Speech: Peters - Creating the wealth but getting little
EMBARGOED TILL 1.30PM
Speech by New Zealand First Leader and
Northland MP Rt Hon Winston Peters
Public
meeting,
Bev Ridges on York (Tamatea Hotel)
1 Durham
Ave, Tamatea
Napier
1.30pm, 6th November,
2016
“Creating the wealth but
getting little in return”
On the surface things appear to be going well
in Hawke’s Bay.
The Infometrics' June 2016 Quarterly
Economic Monitor said this region’s economic growth
outpaced Auckland, Wellington and Christchurch for the year
to June.
Given that Auckland’s growth is based on
massive immigration driven consumption which cannot last,
Wellington is the capital, and Christchurch is still
rebuilding after a terrible disaster, the Hawke’s Bay
economy may appear to be rolling along.
Yet there are
underlying problems.
Young
unemployed
The Government measures employment
this way.
If you have only one hour’s work a week
you’re then regarded as being employed.
This means
that the criteria the Government is using is a lie.
On
top of that there are over 100,000 New Zealanders whose
hours of work are so short that they are seriously under
employed and need taxpayer top ups to survive.
In the
last two years the national unemployment figures, those
without even one hour’s work a week, have risen to
128,000.
Despite this fictional criteria unemployment is
not coming down – it’s staying more or less the
same.
Both Hawke’s Bay and Gisborne have the second
highest rate of unemployment in the country - 6.5 per
cent.
Northland is the highest with 7.6
percent.
Perhaps the most worrying statistic concerns
young people.
The rate of young people not in work,
education or training is now growing again.
In the last
two years the number of 15 to 24 year olds who are not in
employment, education or training has risen by 3000 to
74,000.
Meanwhile, under National there has been net
migration in excess of 470,000.
These are people allowed
to come and reside here permanently.
You don’t have to
be a genius to work out what this means.
If you are
unemployed, then you are facing huge competition from the
flood of new immigrants.
A lot of these immigrants are so
desperate to work they will accept any pay and work
conditions.
Let’s remember also that on top of this
more than 100,000 foreign students are coming to New Zealand
each year, most having work visas.
In the light of all
this, is it any wonder then that unemployment is such a
cancer in our society?
And it is a national scandal that
74,000 young Kiwis are left to do nothing.
New Zealand
First has presented proposals for Youth Employment, Training
and Education that would give at risk youth paid employment,
education and training to prevent them from a lifetime of
welfare dependency.
We can’t go on failing to engage
these young people before they fall off the
rails.
Police
In the last six
years the Government has claimed “crime in NZ is
falling”.
That claim as you all now know is
false.
It’s a major concern here.
Our police are
facing a crisis and we were reminded of this last
week.
The newly appointed Police Association president
Chris Cahill said crime was increasing at such a rate,
police could not cope and they needed help.
He said
police are struggling to deal with increased crime, the
resurgence of gangs and the war against drugs.
New
Zealand First has been pointing out for years the obvious,
that crime has been increasing but the government and Police
Minister Judith Collins have continued to deny it.
Since
2008 the total number of incidents that police have attended
has increased over 20% - from 420,000 to 525,000 when last
measured.
Up over 105,000 and yet arrests are down by
3000
That’s a drop in arrests, while incidents have
gone up, but National keep saying crime is going down.
It isn’t.
To massage the figures the Police have
been following a policy more appropriate to recreational
fishing – “Tag and Release”.
In short they have
caught the offenders but instead of charging them, they are
giving them warnings.
Hence the arrest figures have gone
down at the same time as the offence figures have gone
up.
That’s a major exercise in political deception but
it is not the fault of the Police who are acting under a
Government direction.
New Zealand First knows the major
challenges our police have.
We would introduce, as fast
as training permits, 1800 new front line police officers.
When last in Government we gave police, in 3 years, 1000
more frontline police.
We understand New Zealanders
should go to bed knowing their homes, streets and businesses
are safe.
Under this government that is not
happening.
Rural Police
Support (RPs)
Also in our policy we will roll
out support for police in regional NZ.
Rural areas of New
Zealand have far too few police.
1800 extra police will
have a major impact but will not of itself solve the crime
issue in our provinces.
The Police Workplace Survey
showed that police morale is lower in country areas than in
the cities.
In many cases police stationed there work
alone – or have countless Police Stations unstaffed or
closed at weekends.
New Zealand First would create and
trial Rural Police Support.
Our RPS would come from all
walks of life, similar to the rural volunteer fire
service.
They would meet the recruitment requirements as
set by the NZ Police.
They would undergo training and
receive an allowance.
They would volunteer for a minimum
of 16 hours a month.
They would man police stations in
the absence of fulltime officers.
They would go on
patrols, take part in crime prevention initiatives and be
involved helping police in major incidents, providing
operational support to regular officers.
At no time will
they replace fulltime police – but they will act in a
supportive capacity.
Immigration
Many of our
problems – infrastructure, housing and resources that are
stretched to the limit - stem from surging immigration - the
direct cause of our biggest ever annual increase in
population.
This is at record levels.
Net immigration
– that is the number of immigrants who settle here
permanently is running at over 69,000 a year.
That means
each year we are creating a city the size of New Plymouth
through permanent immigrants.
It’s
unsustainable.
Jobs, housing, hospitals, healthcare, and
schools – they are all under massive pressure and
there’s no let up.
Most immigrants are coming to
Auckland
Now there is a connection between immigration
and the provinces.
They may not be coming here but the
tax payers costs most definitely are.
