The Nation: Steven Joyce
On The Nation: Steven Joyce dismisses fears of a recession in the
next two years, “unless we talk ourselves into it” but
admits “the job isn’t done in the economy”. Will present a new foreign investment strategy to
Cabinet on Monday that involves partnering with Australia to
create “a pipeline of private sector investment
opportunities to international investors” aimed at the
regions. Won’t project how long dairy prices will
stay low; dismisses estimates of five-year glut but thinks
prices may stay low “slightly longer than Fonterra” has
thought Says while “it’s going to be bumpy”,
he’s still positive about the economy, stresses many
industries are growing and argues dairy concerns have to be
kept “in perspective” because it’s “not the whole
story”. “You can’t be all about China
forever” and current economic concerns are “a bit of a
warning that it can’t be”. Debate over TPP “is
a bit silly because it’s all about access to our farmers
and access for our businesses in world market”. Says lower dollar will push up inflation “a little
bit”, but will protect our
exporters
Patrick Gower
interviews Economic Development Minister Steven
Joyce
Lisa Owen: Well, given
dairy is the backbone of our economy, it is time to see the
doctor? The Government is insisting that we’re well placed
despite the slump, although some economists have even used
the R word – recession. So is Economic Development
Minister Steven Joyce changing his view, and does he have
any medicine up his sleeve? Paddy is with Steven
Joyce.
Patrick Gower: Good
morning, Minister, and thank you for joining
us.
Steven Joyce: Morning,
Paddy.
Let’s look at dairy and the slump
that we saw in that story before the break. The dairy price
is falling and falling. The global milk glut is hurting the
New Zealand economy and probably worse still, it’s hurting
confidence in the economy. There’s no argument about that.
Steven Joyce, just how big a worry is this for
you?
Oh, look, I think we’ve got to keep
it in perspective. It is obviously our biggest industry, but
it’s about 20-odd percent of our exports, not the whole
story, and, actually, all the other industries that we’ve
got in the exports base are going very well at the moment,
which is good for us. And as a country, we’ve got
education, tourism. All the kiwifruit, the apples, the wine
are all having record years. ICT, a new industry that’s
growing fast, high-tech manufacturing, even the meat
industry’s having a positive run, so it’s tough for
dairy, but, actually, the rest of the economy is going well.
And, of course, the other advantage is that we’ve seen
automatic stabilisers come into effect, and we’ve seen a
drop in our exchange rate of around 19%, which does counter
a lot of that.
Sure, but if we come back to
those other export earners, for instance, if we take some of
those that you mentioned – wine, fish, IT and fruit –
and put them all together, that’s only half of what dairy
does.
That’s in the—
The
reality is they’re not big enough to pick up the
slack.
Well, hang on. Be careful. Tourism is
our biggest of all, and it’s had about 7% growth in the
last year and, actually, it works in a lot of the regions
where we’re having the dairy challenges at the moment,
which is why they’re doing better than expected. So places
around the country are looking at 6% to 7% growth in the
tourism industry. So I’m not saying that it’s not
something we should be focused on. Absolutely we’ve got to
keep investing and encouraging investment in our economy,
because it’s something that we just should keep it a bit
in perspective.
Yeah, because we’ve got Bill
English saying this is a concern, then we’ve also got
Stephen Toplis from the BNZ coming in and warning of a
scenario where a recession may not be that far away, and he
puts the dairy slump at the top of that list. I mean,
seriously now, are we at risk of a recession in the next
couple of years?
No, I don’t think so,
unless we talk ourselves into it. I think, actually, we have
got some challenges internationally. The world’s a pretty
fragile place, and we’ve sort of gone along 17 quarters of
growth and probably convinced ourselves that everything in
the world is okay. And what we’re seeing with Greece and
China and a couple of other places at the moment is that it
is still pretty fragile, so I’ve been on record the last
week saying I think it’s going to be a bit bumpier over
the next little while, but, again, I think we should be very
careful not to talk ourselves down too far and we should
keep doing and probably accelerate the sort of things that
we’ve been doing anyway that we know works, because
we’ve had a little reminder that, actually, it is— the
job isn’t done in the economy.
Sure, because
I’ll come back to that word ‘bumpy’. And here’s a
bumpy number – $2 billion. $2 billion. $2.5 billion is
what the dairy industry put into the economy last winter.
It’s going to be around about $500 million this time
around. That’s $2 billion less going around those regions
that need it.
Yeah, but—
Is
that bumpy?
