Tax issues and political threats
In a speech to the Christchurch CTU/Government post-Budget briefing, CTU president Ross Wilson explains why tax cuts
will cost working people - and the threat posed if National wins the election.
- Introduction to CTU Government Forum - Post Budget briefing.
Christchurch 13th July 2005 Ross Wilson PresidentN Z Council of Trade Unions
It is my pleasure on behalf of the CTU to welcome you all to this forum, and to extend, on your behalf, a very warm
welcome to the Prime Minister and her Ministers.
This forum is part of a second round of CTU Government Forums. The first forum last year was very popular with union
delegates and more were called for. So here we are.
The CTU Officers regard these meetings as a vital opportunity for direct communication between union delegates and our
Prime Minister and key Ministers.
You are the heart of our movement. You are the workplace leaders, and other members look to you for guidance on issues.
This forum gives you access to information direct from Government Ministers.
These events must be unique in any country of the world. This is participatory democracy in action and we should
acknowledge that with pride.
Prime Minister, we are very grateful that you have again taken the time to attend and engage in a dialogue with us. We
have had a very successful partnership with your Governments over the past 6 years and, working together, we have
delivered a lot for union members and working families.
When we recall the gloom and doom predicted by business organizations and opposition parties about every Government
measure from the ERA to health and safety laws, it is particularly satisfying that we have: The strongest economic
growth of any OECD country The lowest unemployment in 19 years A marked increase in fulltime jobs and participation of
women in the workforce A much fairer employment law framework - and workplace policies including paid parental leave.
Strong investment in training and economic and social development strategies An ACC which is once again back among the
best compensation schemes in the world
We want that partnership to continue.
We have developed this forum as a post-Budget briefing because it is important that we hear direct from you on that
announcement and how it fits into the overall programme of economic and social development of the Government. It is
important firstly because the content of the Budget has been overshadowed by the media focus on tax cuts, and secondly
because the tax cuts issue has itself developed into a matter of lively debate and interest in our workplaces and homes.
Are we overtaxed or underpaid?
Where do we stand on tax within the OECD? We are ranked 12th lowest in the OECD on total tax revenue as a proportion of
GDP. The single income New Zealand family with two children is currently 10th lowest in the OECD in terms of tax and
will be 4th lowest when Working for Families is fully in place.
The average wage in New Zealand is taxed at 20.6%. In Australia, the tax on that wage would be 20.9%. Sure they have
wider tax bands, but their top rate is 48.5% compared with 39% here.
But their average wage is around $AUD1000 a week compared with approximately $NZ800 here. So - are we overtaxed? No.
Are we underpaid? Yes.
Why are wages so much higher in Australia? Well for a start they have an award system that sets industry and
occupational minimum rates. But they also have a more productive economy. This is mainly because they have 50% more
investment in capital per worker as shown in a recent Treasury paper. And it was during the Employment Contracts Act
period that a lot of the damage was done.
So surely we need wages to rise to boost incomes rather than focus on tax cuts. A 5% pay increase on the average wage
amounts to about $27 a week in the hand. Pay increases of say 5% for the first year and 3% or 4% for subsequent years
add around $65 a week to take home pay over that period. And who has been bitterly and hysterically opposing our 5% wage
campaign? Yes the National Party....Brash, Key and Mapp.
Tax Cuts Favour those on High Incomes
A tax cut of $27 a week costs the Government around $5.4 billion. Just think how many vital services would be affected
by a cut of that size.
The media in New Zealand made a big fuss over the tax cuts in the Australian budget. It amounts to $21.7 billion. But
that is over a 4-year period. Over one year it is more like $5.4 billion. But Australia is 5 times our size. So the
equivalent in NZ would be a $1.2 billion a year package once we divide by five and allow for exchange rate differences.
Labour has in fact given tax relief. About $1.2 billion a year targeted at low-income families.
But the Australian tax cuts also illustrate the point about who benefits from tax cuts. The average increase was $AUD6
a week but the top earner gets $86 a week. The same thing happened in New Zealand in the 1990s. When National cut taxes
twice in the mid-1990s, the over $2 billion of tax cuts went mainly (71%) to those in the highest incomes bands.
These tax cuts were made at a time when we had hundreds of foodbanks handing out food parcels each week to hungry
families, infectious diseases spreading because of overcrowded houses, a collapse in industry training, high
unemployment, massive under-investment in roading, the rail network and other infrastructure, and a desperate need for
economic development on a regional and industry basis. So these tax cuts were not only unfair, they were incredibly
shortsighted and workers are still paying the price. Is the Government on a spending binge?
