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The New Zealand Economy and Tax Policy Speech delivered by Gabriel Makhlouf,
Secretary to the Treasury
Embargoed until delivery at 8.30am,
Saturday 17 March 2012
The International Fiscal Association,
Queenstown
17 March 2012
Good morning. Today I want to talk about what has changed in the past few years, and what has not changed. And I want to
leave you with a simple message: our tax system, overall, is in pretty good shape. By international standards, we stack
up well. I am going to talk about three things: the dramatically different economic situation, the nature of tax policy
in New Zealand, and the changing nature of the government’s interactions with citizens. The economic situation: what has
changed Before I address tax, I want to briefly talk about the global economic situation.
I think it is safe to say that economists have really struggled over the past five years to get their heads around the
nature of the global financial crisis and the solutions to it. As an economic ministry, the Treasury has been wrestling
with the complex public policy issues that the crisis has thrown at us. New Zealand went into the crisis in a pretty
strong fiscal position. However, in a small country, open to investment and trade, advantages can evaporate startlingly
quickly. Our terms of trade, the prices of the commodities we sell, are all masking a more difficult problem.
There are undoubtedly many causes of the global financial crisis. Just as academics today still debate the causes of
the Great Depression, I anticipate that the academic community will still be debating the so-called “Great Recession”
for many years to come. But, as with any sharp, sudden, and protracted economic crisis, we always learn one thing: the
conventional wisdom was in many respects, wrong. At the very least, we have learned that risk and return can be badly
mispriced.
Whether it was finance company debentures or mortgage backed securities, too many people took on too much risk without
knowing they were doing so, because promised returns did not match the risk. Putting aside the causes of the crisis, the
relevant question from the perspective of New Zealand is how to best manage the situation – and that is a question that
is only answered through both the public and private sector addressing some of the issues that the recession has
created.
On top of the financial crisis, the tragic and devastating events in Canterbury have reminded us all we live in the
shaky isles. No part of the country is immune from natural disasters. We are all in the same boat. Aside from advising
on the rebuilding effort, the Treasury, as the government’s lead advisor on economic, financial and regulatory policy,
is being called upon to advise on how we can minimise the financial and social costs of the natural disaster risks we
face.
As you would expect and probably be well acquainted with, the earthquakes have thrown up an enormous amount of policy
issues, tax issues not the least of them. We have been taking a pragmatic but principled approach to these problems.
Maintaining revenues is a critical part of managing the government’s fiscal position. Currently there’s a gap between
what we are spending and what we are collecting. In the medium term, our goal is to close that gap. Reflection on global
tax trends in the recent past Tax holds a special place in my heart because for many years I was a tax official. I
chaired the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development’s (OECD) committee of fiscal affairs and worked at the
Inland Revenue in the United Kingdom. Eleven years ago I gave a speech on tax and tax reform when I was at the Inland
Revenue. When preparing for today, I dug out that speech to see what relevance it still has.
As I reflected back, it occurred to me that some things have changed completely, and others have remained the same.
First I will talk about what has changed. Even though I described “globalisation” as one of the most overused words in
the dictionary, I still felt obliged to give a definition of “globalisation” in that speech. But today, it is no longer
a buzzword about the exciting future – it is the ordinary and mundane present. It is not a new trend, it is a fact of
life, and I am sure we have all got a working definition in our heads. Needless to say, globalisation brings many tax
challenges and opportunities.
One of those challenges is the level of tax on companies, when New Zealand is focussed on being as competitive a
business destination as possible. In the last thirty years, OECD countries have dramatically reduced – in fact almost
halved - their corporate income tax rates. Up until the year 2000, New Zealand’s company tax rate was lower than the
OECD average. The trend across the OECD has always been downward, although that trend has slowed since the global
financial crisis. After the year 2000, New Zealand fell behind, and we are now catching up. But we have some limits on
how low we can drop our company rate. On tax reform generally, in that speech eleven years ago I said “tax reform never
ends”. That’s still my view. Taxpayers will always be looking for ways to reduce their personal cost of funding
government services.
But the cost of government is largely determined by government. And accordingly, taxpayers who restructure their affairs
are really playing part in a prisoners’ dilemma – trying to get other people to bear the burden, with the effect that
taxes are higher on all of us. 4 Even if at a moment in time a tax system is completely perfect, it will not remain so
as the wider environment and government priorities change. So we never get to declare final victory, dust off our hands
and congratulate ourselves for a job well done. The first income tax in New Zealand was implemented in 1891, and we are
still working on it. According to Professor John Prebble, in 1891 the first 300 pounds of income – far above the average
income – was exempt.