It is bumpy, but the other side
of it is a lot—
It’s more than
bumpy.
No, the other— It’s a 230-odd
million— billion-dollar economy. The other side of it is
other parts of it are going much better, and I don’t want
to go on about them, but the kiwifruit industry, for
example, which has struggled through the last few years,
it’s really come away. You go to the Bay of Plenty at the
moment, particularly the Western
Bay—
Kiwifruit is tiny compared to
dairy.
No, you’ve got to be a bit careful.
Dairy is about 5% of our economy, about 5% of GDP. So you
mentioned ICT and said that’s not much. Well, it’s
nearly 2% of our economy. You mentioned the tourism
industry. That’s around 7% of our economy. So they all
contribute.
Dairy is 20, and we
can—
No, no, no. Dairy is about five,
Paddy. It’s about 5%.
20% of exports, which
is where it counts.
20% of all exports,
that’s right. Well—
We can go around these
numbers—
No, but it is important to get it
right, because the export stuff you’re right, but,
actually, that is what that economic stabiliser of the lower
exchange rate is doing to counter that, so people are
effectively pricing the New Zealand dollar lower, that will
push up our inflation a little bit, but it will help protect
our exporters. And for exporters that have been dealing with
the tough times, like manufacturers and like other
industries besides dairy, have suddenly found that their
prices in world terms have suddenly gone up a lot because
the exchange rate’s come down. So you talk to the Fisher &
Paykel Healthcares of the world, you talk to the
ADInstruments of the world, they’re suddenly got a big
income increase.
I guess what I’m wondering
here is are you trying to minimise this? Are you being a bit
Pollyanna about the whole kind of thing? Because I’ve
heard you talk New Zealand up this week and in other
interviews, and I want to know really whether you’re being
a bit complacent.
No, no, no, not at all.
Because I’ve actually, as I’ve said, it’s going to be
bumpy. In fact, in one of the national dailies this this
morning, it says I’ve gone negative. I haven’t, but,
actually, you’ve just got to keep a balance. So, yeah,
there’s some challenges. We shouldn’t talk ourselves
into a funk. We should focus on what we now know works for
New Zealand, and that is we've seen a recipe over the last
five or six years which is really working for this country.
This is a reminder that we keep pushing in those directions,
that we keep opening up to world trade, that we keep
encouraging investment in our economy, that we keep building
the innovation in our industries. Those are the things that
are important.
How do we do that? Where do we
go from here? What are the concrete steps from here and what
is Mr Fix-It going to do to fix it?
Well,
there's four things... Let's not get into that. But there's
four things that we need to do as a country, I believe. You
look out 10 or 15 years how to make ourselves more
resilient. And we're much more resilient that we were six or
seven years ago. But let's talk about those things. One is
we've got to unambiguously get into this encouragement of
free trade. I mean, this whole debate about TPP is a bit
silly cos it's all about access to our farmers and access
for our businesses in world markets. And we've got Tim
Groser with another one — Pacific Alliance, which is a
South American opportunity for us, right as we speak. And if
that comes off, that will be very big as well. So we've got
to get further into that. We have to do more to encourage
investment as a country, and one of the things I'm taking
through Cabinet at the moment is a joined-up national
investment attraction strategy which will have four or five
big agencies that are involved in this phase working
together under Peter Chrisp from NZTE, and their job will be
to show a pipeline of private sector investment
opportunities to international investors so that they can
come in, invest particularly in our regions, and encourage
opportunities to grow new industries and put more capital
into existing industries across the
regions.
So that's going through Cabinet at
the moment?
That's right.
So
what exactly is it? Are you looking for foreign investors to
come in and work with...
That's right. We
need both domestic and foreign investors. I mean, why New
Zealand grows, and we've seen this in recent times, is more
investment.
What's different with what's going
through Cabinet now than what you've been trying the whole
time?
Well, it's actually... In the past
it's been a very unjoined-up process. It's sort of like
whoever wanders in the door, we'll say gidday to them and
see what we've got around to encourage them. This is
actually a more proactive government-led private sector
participant investment strategy. We're also working with the
Australians to attract investment down to our neck of the
woods; Australia and New Zealand around infrastructure and
investment.
Give me a practical example of how
this might work.
Well, I'll give you an
example. Manawatu-Whanganui is a region that struggled
historically. We're putting out... We've got a lot of work
with them at the moment, coming out with a regional
opportunities report in the next little while. It's going to
show up some quite significant investment opportunities in
that region. One of them, for example, is the poultry
industry. Waikato has quite a big poultry industry.
