Q+A: Paul Holmes Interviews Russel Norman and Winston Peters
Paul Holmes Interviews Russel Norman and Winston
Peters
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Q+A
PAUL
HOLMES INTERVIEWS RUSSEL NORMAN AND WINSTON
PETERS
PAUL
HOLMES
Let’s start with you, Mr Norman. What
is the number-one priority the Budget should be
addressing?
RUSSEL NORMAN - Greens
Co-Leader
Well, we have a problem in terms of
the debt that’s in the Budget. So, National have built in
a very large level of debt because they made some very poor
decisions. The tax cuts for upper-income earners. It’s
cost $2 billion in the first 18 months because it was never
fiscally
neutral.
PAUL
Yes, I know you’re very big on that. Bill
English’s reaction to that view is that if we hadn’t had
the tax cuts, the tax cuts actually spread a bit of money
around, stimulated the economy, helped business grow, and if
we hadn’t had them, we’d be in a damn sight worse
situation than we are now.
RUSSEL
And if you look at the best way to
reduce stimulus from tax cuts, if that was the objective, is
to give them to lower-income earners and to give them to
everyone. Instead what National did was they concentrated
the tax cuts in upper-income earners, and what that meant
was you get a much lower stimulus effect because either they
save it, they spend it on imports. They don’t necessarily
spend it, stimulating the domestic economy. So that’s one
part of it. The other
part-
PAUL
Well, hang on. The other part is he’s got to
handle debt, right? And that’s what he’s doing, isn’t
it?
RUSSEL No.
He’s doing the exact opposite. I’m sorry, Paul, but
he’s doing the exact opposite. Let’s talk about what
he’s doing. He’s given $2 billion in 18 months he’s
had to borrow for upper-income earners. That’s
irresponsible. Right, that is just basically irresponsible.
He’s giving about $2 billion in subsidies for greenhouse
emissions. Why should we be subsidising greenhouse
emissions? It doesn’t make any sense, and I think it’s
just fiscally reckless.
PAUL So
in one sentence, what should he be
doing?
RUSSEL He
should be addressing the debt issue, but he also needs to be
looking at the structural transformation of the New Zealand
economy. We need to rebalance the economy to focus on
exports instead of just the domestic, non-tradable sector.
The recovery at the moment, if you look at it, it’s the
retail sector, it’s the housing sector, it’s
construction. Cameron Bagrie, right? You know, chief
economist at one of the banks. He said this recovery is
exactly the wrong type of recovery.
PAUL
I’ve noticed that. I’ve pointed that out on the
programme that the only businesses I can see opening are
supermarkets. But, anyway, Mr Peters, what’s the central
priority you would have were you
Treasurer?
WINSTON PETERS - NZ First
Leader
Our central priority’s got to be now to stop the
attraction of Australia killing this economy. In short, ever
since this experiment started 26 years ago, Australia’s
economy has grown about 37%, 38% greater than ours in real
terms. Just imagine if we had kept pace. We’d be 37%
bigger.
PAUL
I know that,
but-
WINSTON Our job is
to follow a rebalanced positioning of our policies that is
in our national interest to contest with Australia. If you
don’t do that, we’ll have a zero Budget. We’ll have
cuts and slashes and the old recipe from the 1930s, which is
a failure. We’ll get statements like you just made that
those high-earner tax cuts were good for the economy.
Absolute drivel. Not true about the growth that you speak,
and all the figures are there. So we have got to face up to
the fact that we’re on a slide and that these policies
that we’ve had the last 26 years don’t
work.
PAUL
All right. I think we’ve faced the fact we’re
on a slide.
WINSTON
We’re not facing things at
all.
PAUL
So what can do, say, next week? What can he
do?
WINSTON A zero
Budget which you’ve got next week will not face the facts
at all. I’m saying we’ve got to remember we’re an
export-dependent economy. Run policies for exports, not
consumption. You’ve got to change the currency of this
country so that it favours exporters - where our wealth is
to be made. You can’t favour the banks and paper shufflers
in downtown Queen Street, for goodness sake. Let’s face up
to some facts in the end.
PAUL
With respect, as Alan Bollard told us when he
became the Governor of the Reserve Bank, he said, ‘Well,
you think about Australia, you’ve always got to consider
that Australia is a lucky country.’ It’s got the iron.