Corporate income was taxed at one shilling in the pound – for those unfamiliar with old money that’s 5% - and
professional income at half that rate. The idea that such an income tax could finance a modern government is ludicrous.
As the burden of taxation has risen, so has the need to ensure that it achieves neutrality, while also responding to the
other, competing needs of a democratic state. This brings me to the nature of tax policy in New Zealand. Tax policy in
New Zealand As I said eleven years ago, the world changes, and the tax system needs to change with it. What I did not
predict then was how fundamentally the global situation would change, and how that would force the state sector to
change. New Zealand is somewhat unusual in the arrangement we operate for developing tax policy. It is a joint process
between Inland Revenue and the Treasury. There are modest differences between Inland Revenue and the Treasury’s
approaches, and due to our different roles we are always going to have different strengths. Inland Revenue will always
have a better perspective on the underlying technical detail and the practical effects of policy.
Similarly, the Treasury, as the government’s lead advisor on economic, financial and regulatory policy, owns the
aggregate effect of all government policy. Therefore an important part of our role is to join up Ministers’ disparate
strands of policy across government. Both the Treasury and Inland Revenue are committed to the tax policy process we
have in New Zealand.
Just last week Matt Benge from Inland Revenue was presenting at a conference in Oxford on the way New Zealand has
formalised our generic tax policy process. This process is well regarded internationally as well as domestically. When
it comes to tax, we aim to locate tax advice within the government’s broader economic, fiscal and social policies and
objectives. The differences between the Treasury and Inland Revenue are about weight and judgment rather than any
fundamental difference in how we think about tax policy. 5 Both departments share strong, and fairly conventional, tax
policy frameworks – in short, taxes should distort behaviour as little as possible while achieving government revenue
objectives and contributing appropriately to wider social or distributional goals. We have reviewed the relationship
between the Treasury and the Policy Advice Division of the Inland Revenue in the last year and our view is that it is
the healthiest it has ever been. As we know, the ability for government departments to collaborate and break down
artificial institutional barriers is a key focus of this Government.
Combining the drive to make New Zealand more competitive with the fiscal demands, the focus is very much on chipping
away at loopholes, inconsistent treatment of some expenditure, and broadening the base where possible and appropriate.
Global mobility of people and capital always puts pressure on our personal and company tax rates and in the long term,
further reductions to improve incentives to work, save and invest are important. We also recommend mutual recognition of
imputation credits with Australia. This would promote freer flows of capital across the Tasman and would extend to
capital the trans- Tasman single economic market that largely operates for goods, services and people.
Mutual recognition of imputation credits is a growth enhancing strategy for both New Zealand and Australia. While
further company rate cuts may be desirable in the future, in the short term our primary constraint is, of course, fiscal
– the need to balance tax revenue with government expenditure. The Government’s strategy is to achieve surplus by
2014/2015, and accordingly, in the short term anyway, reductions in the corporate income tax rate are unlikely. The
second constraint is how we think about alignment between tax on different types of income, and how far we can deviate
from the goal of alignment while still retaining income neutrality.
In an uncomplicated world we would want to align the top personal income tax rate with the corporate income tax rate.
Because they are both final rates, we know a six percentage point difference between the top personal rate and the trust
rate distorts behaviour and is unfair – the Government changed that in 2010. We can live with the current five
percentage point difference between the company rate and the top personal rate, with the trust and top personal rates
aligned. This is because for New Zealanders, the company rate is an interim rate before any extra tax is paid on
dividends.
But with a larger non alignment between the company rate and the top personal rate the timing advantage of operating as
a company starts to bite. So while we are concerned about pressures within our tax system, we must always be aware of
the pressures that the systems of others impose on us. 6 Speaking about the global situation eleven years ago, I talked
about tax competition, and the difference between healthy competition and abusive anti-competitive tax practices. Talk
of tax competition all seems a bit quaint and out of date now, while governments around the world seem to be increasing
taxes or introducing new ones to shore up their finances.
But outside of that immediate landscape sits a long-term trend of decreasing company and personal tax rates, with
revenues supported by base-broadening measures and increasing VAT and GST rates. It has been said plenty of times before
but it still bears repeating: New Zealand’s GST is the best VAT in the world and our strong consistent advice is that it
should be protected from exemptions that undermine it. GST is a simple tax that raises a large amount of revenue, with
minimal distortions. Using the GST system to promote particular policies comes at great cost.
