Newman Weekly - Letter to the Prime Minister
Newman Weekly - Letter to the Prime
Minister
With the economy in trouble, Muriel writes to the Prime Minister to suggest a plan for growth, and Don Brash outlines his commitment to welfare reform.
The economy is in trouble. So much so that the Prime Minister has signalled it will become her government's major priority.
This position comes in response to reports that jobs losses have now reached 800, that Kiwi interest rates are the highest in the world, and that business confidence has plunged to a 30-year low.
But the Prime Minister's response is scary, because many of the problems New Zealand faces are not caused by too little government, but by too much!
Small business is the engine room of growth of any economy. Wealth is created by voluntary exchange - entrepreneurs creating goods and services that consumers want more than the cash in their pocket. Everyone benefits from the exchange: businesses flourish, there is more investment, jobs are created, and we as a society become more prosperous.
The driving force behind small business success is, of course, the free market. As Adam Smith said: "It is not from the benevolence of the butcher, the brewer or the baker, that we expect our dinner, but from their regard to their own interest." In a free market, where enterprise is rewarded, small businesses owners are prepared to work virtually all hours of the day and night satisfying customers and building markets, in order to make a decent living and achieve their personal ambitions.
What Adam Smith was in effect saying, was that the very best thing that governments can do to encourage small business success is to remove barriers to productivity and get out of their hair.
History shows us that countries with a track record of strong economic growth, in general have open economies with governments that not only favour a light handed approach to regulation, but are also committed to protecting private property rights and upholding contract law. With all of that in mind, I have drafted a five-step plan for growth. I will be sending this to the Prime Minister and her government as they prepare their response to the country's serious economic predicament.
1. With the operating surplus now standing at $5.6 billion - $1billion ahead of Treasury forecasts - the company tax rate should be immediately reduced from 33 to 30 cents. This should be the first step in a gradual flattening of New Zealand's tax rates. Cutting company tax would not only immediately boost business confidence, but it would also give Kiwi exporters an important international competitive advantage.
In conjunction with cutting company tax, all corporate subsidies introduced over the last six years, should be phased out. As Professor Richard Epstein (a former NZCPD guest contributor) has stated: "Subsidies distort competition between firms, and nations are often poorer as a result". Our own history confirms that, and while the removal of subsidies undoubtedly causes pain, the economy as a whole will benefit.
2. At a time when the shortage of
skilled and unskilled labour has become our major impediment
to growth, it does not make sense that there are literally
well over a hundred thousand able-bodied men and women who
are quite capable of working, receiving welfare. To boost
productivity and growth, a programme of welfare reform needs
to be urgently implemented - an issue addressed by the
Leader of the Opposition, Dr Don Brash, in his NZCPD Guest
Commentator's opinion piece this week Hand in hand with welfare reform, is the need for
labour market reform: when unions become too powerful, they
end up by hurting the very people they purport to want to
help. As an MP, I drafted a Private Members Bill to bring
back a probation period for new workers, in order to
encourage employers to offer jobs to young workers, the
long-term unemployed, former prisoners, and others without a
track record of employment success. In fact, when times are
tough, it is imperative that small businesses have maximum
workforce flexibility. Before entering politics, I worked as
the Assistant General Manager of Michel Hill Jeweller, and I
recall in the aftermath of the 1987 sharemarket crash having
to ask all of our staff to tighten their belts, so we could
avoid layoffs and store closures. They did so voluntarily
because it was in their best interests to do so. 3. The
government needs to dramatically cut back on the regulations
afflicting small business, to reduce the excessive cost of
compliance that has now become a major impediment to growth.
While many regulations, have been introduced with the very
best of intentions (to improve workplace safety, provide
better information, crackdown on dodgy operators and the
like) the reality is that an unnecessary mountain of
bureaucracy has been created that wastes precious time and
money, and cripples small business operation. I will also
be asking the Prime Minister to play her part, by cutting
back on the size of the public service. Over the last six
years, Labour has hired an estimated 20,000 to 30,000 new
public servants, many of whom justify their existence by
dreaming up regulations that consume wealth, instead of
being hired in the private sector to create wealth! 4. The
government should prioritise the upgrading of essential
roading and energy infrastructure. All revenue collected
from motorists should be re-invested into roading to remove
the transportation bottlenecks that are destroying national
productivity. Since the government already owns more than 40
percent of all New Zealand's land mass (most countries
aspire to having around 10 percent of land under
conservation management), containing vast reserves of
natural resources which have the ability to markedly lift
our prosperity if properly managed - surely ensuring a
stable supply of affordable energy, particularly hydro
generation, is not too much to ask! Further, to
facilitate infrastructure development, the Resource
Management Act needs an "extreme makeover" (including
liposuction as per point 3 above!) to transform it from the
bureaucratic time and money-wasting merry-go-round it has
now become, to a sensible facilitator of progress. 5. With
New Zealand's future growth and prosperity depending to a
large extent on exporting value-added products to the
billions of consumers in the world's global market, the
Government should prioritise the securing of free trade
deals with other developed countries, such as the USA, in
order to facilitate our move from a consumer orientated
economy to one that is export driven.
Postscript. In my letter to the Prime Minister I will
be adding the following PS: "Everyone knows there is a
threat of a bird flu pandemic, but talk of mass graves, body
bags, funeral bans and the like, is creating a pall of gloom
and pessimism about the future. So, Prime Minister, could
you please ask officials in government - and local
government - to stop wasting public money and depressing
people with self-indulgent talkfests about a bird flu
pandemic that might or might not ever happen!" This week's
poll asks whether you agree that the top priority for the
government this year should be the economy? It then goes on
to ask, if you could add a PPS to the letter to the Prime
Minister, in not more than 100 words, what would you
say? Extracts from these comments will be posted on the
NZCPD Forum during the week (see www.nzcpd.com/forum.htm)
and the best comment will be added to the letter and sent to
the Prime Minister! Newman Weekly is a weekly article by Dr
Muriel Newman of the New Zealand Centre for Political
Debate, a web-based forum at www.nzcpd.com for the lively
and dynamic exchange of political ideas. Muriel can be
contacted by phone on, by email on muriel@nzcpd.com by or by
post at PO Box 984 Whangarei. ENDS