Patrick Gower interviews Finance Minister Bill English:
Patrick Gower interviews Finance Minister Bill English:
Finance Minister says he
doesn’t know what difference his tax on capital gains will
make to housing affordability and admits it may not have an
impact on Auckland house prices. When asked about his
comments from 2013 that extending the tax “will not make
much difference” and “overseas… has not improved
housing affordability”, English says “we don’t know
exactly what impact it will have… we’re hypothesising a
bit”. English denies the tax on capital gains, travel
tax and raising benefits are U-turns, despite National’s
“no new taxes” election promise and John Key rejecting
benefit increases on The Nation last year. (Key quote,
October 2014: “‘If it’s just a matter of a bit more
money on the benefit, the one point I’d make there is that
welfare broadly costs about $8 billion a year. So if it was
just as simple as a bit more cash and that was at the heart
of the problem, I would strongly suggest governments would
have fixed it in the past.” English says developers
will be given public land on which to build houses and
won’t have to pay until the house is sold, but can’t
confirm whether the developer will pay the price of the land
when they are given it or when the house is sold. “That
will be a matter for negotiation… it will be fully
transparent” Says “as many [homes built on public
land] as possible” will be affordable. “We’re unlikely
to be building hundreds of McMansions across the Auckland
landscape.”
Confirms offshore buyers will face a
withholding tax, after last week simply saying it was simply
being investigated by officials. Says the Government would
only act to limit foreign buyers if the new data showed they
were having a “pretty significant” impact on the housing
market. English insists new travel tax is a levy not a
tax, but won’t say all the money raised will go to border
control. Says National is keen on auto-enrolment for
KiwiSaver and without the $1000 kickstart it will be
“considerably cheaper”. “Once we implement this policy
we’ll just go back and see what the costs are likely to
be”
Lisa Owen: Well, call it a
tricky Budget, a battler’s Budget or political master
stroke – Thursday’s Budget certainly confounded
expectations. Before the day, we knew the surplus had been
missed and taxes on capital gains extended, but no one was
picking an increase in benefits and tougher work obligations
for beneficiaries, cuts to KiwiSaver and a new travel tax.
In the election campaign, National campaigned on no new
taxes. Now we’ve had two inside a week. So when political
editor Patrick Gower talked with Finance Minister Bill
English yesterday, he began by asking if National had misled
voters.
Bill English: No, we didn’t. The
airport levy is a user charge. And across government, we
have user charges for all sorts of things. We’ve been
changing, for instance, the charge on passports. I don’t
think anyone would suggest that that’s a new tax. And in
this case, we’ve got demand at the border – lots more
people turning up. It’s a problem of success. We’ve got
biosecurity risks, and so we’ve taken the opportunity to
shift the cost from the taxpayer to the
user.
Patrick Gower: So it’s a charge at the
airport, so every cent of that will go back to airport
security. Is that what you’re saying? Every cent of that,
just like a passport charge, because that’s what a charge
is?
Well, that’s yet to be seen just
exactly where it all goes, but the users are certainly
going—
So it goes, for instance, into the
consolidated fund?
That’s yet to be seen
exactly where it’s all going to go,
but—
Because it’s just word games, isn’t
it? It’s just word games about these two new taxes, that
they are—
Well, it’s just word games
calling it a tax. It’s the same with the housing
issue.
But it’s important, though, isn’t
it? Because this is what you said – no new
taxes.
That’s right.
And
we’ve got two taxes in a week.
No, I
simply disagree with that. With the housing, we’ve made it
pretty clear what we’re doing is working with existing tax
law. We’re bolstering it, we’re making it enforceable,
and I think most people would see that the impact on the
housing market’s going to matter a lot more than the word
game over whether it’s a new tax or not.
So
on that, what do you say to those who argue that this
extension of that existing capital gains or this change in
tax rule won’t make any difference, won’t raise much
revenue and will just add to compliance costs. What do you
say to them?
Well, it’s a bit hard to tell
with this kind of tax. In the first place, we don’t know
exactly how much influence buying and selling houses within
in two years has on Auckland house prices. If it’s having
a big influence, then the change in rules will have an
impact. If turning houses quickly by speculators isn’t
really having much influence on Auckland house prices, then
we probably won’t see much influence— much impact on
Auckland house prices.
So it might have an
impact; it might not?
That’s right.
We’re not quite sure. And the other thing that happens
with these taxes you may not collect more revenue, but it
may change behaviour in a way that means you don’t collect
revenue.
