring rights of citizenship is a fundamental
obligation of governments. In meeting that obligation
governments provide basic entitlements, and do not merely
step in when markets fail.
We have the advantage of a
strong economic outlook. Growth is forecast to average
around 3% per annum over the next three years on the back of
a robust world economy and a competitive exchange rate.
Unemployment is expected to reduce to just above 5% by March
2002. I would like it to fall further and remain
low.
There is more life in the provinces. Tourism is
expanding. Exports are increasing steadily and the export
base is widening. We have seen a welcome resurgence in
agriculture and the prospects for primary exporters continue
to look good.
This should assist in bringing the external
deficit closer to sustainable levels. It is now running at
around 8% of gross domestic product. We should see it
shrink back to about 5% of GDP over the next two
years.
On the fiscal front, the Government is looking
ahead to substantial and rising surpluses. This year's
surplus is forecast at $763 million. The 2000/2001 figure
is expected to rise to $1.01 billion. This is in line with
the Budget Policy Statement forecast of $1.0 billion.
Projections for the following two years - 2001/2002 and
2002/2003 - show the same pattern of continuing improvement
at a little over $2 billion and $2.7 billion
respectively.
Those surpluses represent increased
national savings. We will not spend them. We have promised
that we will be a fiscally conservative Government and we
will hold to that promise. The $5.9 billion spending cap we
have imposed on ourselves remains in place, even though it
will demand great discipline over the next two
budgets.
The Budget consolidates initiatives taken since
the election, complements them with new initiatives, and
creates a platform from which the country can build a sense
of identity, integrity, prosperity and purpose.
The
foundations are access to education, to affordable housing,
to health services, to a job and to an income in retirement
that is consistent with peace of mind, dignity, and a
capacity to participate actively in society.
1 Developing
an Innovative Economy
Economic development
In the
modern age, all economies face a mix of opportunity, stress
and challenge. We live in a time of massive and rapid
technological change. Global markets and world financial
systems are at one level more open and accessible, and at
another, less predictable.
Everywhere, governments are
reassessing how they can best assist the private sector to
manage the risks in the new economic environment, and
prosper from the opportunities it presents.
A lot of
money is, and always has been, spent in creating and
maintaining a framework in which economies operate, change
and grow. Government programmes cover a broad spectrum from
developing skills, providing infrastructural supports and
maintaining stable financial and market systems, to more
specific supports like provision of business information and
trade assistance.
The challenge now is to coordinate
those efforts, continuously monitor them to improve their
effectiveness, and to provide resources to upgrade the level
and scope of the economic development effort.
As one part
of the wider policy framework, we promised that we would
increase investment in industry assistance by $100 million a
year before the end of our first term in office.
We have
done better than that. Today's budget allocates an
additional $112.5 million a year from 2002/2003. We will
get there in three roughly equal instalments beginning with
$34 million in the coming year, rising to just over $73
million in 2001/2002 and reaching $112.5 million in the
third year.
The money will be spent on a range of
services, including a strategic investment service, early
stage financing assistance and developing business skills.
And not just in the cities, but in the regions also.
We
do not want to pick winners. We do not want to regulate,
subsidise or compel. We do want to help businesses find new
markets and become winners. At times that means getting the
regulatory framework right so that short term opportunism
does not damage the wider public commercial good. At times
it means ensuring the right financing options are available.
At times it means taking a direct leadership
role.
Industry New Zealand will work with firms with good
growth potential to enable them to fully realise that
potential. Specifically it will assist them to develop
business plans, build partnerships with other businesses and
approach financiers. It will also work with Trade New
Zealand to actively market New Zealand as an investment
destination.
The funding also allows for the
establishment of a nationwide regional development strategy
to be administered by Industry New Zealand in partnership
with local authorities and other local groups. This will be
reinforced by a coordinated central government effort,
organised through the Ministry of Economic Development, in
areas with particularly acute problems.
The Government
will provide financial support to help communities through
the process of developing their plans, developing the
capacity to implement their plans and implementing them.
Details of the principal regional development vehicle will
be announced soon.
A further increase of just under $3.5
million a year has been allocated to the Ministry of
Economic Development specifically for policy advice on
economic
development.
ENDS