NZ to join Australian Small Businessl Council
NZ to join Australian Small Business Ministerial Council
New Zealand is to become a full member of Australia's
Small Business
Ministerial Council, Small Business
Minister Lianne Dalziel said today.
Australian Small
Business Minister Fran Bailey today announced that
the
Small Business Ministerial Council had endorsed a
revised charter providing
for full New Zealand membership
of the Council, she said. The SBMC provides
a forum for
Australian government, state and territory ministers to
discuss
small business issues and promotes a national
approach to small business
policy and
development.
Lianne Dalziel said that the decision to make
New Zealand a full member
represented an important
strengthening of the Trans-Tasman commitment
to
consulting on issues relating to the development and
future prospects of
Australian and New Zealand small
businesses, particularly those issues
requiring
co-operation of member governments.
"I welcome the
opportunity to become a full participant in such
an
important Ministerial council and believe that the
mutual exchange of ideas
and information will be very
good for New Zealand small businesses," she
said.
"As
New Zealand's Commerce Minister, I am also involved in both
the Closer
Economic Relations and Single Economic Market
agendas which have
complimentary work programmes to the
work of this council."
Lianne Dalziel said it was a very
timely opportunity for New Zealand with
this recent
establishment of our Quality Regulation Review which
includes
the decision to adopt the Business Cost
Compliance Calculator.
"It is also true that the majority
of New Zealand small businesses test
their ability to
enter export markets by exporting to Australia. It
will
obviously help New Zealand businesses exporting to
Australia if they are
able to meet similar compliance
requirements. That is why this Labour-led
government has
worked so hard on the SEM and CER agendas, and now why
we
are extending our influence into this Small Business
Council."
Lianne Dalziel said Australian businesses would also benefit from the move.
"There has never been a
monopoly on good ideas and they come from both
sides of
the Tasman. I am looking forward to working with Minister
Bailey
and the council for the benefit of small
businesses in both our
countries."
Ends