The Nation: Alan Johnson and Bill Rosenberg
On The Nation: Lisa Owen interview Alan Johnson and
Bill Rosenberg Johnson says the Working for Families programme is
underfunded by half a billion dollars and the changes in the
budget have not made up for that. Both Johnson and CTU
economist Bill Rosenberg say the increase in the
accommodation supplement will lead to rent
rises. Rosenberg says the CTU would like a top tax rate of
45 cents in the dollar that would start at three times the
average wage. That’s similar to Greens policy at last
election for a 40% top tax rate over $140,000, but puts them
at odds with Labour, which has said it won’t support any
new taxes. Rosenberg says “We are not affiliated with the
Labour party. We’d obviously support a Labour-led
government, but we’d make up our own minds on what we
think is good for the working
people”.
Headlines:
Alan
Johnson from the Salvation Army says tax changes in the
budget benefit higher paid people more than lower
paid.
Lisa
Owen: The centrepiece of this year's budget was a family
package designed to help those on the lowest incomes and
their children, but the finance minister, Steven Joyce,
admits many thousands will still be below the poverty line
and under severe housing pressure. So has the government
gone far enough? We're joined now by Alan Johnson from the
Salvation Army and Bill Rosenberg from the CTU. Good morning
to you both.
Alan Johnson:
Morning, Lisa.
Bill Rosenberg: Good
morning.
Who do you think will be best off out
of this budget?
Alan
Johnson: I guess the benefits are distributed across the
population, but we do know that the tax changes do benefit
the higher paid people better— more in terms of the total
value of those tax cuts going to the better paid. And
feasibly, it was easier, perhaps, to look at others ways of
distributing money to ensure that people at the bottom got a
bigger share of it than they are getting.
Do
you agree with that,
Bill?
Bill Rosenberg:
Broadly speaking, I think it's— the package was heavily
weighted towards tax, so about two-thirds of the money
involved went on tax, and what happened was in the tax part
of it, the top 20% is giving as much as the bottom 60%. On
the other— Because that's the biggest part of it is really
the— those— the top 20% of people.
Yeah,
so if you earn more, you get more of a break on the
tax.
Bill Rosenberg: That's
right. And so for me, the question is, look, there's a lot
of hard-working families out there, low and middle income
earners, who will welcome that extra money in their pockets,
but the question is what we could have done better. And if
that tax money had not been extracted from our government
revenue and used to make that Working for Families package
better and used to improve public
services—
You mean don't give people—?
Let's be clear on this. Are you suggesting no threshold
change and just the extra revenue you're getting, the
government should've allocated to the spending of— to help
these people?
Bill
Rosenberg: That's right. Who has a priority in government
spending? I would say the priority are those low and middle
income family who have not been having good wage increases.
And as we talked— talking about some of the beneficiaries
have been very hard up. Much better to direct that funding
towards them and towards improving the public services like
health and education that they very much— and housing that
they very much rely on.
Alan, the minister
there says, basically, the children of beneficiaries aren't
being discriminated against. They're getting— They're
getting the same breaks as the families of the working poor
in essence.
Alan Johnson:
They are in terms of the changes that are being made on
Thursday, but they're not in terms of the underlying
distribution of, for example, in-work tax credit and the
family tax credit. We believe we should do away with the
in-work tax credit and just have one means of assistance for
all families regardless of whether the parents are working
or not, and that hasn't been addressed, and I think it's
important too to appreciate that there's still about $500
million missing from the Working for Families budget today
than there was when National became government, so Mr Joyce
hasn't really addressed that deficit that over the last
eight or nine years of taking half a billion dollars out of
that budget and they haven't really put it back as a result
of these changes.
The thing is, they would
say, that the changes that they've made has raised more than
50,000 children above the OECD poverty line. Now, that's a
big group of kids by anyone's measures. Are your
expectations just too
high?