Manawatu-Whanganui doesn't. Another one is the food
industry. The horticulture of growing of food. To get those
going, they will need significant investment, and that will
be about attracting international
investors.
So where does this investor come
from? What country does this investor come
from?
We don't have a strong view at all.
They can come from America, they can come from Europe, they
can come from South East Asia, China,
wherever.
Sure. Part of this… Is this about
getting China to invest as well, because we know with the
QDII2, which people won't know about...
Not
even sure if I do, Paddy.
Well, this is the
unleashing of China's investment; allowing more Chinese to
invest offshore. Is that the kind of money that you're
looking at rather than go into the housing
market.
I think you've got to be careful not
to be over-focused on China, because they have made some
significant investments, and they've been good for New
Zealand so far. So if you look through the greater Waikato,
they've got their ice-cream factory on the Hauraki Plains.
You've got the Pokeno dairy factory and so on. That's all
been good. They are also investing in tourism. One of our
hardest areas to get going is the Far North, as we know. And
there's a Chinese company that has bought the Carrington
Resort up there. They are going to invest there. But also
the Malaysians invest here. The Japanese. They have King
Salmon is a Malaysian-owned company. And they provide jobs
in regional areas, and we have to redouble our efforts in
that regard, and I think that's a very important part of the
story.
And the fundamental fear around this
kind of thing is the old ‘becoming tenants in our own
land’ or the profits being made here and taken offshore.
Will there be anything done to stop that when you’re
encouraging this?
If you’re going to
encourage investment, whether they’re from New Zealand or
offshore, you have got to allow them to make a profit,
otherwise why would they bother? Second, though, is New
Zealand has always been built on international investment.
You go back far enough, our meat industry, a whole range of
areas, have come in from international investment. What’s
important is that the activity takes place in this country,
it creates jobs in this country, which gives New Zealanders
the opportunity and the capital to build their own
investments. Now, the other side of that is we have a whole
range of other clever companies in IT and high-tech
manufacturing that are growing here and then starting to
export offshore, and they will need
assistance.
What I want to know, before we
move on, is this – is there going to be any fundamental
rule or law change or anything, or is it just going to
continue to be a big advert to foreign investors to come
here? Are you actually going to do anything more to
encourage them?
You don’t need a law
change, actually, Paddy. That’s the important thing –
you don’t need a law change in this particular area. Other
areas you do need law change, so we’ve talked about the
RMA; that actually is helpful to have a law change, and
we’re working on that through the House.
But
will there be anything more than a cosmetic sort of flashing
sign saying ‘come and invest in New
Zealand’?
Well, actually, you may play
that down, but that’s a very, very important part of the
opportunity.
I’m not playing it down. I’m
just saying is there anything more to
it?
Yes, there is, actually. As I say, there
will be a pipeline of effort. I don’t want to overplay it.
It’s just one thing of a number of things. You know,
we’ve got the whole business-growth agenda across a whole
range of areas. You know, the right skills, the ICT, the
high-tech, the engineering. It’s also encouraging the
innovation area, and, you know, we’ve had the criticism
for the right on what we’re doing with R&D grants, but
actually, that’s a really important part of the story, and
the infrastructure space as well – broadband and so
on.
I want to get back to milk again, quickly,
because this milk glut has got so bad that the United States
are actually dumping milk up in their north eastern states.
Goldman Sachs has just come out and said the milk glut will
go on for five years.
I think you’ve
gotta be careful with individual commentators. Look,
nobody’s arguing…
Sure. Here’s another
individual commentator – the Prime Minister said in May
the milk price won’t stay low for long. So how
long?
We literally don’t know the answer to
that question, and I don’t think anybody does, including
the Goldman Sachs.
But do you agree with the
Prime Minister that it won’t stay low for
long?
The point the Prime Minister makes –
and he’s right – the fundamentals are right.
High-quality food, particularly dairy, is in big demand.
Now, I’ll give you a couple of examples here. Last month
two New Zealand companies, Synlait and GDP that make infant
formula and selling it into China, they can’t make enough
of this stuff. So, yep, there’s challenges in the short
term, but don’t forget, the dairy price, the long-run
average dairy price over the last 10 years is about
$5-something a kilo, so, yes, it’s come down a long way
from the highs, but actually, it’s only reasonably close
to its long-run average. It’s a bit below it at the
moment. And also to note that at the same time, our exchange
rate’s come back 19%. So I’m not arguing that it isn’t
a tougher time for dairy, because it is a tough time for
dairy, but it will be important not to talk ourselves into a
funk about it and get on and do the things that we know
workers are confident…
But the point is this
– we’ve got a whole cohort of commentators saying there
could be a five-year low in dairy
prices.