Well, just on that, because I want to
quote you, actually, on this from 2013 in Parliament,
‘Further extension of the current tax on capital gains is
likely to have high compliance costs, and that is a
conclusion that three tax enquiries, several governments
have come to over 20 years. If it excludes the family home,
like it does, it will not make much difference.’ These are
your words, Minister. ‘It will not raise much revenue. In
overseas jurisdictions, it has not improved housing
affordability,’ so what’s changed?
The
Government’s position around the tax hasn’t changed.
We’re making it more enforceable. We’re bolstering
it.
But you’re talking about it here, and
you’re saying that the tax won’t work 18 months ago, so
what I’m trying to get my head around is what’s
changed.
Well, we don’t know exactly what
impact it will have. One thing that has changed for the
Government is we’ve found a simpler way to enforce
existing law, which is the provision of IRD numbers and tax
numbers from offshore jurisdictions.
Yeah, but
that’s slightly separate to the new tax rule. So you’re
saying today that your words could actually be right,
aren’t they? Your words from 2013 could actually be right.
This tax might not end up having any
impact.
Well, you know, we’re
hypothesising a bit, so we’ve always had the view that the
main driver of house prices in Auckland is supply. Some
people have said that foreign buyers speculating is what
drives Auckland house prices. Now, I’m a bit sceptical
about that. These measures will have some impact on foreign
buyers who are speculating, but I think it’d be a brave
person who would say they know what difference that will
make to house price inflation in
Auckland.
Okay, so it may make no impact at
all?
Well, we’ll find
out.
Now, on the foreign buyers, the provision
of the IRD number, if you get information back from that
that shows that foreign buyers are an issue, more of an
issue, perhaps, than you think, will you act on that? Will
you act on that? If the information proves what a lot of
people think is happening with foreign buyers, will you do
something and act on it when you get that ‘perfect
information’, as the Prime Minister calls
it?
Well, that’ll be what the Government
will have to consider at the time. Between now and whenever
that information shows up, there’ll be a withholding tax
come in, where if an offshore buyer who is technically a
non-tax resident sells a property, then there’ll be a
withholding tax payable to IRD before they can execute the
transaction. Then we’ll see what information comes out
over time about who’s buying what, and I wouldn’t want
to pre-judge how the Government will see that, but we’d
surmise that that the foreign buyers may have some
influence. It would have to be pretty significant for the
government to decide to take draconian action about
it.
On that new plan in the Budget – the
public land being opened up to private developers. Have you
got some idea of how much will be affordable on that public
land?
Well, it hasn’t been predetermined,
but we would like as many of them as possible to be
affordable for middle-income New Zealanders who are looking
for houses. We’re unlikely to be building hundreds of
McMansions across the Auckland landscape. There are plenty
of other people doing that.
But you will allow
these developers that use this public land to build houses
that aren’t in the affordable zone if it means them making
money is part of the deal to get them on
there?
That actually is a good point.
You’ve got to get a mix here to make the economics add up,
but this policy gives us a very direct—opportunity for
direct negotiation with developers around the quantity, type
and value of the housing that we
build.
What’s a good figure for you? Because
you must have a figure in mind. Is it 80%? What’s a good
number that you’d be after?
Well, as many
as possible, but I wouldn’t want to pre-empt a commercial
negotiation process. We’ve got to make sure that we’re
getting value. It’s got to be viable for a developer to
come along and do it. Certainly, that preference is for more
affordable housing if we can secure that.
So
on that, the developer, they obviously don’t pay the
government for the land until the house has sold. That’s
the deal, right? When is that land priced? Is it priced when
they come in at the deal, or it priced when the house is
built later on?
Again, that will be a matter
for negotiation, and we will use a comparable structure to
Christchurch. I wouldn’t want to get ahead of a commercial
process.
But that commercial process is
important, isn’t it? Because it’s public land, and it
may be that a developer can get some windfall profits out of
this.
Well, it will be fully transparent, as
are the deals happening in Christchurch.
Do
you think that the Auckland Council should be doing the same
thing – going out, auditing what it owns in Auckland, what
it’s not using in Auckland and essentially doing the same
thing as the Government and saying, ‘Hey, this should have
some affordable housing put on it.’
We’ve been having those exact discussions
with Auckland City Council just in the last couple of weeks.
They’re reorganising their own operation. Remember,
Auckland City is an amalgam of eight or nine other councils,
so they’ve inherited a lot of land from other councils.
They seem to have got to the bottom of that, so it is quite
a positive environment there, where the Government and
Auckland Council and Housing New Zealand and Tamaki
Redevelopment Company will all be up there over the next
6-12 months procuring new houses, new supply on public land,
for Auckland.