Alan Johnson: I'd
dispute that. It'd be interesting to see what the results
are, because they're betting a lot on this idea that you can
put more money into the accommodation supplement and rents
won't rise as well. And when you don't do anything about
building houses, when you just think you can top up people's
incomes and they can pay rent, you're misled because the
reality is that rents will rise, particularly in the tight
housing markets such as in the North Island, and we'll see
all of that benefit going to landlords and not to the
families who for whom it was intended.
So the
accommodation supplement, is that an investor bonus— as it
is a housing investor's
bonus?
Bill Rosenberg:
Well, I think they've done about the right amount to raise
it after a decade of drought in the level of that, but there
is a big risk. I agree with Alan that that just flows into
higher rents. And if you still have big housing problems,
housing shortages, then that's even more likely, because
people out there, as we've seen, are competing for rental
housing.
Yeah, but I want to talk about also
— you mentioned tax, before we move on from that. So if
you're of the belief that they should just keep the revenue
from the tax and distribute it themselves rather than giving
everybody a hand back, what about raising the top tax rate
to get a bit more to do the kinds of things you would want
to do? Do you support
that?
Bill Rosenberg: Yes,
we'd be up for that, and I think, you know, our tax system
is not nearly progressive enough in the sense that those who
can afford to pay more are not paying nearly the rates that
they do in places like Australia and the
UK.
Do you have a figure in
mind?
Bill Rosenberg: We
would say around about— at about three times average wage,
it should go up to 45%.
So 45%, you're kind of
in line with the Greens in some ways, because they'd like a
40% but only if you make over 140,000. That was their policy
last.
Bill Rosenberg: So
it's roughly the same.
Roughly the same. But
the thing is Labour doesn't support any new taxes, does it?
Where does that—?
Bill
Rosenberg: Well, Labour is Labour, and that's what we're
advocating for, because we think it would be fairer to have
those higher taxes on the higher income brackets. We also
think we could raise some funds from taxing wealth in
various ways such as a capital gains tax or some forms of
asset tax.
But the CTU is at odds with Labour
in terms of that policy, then? Raising the top tax
bracket.
Bill Rosenberg:
Well, we are not affiliated with the Labour party. We'd
obviously support a Labour-led government, but we'd make up
our own minds on what we think is good for the working
people.
Yeah. What about from your point of
view — raising more tax by taxing those who're earning
more, would you support that
also?
Alan Johnson: We do
support that. Our view is that if you want to make a society
fairer, then you've got to do that through redistribution,
and the tax system is important part of that. And in
particular, it would've been good to see the top tax rates
rise a bit, perhaps from 30% to 33%, simply because I think
a lot of New Zealanders, even a lot of the better-paid New
Zealanders believe that if we want to address things like
homelessness. If we want to address things like child
poverty, then it's important that other people, people who
can afford it, actually pay a bit more, and that wasn't
addressed in the Budget, and we didn't expect it to be, to
be honest.
So the thing is it's not a
never-ending pot of gold. What would you, in the Budget that
you saw, what would you have canned to give that money to
other things? Is there anything that you saw that stood out
that you thought, 'No, I would have taken that money
away?'
Bill Rosenberg: As I
say, the biggest spend there was on those tax cuts, and if
that money was used both to improve Working for Families and
to apply itself to areas like health, which is underfunded,
as we calculated, by 305 million; to education, where
operation grants for many schools has been frozen; to
housing, where there's really no new money for desperate
needs there. Those kinds of things then we would have a much
more balanced budget which is aimed at the people who most
need it and the social services that we all benefit
from.
I want to come to the comments about
continued underfunding, but, Alan, was there anything that
you would have pulled back from spending, aside from those
tax cuts?
Alan Johnson: No,
I think the allocations as they are are fine. Clearly, it's
an incremental budget that's just added little bits to what
exists. The bigger issue, I think, is around whether or not
we've got a tax system that's fair and whether or not we
could expect some people to be paying more tax in order to
do things build houses and fund a decent health system. And
those questions haven't been answered in this
budget.
Bill, you have written a lot about underfunding
in health spending, and you would've heard the Finance
Minister there saying that we're getting gains in
productivity, so we're getting more bang for our buck, so
you don't have to keep increasing the spend. What is your
response to that?