The compliance cost, uncertainty, and complexity of bringing in exemptions and multiple rates are overwhelming as
compared with asserted benefits. There are far more effective ways to promote social outcomes than by fiddling with the
consumption tax on a good or service, and far more effective ways to achieve redistribution than taking GST off whole
swathes of goods and services. GST remains our best designed and most efficient tax.
There have been 17 VAT increases in the EU in the last 2 years. In 2011 an average VAT rate across the OECD was 18.5% -
it is 20% in the United Kingdom. One reason these countries have higher value added taxes is because they exempt all
sorts of goods and services. As with income tax, we prefer a broad based low rate to a narrow base with a high rate. The
increasingly popular “Tobin tax” is proposed by some as a solution to shrinking revenues. A Tobin tax is usually thought
of as a tax on foreign currency exchanges, but now the name seems to be used to describe more general financial
transaction taxes.
Nobel-prize winning economist James Tobin came up with the idea. The purpose was to reduce speculation in currency
markets, which Tobin thought of as dangerous. Tobin came up with the idea soon after the end of the Bretton Woods
system, before which each country maintained its currency within a fixed value of the price of gold. The idea gained
popularity after various “capital flight” scenarios in Mexico, Asia, and Russia in the 1990s.
Somehow, the idea has been resurrected in the aftermath of the financial crisis as a means of raising revenue. Now it
seems to be simply an attempt to target banks, or, in some circles, as an antiglobalisation measure. These views seem to
ignore the difference between tax liability – who literally pays the tax; and tax incidence – who really bears the cost
of the tax. 7 To the extent the idea is supported by those who oppose globalisation, such support is misguided. Before
his death in 2002, Tobin laid out his position [interview with Der Spiegel]: I am an economist and, like most
economists, I support free trade. Furthermore, I am in favour of the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, the
World Trade Organisation. [The Tobin tax supporters have] hijacked my name. ... The tax on foreign exchange transactions
was devised to cushion exchange rate fluctuations. It’s fair to say that exchange rate fluctuations played next to no
part in the financial crisis. In fact, countries like Iceland, with floating exchange rates and the ability to regain
competitiveness by dramatic exchange rate revaluations, are in a much better position than a country like Greece,
without the ability to devalue its own currency. The Tobin tax is a solution in search of a problem, and we do not see a
role for any such tax in New Zealand. Countries searching for extra revenues would do far better to follow the advice of
the OECD’s recent paper on inequality and growth - tidy up their tax codes to remove tax expenditures, which typically
favour higher-income taxpayers, so that more revenue can be raised without increasing tax rates.
A “tax expenditure” is a tax concession or exemption given to a particular industry, group, good, service, or type of
income which is not given more generally. It is, in effect, a subsidy by another name, and the work on tax expenditures
is focussed on identifying such expenditures in the interests of transparency. With its broad-based, low-rate approach
and its comprehensive goods and services tax, New Zealand does not have many tax expenditures. Perhaps because of this,
we have not been particularly good at spelling out the ones we do have. As part of each Budget since 2010 we produce a
list of expenditures made through the tax system. The methodology of doing this is riddled with tough questions, and it
always raises the ire of some who think the concept implies that government is entitled to all your income and is
awarding a “tax expenditure” by allowing you to keep some. But the real goal is to have a comprehensive tally of all the
implicit and explicit subsidies that government awards, so they can be appraised on their merits.
It is clear that some tax expenditures we do have, like the concessionary treatment of specified mineral mining, need
to be looked at, and are being looked at as part of the tax work programme. Apart from the need to raise revenue for
government spending and transfers, there is a second justification for taxes – aligning social cost with private cost to
remove spillover effects to third parties. 8 Alcohol and tobacco excise taxes are one area where New Zealand attempts to
remedy this problem. One of the most obvious other areas where this occurs is in environmental damage. If an
individual’s private interactions affect the wider community through environmental damage, there is a spillover cost on
society and, under certain circumstances, the activity should face an additional cost or be regulated.
The important thing is that we get the signals rights. From a tax perspective, the challenge is in designing a pricing
mechanism that addresses the problem, is simple to understand and apply, and is set at the right level. If the price is
set too high, it can be as inefficient as having no price at all. We anticipate that as environmental resources come
under increasing pressure and conflicts between competing users become more stark, there will be an increasing move to
the use of economic instruments, including environmental taxes and trading schemes, to help manage those pressures. Of
course other regulatory mechanisms will continue to be important, and we need to tailor each policy response for the
environmental problem to be addressed.