Central government spending has fallen from being worth 33% of the economy in 1999 to 30% in 2004. If we look at
overall outlays (including capital, local government), it was 41% of the economy in 1999 compared with 38% now. The OECD
average is 40.6%. This gives a lie to National party claims of a spending binge. Controversy of the quality of
Government spending is not new. Remember WINZ in the 1990s under National-NZ First? Remember all the team-building
conferences, training workshops, corporate videos and advertising. Quality of Government spending will always be an
issue. And this Government, as with previous Governments, has not got everything right.
But when spending is in the order of tens of billions of dollars, mistakes worth a few thousand dollars need to be put
into perspective. What we know for sure about the Labour-led Government since 1999 is that their spending priorities
have been - health, education, economic development, infrastructure, low-income families, paid parental leave,
superannuation. Compare that with National and NZ First in the 1990s. We know that tax cuts have historically meant cuts
in public services; that was our experience of the National Governments of the 1990s.
There could also be an effect on mortgages for a period if interest rates either increase (0.25% on a $200,000 loan
amounts to over $8 a week) or do not reduce when they otherwise would. We want to continue to rebuild our health,
education and other public services; not return to the slash and burn approach of the 1990s.
We want real wage increases.
And we also know that any minor benefits from tax cuts will be quickly offset not only by cuts to our social wage
through the cuts in public services but also directly to our salaries and wages.
National Declares War on Workers
The National Party has already announced its industrial relations policies. Its policy is nothing less than a
declaration of war on unions and the gains we have made for workers under your Government. For a start National has
explicitly committed to axing the Employment Relations Act and restoring an Employment Contracts Act.
National is absolutely clear on this. They will repeal each and every provision of the 2004 amendments. In addition
they have confirmed they will scrap: The union right of access to workplaces. Union meetings. Hold them outside work
time they say. Right to deduction of union fees Trade union education leave Union right to negotiate collective
agreements.......bargaining agents will be back. The right of every worker to challenge an unfair dismissal during the
first 3 months in a job. There are 200,000 workers who start a new job in New Zealand every year. Many of us have 7 or 8
jobs in our lifetimes. Imagine that you can be sacked for no reason in the first 3 months every time you start a new
job. And they won't stop there. The Howard Government has given them some new ideas, so look across the Tasman to see
what will be next.
And that's not all. They also intend to gut the Holidays Act: Four weeks annual leave will be axed because under
National an employer can require an employment contract to have 3 weeks only Rate and a half for work on public holidays
will be axed Payment for public holidays, sick days and bereavement leave will not include overtime and productivity
bonuses.
In the health and safety area National has confirmed they will: strip the 15,000+ workplace health and safety
representatives of their important role in workplace health and safety. Remove workplace stress as a specific ground for
OSH action. Review the HSE Act and privatise ACC.
And lets not forget the minimum wage. When the National party was last in Government they only lifted the minimum wage
in a whole 9 years from $6.13 an hour to $7.00. This was an increase of a pathetic 14% in almost a decade. From March
1997, National actually froze the minimum wage at $7.00 for 3 years with a rate for those under 20 years of $4.20 an
hour.
In contrast, Labour since 1999 has increased the minimum wage from $7.00 to $9.50. This is a 35.7% increase in just
over 5 years. The increase for 18/19-year-olds has been from $4.20 to $9.50 (126%) and for 16/17 year olds from $4.20 to
$7.60 (81%).
A Government that invests in our future People expect a lot of Government. When there are floods the cry is - "what is
the Government doing"? It was the Government that invested in Air New Zealand to avert a major crisis. The Government
bought back the railway track. Every day we hear constantly the phrase "The Government should....". and usually it
involves some expenditure. Well with significant tax cuts, people should expect a lot less of Government. They should
expect a Government like the one we had in the 1990s. Mean-spirited, let the market sort it out, trickle down theory,
user pays, cuts in benefits and so forth.
After 5 years of strong growth, the economy is slowing. The increased revenue for the Government over the last few
years has been a reflection of a strong economy. More people in work. More businesses paying tax. Higher profits. But
this Government has also increased spending significantly. Health and education spending is up by 39%. Industry training
spending has almost doubled. They have already put away over $8 billion to make future payments of New Zealand
Superannuation more secure. They have reduced debt.
But as the economy slows, the surpluses reduce. They have put in place a sensible plan to maintain these new spending
levels when revenue is not growing so strongly.
2005 Budget
It is against that taste of what a National led Government would do that I now ask the Prime Minister and her Ministers
to speak on the 2005 budget in the context of the programme which has been built over the past 6 years; a programme
which, subject to the General Election, will continue into the future.
And as they do so, lets just reflect on the price we will pay if New Zealanders are drawn into seeing the issue for
this years election as a tax cut.
We all have a very important responsibility in providing information, and leadership, to our union members. It is not
our role to tell our members how to vote, but it is certainly our responsibility to tell them what to expect if a Brash
Government is elected.
And the message is: expect the worst you can imagine.
ENDS