Who do you think is
going to be paying for Auckland’s infrastructure mess
borne of massive immigration?
You are.
And every
dollar going there is a dollar not going to solve problems
you have in the provinces.
Some of our political
opponents have sensed the public mood and made noises about
how immigration might be getting out of hand.
Treasury,
MBIE, ANZ and others have said the same thing.
Economist
Kerry McDonald described our current rate of immigration as
“a national disaster.”
We’re cramming more and more
people into Auckland and the infrastructure can’t handle
it.
The tap must be turned down to 10,000 skilled
immigrants a year.
We should only accept immigrants we
need – not those who need us.
Boosting the regions
New
Zealand First will breathe new life into regions like
Hawke’s Bay by shifting government departments into
provincial centres throughout the country.
Regions such
as Hawke’s Bay need jobs to boost their
economies.
Service industries and shops will flourish
with more residents spending their money
locally.
Currently we have a country with the majority of
jobs concentrated in overloaded cities.
There is no
reason in this age of advanced technology that government
office jobs cannot be in smaller cities and towns.
For
example, why is the Conservation Estate located in all the
provinces, yet the Conservation Department is parked up in
high real estate Wellington?
Many workers will welcome
the opportunity to ditch long big city commutes for a drive
of a few minutes and the outdoor recreational opportunities
on their doorstep.
Others who have been forced to seek
job opportunities in cities will be able to return
home.
They will all benefit from much cheaper real estate
- many Kiwi civil servants will be able to achieve the Kiwi
dream of owning their own home.
New Zealand First has
always argued for common sense policies like this to benefit
all New Zealanders.
The onslaught of neo-liberal policies
in the 1980s under Labour and its continuation by National
governments drained provincial New Zealand of its jobs and
services as government departments were moved, downsized or
sold off to private enterprise.
NZ First
will give equality with Auckland back to the
provinces
We will give
provincial New Zealand equality with the big cities,
especially when it comes to transport spending.
Labour
and National, the “Coke and Pepsi” of politics, are
outdoing themselves with how many billions of dollars they
can throw on Auckland.
While New Zealand First backs
better transport it must be for all New Zealanders.
This
is why New Zealand First will insist that for every dollar
spent on major new transport projects in cities like
Auckland, a comparative spend must be made on projects in
provincial New Zealand.
Regional New Zealand is tired of
being the Cinderella when it comes to broadband, mobile
phone coverage, roads, rail and even access to banking
services.
Take the $1 million a metre that Auckland’s
Cross Rail Tunnel is now expected to cost, and they
haven’t even begun to dig it. The taxpayer is footing
$500,000 of the $1 million per metre.
That wouldn’t be
an issue if Northland’s Victorian rail tracks and bridges
were upgraded to take trucks off SH1 with a spur put into
Northport. Nor would it be if the Gisborne-Wairoa rail line
was reinstated because both would cost less than a few
hundred metres of that tunnel.
Yet Labour is
promising to fast track the Mt Roskill Light Rail at over
$107,000 a metre. That means that taxpayers from Gore,
Hawke’s Bay and all the way to Kaitaia will be expected to
pay for half of it.
These big city free spending
politicians forget where the wealth of this country comes
from. Our top three primary exports are worth more than
every ‘service export’ combined. Even that forgets that
tourists come to experience provincial New Zealand and not
the cities.
That is why NZ First will ensure transport in
the regions gets the same priority with cities, and
comparative spending on major new projects.
NZ First’s other policies for the
regions
Some of us recall when Hawke’s Bay was
the booming centre of huge export industries.
The main
reason it is not doing as well as it should be is that New
Zealand’s economy is being run for big city and
international interests despite the great export wealth
being created in the provinces.
You are about production
and exports.
They are mainly about consumption and
imports.
We want the Reserve Bank Act changed so that New
Zealand’s currency settings reflect that New Zealand is an
export, production and more wealth, not consumption and more
debt, economy.
NZ First has a Royalties for the Regions
Policy.
Under this policy, 25% of royalties collected by
the government from extractive enterprises such as mining,
petroleum and water stay in the region of origin.
As an
example, the government collects over $400 million in
royalties. Under our scheme over $100 million, year on year,
would remain in the regions for investment.
That money
would help to regenerate regional New Zealand.
We would
stop the sale of our land to people who are not New
Zealanders.
We would boost funding for regional roads and
rail.
We would ensure key export industry sectors remain
in New Zealand hands.
We would turn the tap of
immigration way down and require many of them to live in the
regions for a number of years before going to the big
cities.
Our policy unveiled over the next few months
would help provisional industry leaders and farmers to
employ New Zealanders locally rather than bring in thousands
of immigrants, for example, to work on farms.
When
Hawke’s Bay was booming that’s exactly what we did and
we’re going to do it again.
The Ministry of Primary
Industries says we need over 8000 new farmers for dairying
alone if we are to meet targets of doubling exports by
2025.
Government is doing nothing to address that.
And
in future policies soon to be announced we will address the
‘twilight zone’ of a growing under class where mainly
young people drop out of our economy with few choices to get
back in.
Conclusion
New Zealand has
a two-tier economy – Auckland, Christchurch and the
rest.
We want a one-tier economy where, from Invercargill
to Kaitaia, the provinces again become central, core, and
critical to our recovery.
New Zealand has massive
personal debt, Government debt up eight times in just on
eight years, and it is New Zealand First’s intention that
the provinces be restored to their rightful place as the
drivers of economic wealth and security.
We hear
you.
We did that once – when we were a world
leader.
And we are going to do it again.
I’m asking
you to help us do just that.
ENDS