If the Treasury is to provide good advice and improve the living standards of all New Zealanders, this is an area where
we have to get the balance right. Changing nature of government’s interactions with citizens We know that over the
medium term, the Government is focussed on breaking down artificial barriers between departments and having a “whole of
government” approach to a citizen’s interactions with the State. As you will have heard this week, this Government is
focussed on results. Inland Revenue is close to all of this work because it is an agency which delivers services for
citizens and services for businesses. On top of this, it helps to deliver social policy as well.
Two weeks ago I spoke to NZICA in Wellington about the challenge for the Treasury and the state sector to gain more
traction on critical outcomes and results in a world of flat budgets. I said that the only option available to us is to
get greater value out of existing spending and out of the assets that the Crown owns. This means the state sector has to
change. We have to better measure our performance and we need to perform better by finding new and different ways of
working. Like other departments, Inland Revenue faces a number of challenges which will require it to be bold and
innovative to find solutions. A perfect example of the challenges facing Inland Revenue – and this is a very mundane but
realistic aspect of their challenges – is their computer system. The computer system 9 FIRST, that Inland Revenue
started using in 1992, was built in a world without the internet, in a programming language that no one uses any more.
The founder of Facebook was eight years old.
Updating this system, as part of the business transformation of Inland Revenue and the transformation of the tax
administration system, is an investment in a core piece of infrastructure of New Zealand – the infrastructure that pays
for all the other infrastructure. We do not have a firm idea of the cost of this investment, but the $1- 1.5 billion
number that has been in the press cannot be far off. It is going to take years, and we are thinking about this as a ten
to fifteen year, rather than a two year project. Twenty years for software is a pretty good run, and the challenge for
us is to make sure we future proof, to the greatest extent possible, any investment we make.
Recently, as part of preparing a document on the Treasury’s tax policy priorities over the next few years, the Treasury
reflected on how Inland Revenue’s role has changed over the past ten years. We are releasing the document. Most of us
still probably think of Inland Revenue as simply a tax department, but that is an outdated view. Now, more than a third
of Inland Revenue’s departmental expenditure is on social policy programmes. That is Working for Families, Child
Support, Student Loans, KiwiSaver, and Paid Parental Leave. Operationally, that creates enormous pressures, and those
pressures are only increasing. Inland Revenue also has a social policy role due to the inter-relationship between the
tax and welfare systems.
In my speech on state sector reform I emphasised the need for agencies to find new and more effective ways of working
together to deliver the results that New Zealanders need. The interface of tax and welfare provides an example of the
importance of agencies working together – not just in the delivery of policy, but in policy design. Many people regard
the relationship between tax and welfare as tax paying for welfare. But the application of welfare benefits – and in
particular their abatement – can act as effective taxes. We need to provide the right level of support to people who
need it, without creating punitive disincentives. The complicating factor here is the effective marginal tax rate on an
individual.
If we look at tax without looking at welfare, we ignore the potential for policy to create poverty traps where people
see no reward for getting ahead. Whether it is an explicit tax rate or an implicit benefit abatement, at the end of the
day people know how much extra money they get from starting a job, going to full time from part time, or working more or
getting promotions. We have got to make those calculations stack up. 10 And this is not just in the narrow fiscal sense
of making sure people have a financial incentive to get ahead. That is important. But it is also important to make sure
that there is a pathway for people to get more involved in society, in work, and in their community.
We know that these measures are fundamental to subjective wellbeing. The Treasury’s Living Standards Framework
emphasises these broader measures of wellbeing, and we make sure we’re thinking about all of this when we provide advice
to government. Conclusion In tax policy, there will never be any silver bullets. Changes are brought about by a
confluence of factors – the practice of taxpayers, the international environment, competing social policy goals,
developments in tax administration, and the need for revenue to fund essential services. Right now our focus is on
ensuring that the books are balanced while increasing our global competitiveness. That means that, while we have
delivered tax cuts, we will be looking very hard for well considered base-broadening measures. On top of all of this we
are determined to get the best results possible out of our tax administration system. So overall, we are satisfied with
the fundamental framework of our tax system.
As we look ahead we see amazing opportunity for New Zealand to sell our goods and services to the world. China is now
our second-largest trading partner. The economic geography is changing from West to East, and it turns out we are
geographically closer to the East than most of the West. I am excited about this opportunity. If I look back at what I
have said today in ten years time, I know that some of what I have said will look naive, or will have been overcome by
events. But fundamentally, the direction we are moving is absolutely the right one.
There are going to be bumps along the way. Some of those bumps we can predict, but others are unpredictable. The
Treasury’s objective is to best situate New Zealand for the coming opportunities and challenges. Improving the living
standards of all New Zealanders requires us to do that. Thank you all very much for listening to me. I hope you enjoy
the rest of your conference.
ends