It’s got uranium in places where nobody cares if you mine.
RUSSEL And
we’ve got water.
WINSTON
That’s an excuse for failing to run the economy.
I know for decades and long before Mr Bollard ever came
along that this economy was doing far better than Australia,
and they were still having all the mines and all the
minerals and everything else. We just failed to follow the
recipe that made us number two in the world, and we changed
it for an economic experiment which a lot of you loved
because it make you very, very wealthy. But it meant the
rest of-
PAUL
[LAUGHS]
WINSTON
Not you personally, Mr
Holmes.
PAUL
Thank you.
WINSTON
If you were vicariously fortunate, very good. I’m
saying the balance of the population did very badly.
PAUL
Hang on, Russel. Can I
just-?
RUSSEL Just
finally on that, we’ve had very high commodity prices.
It’s not like this government has gone through a period
that’s been terrible for the New Zealand economy. We’ve
had very high commodity prices. What’s the government done
with it?
PAUL
We’ve had a global meltdown, haven’t we? And if
we hadn’t had the high commodity
prices-
RUSSEL
Where’s the transformation towards the
rebalancing of the economy? The government rightly said. So
when Bill got in, Bill English said, quite rightly, we’ve
had debt-fuelled consumption boom. I agreed with him. And
then he didn’t bring the
changes.
PAUL
I know, and I’ll get on to that, I promise you,
next. Can we just finish this little bit by saying he’s
the Treasurer. He’s got the books in front of him. He’s
got a Christchurch earthquake. God knows what that is going
to cost. We’ve had the global meltdown. We’ve got debt,
and he’s got to deal with it, and he probably doesn’t
want to have that debt either, but he’s got to deal with
it.
RUSSEL So then
we look at the actions he’s taken. I agree with you. He
had two big challenges. He had the GFC and he had the
earthquakes. You know, they were the big challenges facing
the government. And fair enough - they were big. Right, and
so I would say if you look at the decisions they’ve made,
and they’re responsible for their response. If you look at
the tax changes, they said they were fiscally neutral. They
are not. And then if you look at the earthquakes, what we
said to them at the time was you need to raise a levy, a
progressive levy to pay for the rebuild, and we outlined how
you could do it. He went down these earthquake bonds
instead. His earthquake bonds have raised $26 million so
far, whereas an earthquake levy would have raised $1 billion
so far. I just don’t think he made the right decisions.
PAUL
Let’s talk about realigning the economy to a
stable basis. A green-tech economy, all right? And you
talked in the last election about wanting to spend $4
billion - borrowed,
presumably?
RUSSEL
No.
PAUL
$4 billion-
RUSSEL
As we were saying earlier, we actually did cost
exactly how we’d pay for it. It wasn’t
borrowed.
PAUL
All right. $4 billion either way. Wherever you got
it from. But other people seem to think it was fairyland
money. $4 billion to create 100,000 jobs. Could he still be
doing that?
RUSSEL
What we said is you’ve got to look at how to
rebalance the economy, and that means you need to move
capital into the productive sector. That’s why a capital
gains tax matters. It’s not about raising the money.
That’s part of it. But the key part of it is to push
money, capital, into the productive sector. The second part
of it was what are New Zealand’s key strategic advantages?
And that’s around the green-tech sector and to protect our
clean, green reputation, which is fundamental. So we
actually think that is where New Zealand’s strategic
advantage is. It isn’t in casinos, which is where
they’re throwing the
money.
PAUL
You can’t do it
overnight.
RUSSEL
But they’re picking winners. What are the winners
they’re picking? The irrigation subsidies, they’re
picking casinos. We’ve got Warner Brothers. I think that
they’re picking the wrong
winners.
PAUL
All right. I’ve got to leave you there. Mr
Peters, what do you make of all of
that?