So we could see Auckland Council
free up some of its public land as well? It might not just
be government land?
Yeah, Auckland Council
will be going to the market with land that Auckland Council
owns. There will also be some we do together, such as in
Tamaki, where Auckland Council has some land. We have a lot
of land, and there are opportunities to work
together.
So this 430ha that’s been put up
in this Budget announcement, is that all of it, or is that
just the start of what we’re talking about
here?
Well, at the moment, that seems to be
the extent of under-utilised Crown land that is
appropriately zoned.
I want to look at the
hardship package now. Raising benefits – straight after
the election, John Key rejected benefit increases on this
programme, saying, ‘If it was just a matter of a bit more
money on the benefit, I would strongly suggest governments
would have fixed it in the past.’ So why this, another
U-turn, essentially? Why more money for the
benefit?
Well, it's not a U-turn. There's
two tracks here — one we've been working on three or four
years and that is looking at individual families in
communities and at the kind of issues that lock them into
long-term dependency and what the experts call persistent
deprivation; that is people on a very low income for year
after year — six, seven years — and that's under our
label of social investment, and we're starting to make some
real progress in understanding the cycle of violence, low
income, no education, no employment and criminal offending
that locks families in. Alongside that, though, as the Prime
Minister indicated on election night, some of these families
are in sufficient hardship that can't wait round while we
deal with multi-generational problems; they need some cash
now, and the evidence from MSD surveys has been that, you
know, there's families where children can't get enough to
eat and enough clothes, and so they need some cash to
help.
So, on that, you know, you said when
families rely on a benefit, it has to be enough for children
to get a decent upbringing; is 25 bucks a week, is that
enough for a decent upbringing in your
mind?
Well, it's going to help. I don't
think we pretend that it's going to meet every need that any
family would want. It's going to help—
It's
decent, is it? It's decent.
Well, as we've
said— Look, it's going to relieve some of the burden of
hardship there, bearing in mind that we want to make sure
that there's still pretty clear incentives for these
families to get into work, because work is the best way out
of welfare dependency.
And on this kind of
thing we're talking about it's a long way from the National
Party of Ruth Richardson. It's a long way from the National
Party of Don Brash, you know, that you were part of. What's
going on here. What's the change? It is quite different,
isn't it? Are you copping some flack from the right wing of
the party?
No, I think it would be a bit of
a mistake to see it in those kind of political terms. I mean
the National Party is still the National Party, but, you
know, as the Prime Minister signalled pretty clearly on
election night, this is a National government that has spent
quite a bit of time on social-type issues because these are
the drivers of government spending; it's what makes
government big — is we've got all these social problems,
which in 30 years— well, there hasn't been much progress
until the last three or four years when there's been some
real progress, so we're working now on an environment where
we have confidence in our welfare and housing reforms, which
do help people to transition out of dependency, and, in that
context, then you can probably put a bit more money in. In
the past, there wasn't the confidence, actually, that you'll
get people out of dependency, and there was a real concern
if you gave more money to the households, they'd just stay
where they were.
And on the KiwiSaver —
kick-start's gone now. I mean let's— Are you sort of
robbing the piggy bank to get the surplus? Are you
discouraging people from joining KiwiSaver, saving that
money, to help you get across the line with that
surplus?
No, we’re not. Look, the best
thing that’s happened for savings in recent years is the
tax which back in 2010 that cut the tax on savings, when
with income tax cuts, and put more of the taxation burden on
spending. The net effect of that is more incentives to save,
to work, to invest, and New Zealand savings rates are now—
have been positive for five years for the first time in
decades.
So on that, auto enrolment, which you have
promised, it’s now actually cheaper to do that, isn’t
it, because you don’t have to pay the kick-start if you
auto enrol people. When will we see auto enrolment?
Well,
we haven’t put a specific date on it, but we’re still
keen on that concept, because it tips a lot of people into
KiwiSaver and they again— who aren’t there, and they
have to make the choice to get out.
And it’s
easier, it’s cheaper now, isn’t
it?
That’s right. It would be considerably
cheaper, and once we implement this policy, we’ll just go
back and see just what the costs are likely to
be.
So will that happen, auto enrolment, or
will that happen when you get back to surplus, or can you do
it sooner? Will we see it before the next
election?
Well, getting back to surplus
would certainly help. I mean, as we head into surpluses, we
have the capacity to do things like auto enrolment and then
eventually to restart contributions to the New Zealand Super
Fund.
All right, Minister, thank you very much
for your time.
Thank you.
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