Bill Rosenberg: Well, our response to
that is, A, we're very much in for productivity gains, and
we're talking to the DHBs about what we could do there, but
historically and worldwide experience is it's very difficult
to get productivity gains out of sectors like health, which
are very much people to people— the main cost are people.
It's very hard to get productivity gains from that. Treasury
in its long-term fiscal projections reckon they've been
doing well if they've got a .3% productivity gain. And in a
recent report, they were doubtful that the DHBs were getting
any productivity gains at all.
Is the Finance
Minister trying to pull the wool over people's eyes, is that
what you're saying?
Bill
Rosenberg: I think that's just the way of him saying they've
got to suck it up.
The other thing is social
investment, which, I mean, there's been a lot of questions
around this. Again, Bill, you've raised questions around
whether it's all new money, whose budget it's coming out of.
Well, he says it's all new money, but he couldn't offer up a
cost-benefit analysis. Do you still have concerns about
social investment?
Bill
Rosenberg: Well, there's good things and bad things in
social investment. I think the idea of evaluating programmes
after you've done them, started them, I think that's a
really good idea. Our main concern— If you take each of
those, they're just integrated into those health— into
those various budgets, like into the health budget. And our
calculation takes that into account, that 305 million
shortage. The concern we have with the government's model of
social investment is that it's a highly targeted approach.
And it's like building a more efficient ambulance at the
bottom of the cliff, rather than stopping people from
falling off. And stopping people from falling off means
improving our public services so they get good health, they
get good education and so on. So a social investment
approach applied to that wider programme of social— of
social spending, would be much more to the point and would
actually stop people getting into the kinds of problems that
they do get into, and this approach is just trying to
address in very small bits and pieces— doesn't take into
account the causes of it.
Okay, housing, which
is a big area for you, Alan. So no more bricks and mortar
announcements in the Budget other than the one we had just
prior to the Budget — 34,000 houses over 10 years. What
would your budget number have
been?
Alan Johnson: I think
the 34,000 houses over 10 years is illusory in a sense too,
because much of it relies on a government agency finding it
in the balance sheet. There's no real commitment in capital
terms to building new houses, and much of the additional
housing that's been provided is into the market that
would've otherwise been provided, so we'd put a question
mark around whether that 34,000 is a real figure or not.
Look, I—
So should they have spent that tax
cut on bricks and
mortar?
Alan Johnson: Look,
yeah, one of the things is we've got to think about using
debt in a creative way. We think that we should be building
at least an extra 1000 social housing— state and social
housing units a year for the next 10 years. We think that's
a start. We think it would cost about half a billion dollars
a year to do that. What's wrong with borrowing money to do
that? Mr Joyce had an aversion to debt, but what's wrong
with debt to actually build assets that improve the lives of
New Zealanders?
He talked about— We talked
about the 155 million, with him, for operational costs for
emergency housing, and he has conceded that, you know, a
chunk of that is going to be on renting rooms. Some of it's
going to go on motels. Do you see any logic in
that?
Alan Johnson: Look,
we've always said that that was a good first step, but the
reality is it's a bit like building a hospital with an
emergency department and not worrying about wards behind the
emergency department to actually be able to assist those
people to get well again. That's what we've done in housing.
We've actually provided the emergency housing, but there's
nothing behind it that's going to staircase people into
proper housing and where they can get on with their lives.
And that's the real challenge, and it hasn't really been
addressed with any budgets that have been allocated by Mr
Joyce.
All right, in the— We're running out
of time, but in one sentence, sum up the budget from your
point of view. Bill?
Bill
Rosenberg: I think it's an election year budget that is
deceptive in that makes people look over here at the tax
cuts, where in fact, the big problem here is in our failing
public
services.
Alan?
Alan
Johnson: I think it's a 'business as usual' budget. I think
a lot of attention's been paid to very small programmes,
and— but the bigger picture hasn't changed
much.
All right, thank you both for joining me
this morning.
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