WINSTON The $4
billion and the green policy that Mr Norman talks about is
actually picking winners. That’s a very dangerous thing to
do. You’ve got to reward winners and make winners more
successful, and that’s got to be a tax-incentivised
policy. I’m not knocking what he’s saying. I’m just
saying I do not see the way through for a great economic
future on that. We have got to go back to doing things
great. That is to add to our great export base. We need
research and development systems. We need new market
discovery. The tax changes have got to take place. And when
we say rebalance the economy, I mean incentivise the people
who are going to make us great and not have, for example,
Sam Morgan - and Sam Morgan says himself - he sells Trade Me
for $700 million-plus. He doesn’t pay any tax at all. This
cannot go on if we wish to be a successful economy. And we
don’t have to be brilliant. It’s 2012. We were once the
best in the world.
PAUL
And now we’ve got 160,000 people unemployed. 6.7%
unemployment. What would you do about it?
Jobs.
WINSTON Well, the
only way you’re going to get them to work is with jobs and
exports. Timber is our third-biggest export - going out in
its most raw state for hundreds of thousands of jobs
somewhere else and for billions and billions of extra
profits for some other economy. When I say it’s in its raw
state, a one hour of labour being added to it. Going out as
logs. This is a foolish
economy.
PAUL
Yes, and we’ve been talking about that for 30
years. And I thought that the third-biggest export was
petrol and gas.
WINSTON
No, it’s not
true.
PAUL
It’s fourth, I think. Something like that. So,
what’s your attitude to this offshore drilling? Mr Norman
has problems with it.
WINSTON
If you can provide me a safe experiment for
offshore drilling, we’d look at it. But I don’t believe
you can say it’s safe. Not
now.
RUSSEL It’s
the deep-sea stuff. We’ve been doing shallow offshore
drilling for a long time and relatively safely. It’s the
deep-sea stuff that’s the problem. Nobody knows how to
plug a well at those depths. And if New Zealand’s economy
is built on clean and green, how would it be if we had a
huge oil spill on the East
Coast?
PAUL
Quick couple of questions. Are cigarettes likely to
go up in price in the
Budget?
WINSTON No doubt
about it.
PAUL
Is Mrs Turia realistic when she wants to get rid of
tobacco by 2025, do you think, Russel? Yes or
no?
RUSSEL I’m
sure that she would like to, yeah. I mean, whether it will
happen is a different
thing.
PAUL
I mean, the other thing I’ve got to say too in
fairness to Mr English and his team is that you two can sit
here and say what you like, but you don’t have to answer
the big questions.
WINSTON
Yes, we do. Look, I was the Treasurer once in this
country during the Asian crisis. Remember? We lost some of
our markets offshore in Asia, and we didn’t get through
that by cutting and slashing. We had liquidity. We kept
confidence up, and that’s the way through this one as
well, providing you spend money on the right
things.
RUSSEL
Bill English, the other advantage he’s got is
he’s got all of Treasury to support him, so it’s not
like he’s got to do it on his
own.
PAUL
Whereas you did your own
costings.
RUSSEL
We employed people to do it, yeah. That’s
right.
PAUL
A political one for both of you. Mr Key, who seems
to be increasingly disappointed with his partners, has
indicated he might not be so adamant about not talking to
you after the next
election.
WINSTON He’s
got the highest of double standards, Mr Key, hasn’t
he?
PAUL
Would you be interested in talking to
him?
WINSTON Well, you
know that’s for the party to decide. We don’t make those
sorts of arrangements before the election, go behind
people’s backs with constructed devices like Epsom, which
is the most embarrassing thing I’ve seen in the history of
Western democracy. We don’t want a repeat of that, do
we?
PAUL
Well, it’s a big
call.
WINSTON It may be
a big call, but it is absolutely ridiculously
extreme.
PAUL
And what about the Greens? Do you still absolutely
rule out some kind of accommodation with the
Nats.
RUSSEL Well,
we didn’t at the last election. I mean, what we said was
we were open to it depending on what the agreement was, and
so what we’ve done since then is we’ve worked with them
on policy
issues.
PAUL
I know you do, but I think he was indicating
recently he couldn’t come much closer to
you.
RUSSEL Well,
I mean, obviously with regard- We had a memorandum of
understanding between National and the Greens, and that’s
how we did the home insulation scheme. Great scheme. And
we’re open to working with National where we
agree.
PAUL
I thank you both very much for coming on. Right
Honourable Winston Peters, very nice to see you. Russel
Norman, thank you, of the
Greens.
ENDS