No, actually, you’ve got a couple.
But, actually, look…
Let’s put the numbers
to one side for second. Isn’t the question here that did
you not see this coming? Did you get it
wrong?
Well, actually, we have been… If
you’re saying, ‘Should we diversify the New Zealand
economy?’ which I think is the subtext, that’s exactly
what we’re doing. We’re spending all this money
encouraging the R&D and the ICT industry, which is growing
at the rate of 14% a year. You’re right that it’s still
reasonably low, but it’s actually gonna pass wine and kiwi
fruit, which are big export earners, fairly soon. And then
you’ve got the high-tech manufacturing sector – we’re
investing a log there alongside those companies, again
subject to some criticism. It’s the skills that are
creating these opportunities. So I would argue actually this
is exactly what we have been working for in terms of the
diversifications of the New Zealand economy, and the other
part is opening out our markets, because it’s really
important you keep doing that. You can’t be all about
China forever. We know that, and this is a bit of warning
that it can’t be, and so that means getting out and
getting on with TPP, getting out and getting on with the
Pacific Alliance…
Realistically, where does
this current set of economic conditions put our chances of a
surplus next year? Because you’ve talked a lot about the
dollar today. That is in that downside scenario of the May
budget that was saying no surplus till
2017.
Well, actually, you’ve got to be a bit
careful there, because the downside scenario didn’t
actually have the sort of dollar that we’re at now and
didn’t have the interest rates of the Reserve Bank, and
these are the automatic stabilisers. The downside talked
about lower dairy prices…
And a lower
dollar.
No, not much lower. And certainly
not at the numbers we’re at now, and assumed, also, steady
interest rates.
Where’s the chances of
surplus next year?
On Tuesday, you’ll be
pleased to know the May accounts are coming out, and Bill
English will be sharing those with the country, and I think,
once again, they will show some of the weaknesses of
Treasury’s forecasting - in a good way. But, look, it’s
still on the line as to whether we’ll get a surplus in
14/15, and if we get one in 14/15, it’s a lot easier to
get one in 15/16. So I think, broadly, our fiscal position
– good, strong, conservative fiscal position, which is a
heck of a lot better than most countries in the world.
We’re much better as a country in terms of how much we owe
the world. I mean, we’re down to about 50% of GDP for our
international liabilities compared to a few years ago. Our
balance of payments are staying stubbornly low. So these are
all good things, and New Zealand’s in a much more
resilient space. Now, I think…
Let’s just
come back to that question around the Prime Minister saying
that milk prices won’t stay low forever, and then
commentators like Goldman Sachs saying that there’s a
five-year low. Who’s right?
Well, I think
Goldman Sachs are out of reach. I think we all acknowledge
that that they’re out there, and commentators at the end
of the day have got to make themselves a headline, otherwise
nobody knows that they exist, right? But I think— that’s
true. The ultimate answer to these things is actually it
will recover over time. We don’t know—
How
much time?
Well, nobody knows exactly how
much time. I always thought it might be slightly longer than
Fonterra, I thought, at the outset, but we’ll just have to
continue to work—
In two years, three
years?
I have great faith in New Zealand’s
dairy sector.
Are you talking
years?
We have the best dairy industry in
the world.
Yeah, so how long until it
recovers?
And they are the most resilient.
And you saw some of those guys in your clip say,
‘Actually, we cut our cloth a bit,’ and I saw it at the
Fieldays, and I talked to a lot of farmers. They said,
‘Yep, we’ve seen all this before. It’ll be a bit
tougher, but we’ll get there.’
Last
question. Timeline – when’s the milk price going to
recover like you and John Key say it is?
I
literally don’t know the answer, and anybody who says they
know the answer is actually, with the greatest degree,
having a bit of a whistle in the wind. The really important
thing is we keep doing the things that this country needs to
do to grow and become more resilient again. That’s
investment, that’s innovation, that’s skills and
that’s being open to the world. We do those four things,
and I’m telling you we’ll be the most prosperous little
country in the world in 10 or 15 years’
time.
Thank you, Minister. That’s a good
place to leave it. Thank you very much for coming
in.
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