Patrick Gower interviews Labour's Grant Robertson
Patrick Gower interviews Labour's finance spokesman Grant Robertson
Robertson backs away from
Labour’s 2014 Variable Savings Rate policy to influence
monetary policy, admitting it’s a “complicated policy”
and he can’t commit to it.
Says 45% of jobs in NZ may be gone in
10-15 years and praises a Denmark-style ‘flexicurity’
programme that assumes people change jobs more often but are
re-trained and re-employed quickly.
Labour will “look at” a much higher
short-term benefit - or ‘super dole’ – as is typical
under flexicurity; Robertson says it would be
“irresponsible” for future governments not to give
“income security” as work culture
changes.
Labour
wants secondary schools to do more to prepare students for
work, and is considering adding drivers’ licence training,
computer coding, financial literacy and citizenship classes
to the curriculum.
Says careers advice in many schools
just “isn’t good enough”. Says Labour wants to
“professionalise” careers advice with every student
getting a plan “about what they will do after
school”.
Patrick Gower:
Grant Robertson, thank you very much for joining us. You
just heard your leader Andrew Little there say that the NZ
Power policy was too complicated and likely to be taken off
the policy agenda. I want to ask you about a finance policy
first – the Variable Savings Rate, which was using
KiwiSaver to help control monetary policy; another very
complicated policy. What’s the future for
that?
Grant Robertson: That’s under
review. I mean, it’s really important that we get monetary
policy to work for New Zealanders. I think it’s important
that as well as controlling inflation, we also get a focus
for the Reserve Bank on jobs, on making sure that they’re
thinking about the impact of their policy changes on
employment. Whether or not the Variable Savings Rate ends up
being part of that or not, we’re looking at as whether
that will be a tool in the future. I acknowledge it is
actually another complicated policy, and I want to simplify
down our monetary policy to be focused in on how we develop
jobs, how we make sure work’s at the centre of the
economy.
As finance spokesman, are you
committed to that Variable Savings Rate or
not?
It’s under review, and I can’t make
that commitment today.
Sure. Looking at the
Future of Work Commission – a big body of work which,
obviously, you’ve been responsible for – one of the
ideas brought up in there is ‘flexicurity’. Tell us in
25 words or less what ‘flexicurity’
is.
Essentially, it’s a scheme where if
you lose your job, you’ll have income security and
you’ll automatically go into the kind of training that’s
going to get you another job straight away. This is
commonplace in countries like Denmark, and as we go into a
future of work where we hear that 45% of jobs in the New
Zealand economy might be gone in 10 to 15 years, we need a
policy that gives people the chance to get the new skills
they need for the jobs of the future and have income
security while that happens. So we’re investigating a
range of options, but what we’re not prepared to do is
abandon New Zealanders when these big changes are happening.
We want them in work. That means we need an active policy to
get them trained up.
Which means a benefit or
a higher benefit, essentially, for someone who loses their
job, as it means raising the levels of
benefits.
It’s essentially providing
income security during that period of
change.
Sounds like a
‘super-dole’.
What it’s about is
making sure that we’ve got people trained and ready to go
into the next job. I actually think it’s irresponsible
when you know that there’s going to be a big change,
there’s going to be higher unemployment, that we don’t
take the opportunity to say to people, ‘We can train you
up. We can give you this income
security.’
It would involve a higher
benefit, wouldn’t it?
The system in
Denmark does, and we’ll take a look at that. But what we
want to make sure is that New Zealanders can feel a sense of
security going into a big period of change, which is
what’s happening. Technology is completely changing work,
and we have to make sure that New Zealanders are in a
position to take the opportunity of that change, not fear
it.
So it would mean getting paid something
like the living wage or along those
lines?
Look, we haven’t settled on a
figure or anything like that, but what we are saying is we
want to investigate options that give New Zealanders
security during a big period of
change.
You’re also looking at a universal
basic income as well. This is… How serious are you about
that? A similar payment to all adults whether they’re in
work or not.
Well, certainly, it wouldn’t
be both; I can say that straight away. We are looking at a
range of options that say if a person who leaves school
today is going to have six or eight different careers during
their working life. They’re going to be moving in and out
of work more often. Work’s likely to be less stable. In
that situation, as a government, to be responsible, we need
to provide secure income, and we’re looking at a range of
options for that. The universal basic income has only really
been tried once or twice. There’s a couple of trials
underway at the moment. We want to look at how they go. But
ultimately, we want people to have security in a period of
change.
Sure. And just coming on to careers
there, you mentioned, what do you think, having looked at it
closely in the Future of Work, of careers training at
school, at the end of school? Where are we at in New Zealand
with that right now?
We don’t do it well
at all. In some schools in New Zealand, you get great
careers advice. In other, the career advisor is, you know,
the maths teacher who gets five hours a week to try and see
if he can work out what 700 kids are going to do with their
future. That isn’t good enough. We want to see careers
advice professionalised. We want to see students, teachers,
parents and employers involved in getting a plan for every
single student at secondary school about what they will do
after school. The kind of skills that students at secondary
school are going to need today when they get into the
workforce aren’t already there, so they need to be
prepared to be adaptable, to be able to change with the
changing nature of work.
You’re talking
about something simple as getting a driver’s licence in
school hours?
Yeah, look, we’re seriously
looking at the idea that the curriculum needs to include
driver licensing. We’ve heard from employers time and time
again they want kids ready out of school to be full
participants at work.
So a kid learns to drive
at school, between 9 and 3pm?
That’s one
of the proposals we’re looking at. We want every school
leaver to have in their tool kit a driver’s licence,
understanding financial literacy, understanding digital
literacy, understanding their responsibilities as citizens.
They’re the kind of skills…
And coding?
I’ve also seen in there coding. You want to teach kids
coding?
Sure. And that’s one of the
proposals we’re looking at as well.
Computer
coding?
Coding is like a language. It’s
going to be as important in the future as understanding
maths, understanding English. Understanding how computers
work, which will be part of almost every job in the future,
is just as important as those other basic skills. Education
needs to change to keep up with the changing nature of
work.
Ok, Grant Robertson, that’s a very
good place to leave it. Thank you for your
time.
Cheers. Thanks,
Paddy.
ENDS