The Nation: Lisa Owen interviews Bill English
On The Nation: Lisa Owen interviews Bill English
Headlines: English says he expects growth to remain in
the 2.5-3% range and if government does its job there
shouldn’t be a downturn. English says he might stand
down as leader if if he was in the same circumstances Andrew
Little was when he stood down. But says currently he’s got
strong support.
National Party
leader Bill English admits that despite aiming to, his
government wasn’t able to stop the increase in prison
population.
Lisa Owen: When
Winston Peters announced he was going with Labour, he warned
there were dark economic clouds on the horizon, and since
the government was sworn in, it’s been hinting there could
be a softening of growth when the half-yearly economic and
fiscal update comes out next week. Are they under-promising
so they can over-deliver, or has the National government,
the previous National government, left them some bad
numbers? Well, National’s leader, Bill English, joins me
now. Mr English, do you agree with some of those dire
predictions? And if you do, how long do you think the bad
times could last?
Bill English: There’s no
need for this economy to go off the rails. There’ll be
events around the world, of course, that make some
difference, the cycles in an economy, but this economy is in
good shape; it’s resilient; it’s got some real energy
and confidence, and it’s up to this government to make
sure they keep that on track. And ironically, we in the
opposition now have a more positive view about the New
Zealand outlook than the government
does.
Okay. Well, where do you think growth is
going to go? How low do you think growth will go? Some have
estimated about 2.4%. Where do you think would be realistic
for it to settle at?
Well,
as I said, there’s no particular reason why it should drop
out of the sort of 2.5% to 3% range. It’s been running at
3% plus. There’s a big construction boom going on out
there. In terms of trade, our commodity prices are in pretty
good shape. If there’s any kind of downturn, then people
should be asking the question why that happened rather than
going with the softening up the government appears to be
doing.
Okay. So you would accept a growth rate
around 2.5%. If it goes below that, then you would be
pointing the finger.
Well,
it’s not a matter of what you accept. All I’m saying is
it’s on a good track, it’s in good condition, the
economy’s going well, and I can’t quite understand why
the government’s talking it down more than the normal
economic risk.
Okay. Well, briefings to
incoming ministers were released this week, and some of them
raised concerns about our low productivity. Now, that was a
problem that was there before Labour got into government, so
what responsibility do you take for
that?
Well, the
productivity issue, I think, was clouded with a lot of
half-baked information and slogans. And some of it was a
byproduct of what was the strongest feature of the economy
in recent years with the job creation – 10,000 new jobs a
month for the last couple of years – and when you’ve got
that rate of job creation, you’re not going to necessarily
have very high productivity, but actually, by international
standards, productivity was pretty good.
So
low-wage economy. But in terms of comparisons with OECD, we
are low in terms of productivity, and one of the reports
released this week says important areas of concern – and
I’m quoting the report – are that productivity remains
well below OECD countries. That just didn’t happen in the
few weeks that Labour’s been in power, so, again, what
responsibility do you take for
that?
Well, look, we were
overseeing the economy for the period when we were in the
government. The economy grew well. Incomes grew well.
There’s a few questions about productivity, but by
international standards, it’s actually reasonably good,
and what the new government—
So you accept
that productivity– So per-hour productivity compared to
OECD countries, you can see that we were lacking during your
time.
No, I don’t accept
that as a description of the economy, and I would stress
again New Zealand’s rate of job creation has been amazing.
We’ve got thousands of people came off welfare. We’ve
absorbed thousands of people into the construction industry,
for instance. That has some impact on productivity because
they’re not necessarily high-productivity industries. So I
don’t make any apology for the performance of the economy
over the last wee while, and the government has to get to
grips with the idea that its job is to support the
confidence in the New Zealand economy, not talk it
down.
So you don’t accept that people
working longer hours for less money is a bad
thing?
Well, they weren’t
working longer hours for less money. In fact, just yesterday
there was a revision of household incomes by Stats, who
found out they’d made a mistake, and it turns out that
household incomes since 2007 have risen just on 50% –
five-oh .
That may be the
case—
So incomes have
been rising, in fact, more consistently in New Zealand than,
for instance, in Australia.
But you accept
productivity per hour—No, it’s not. We’re doing poorly
there compared to other OECD countries, and that was
happening on your
watch.
Well, look, I accept
there’s arguments around productivity. The point I’m
making is that for the measures people have, jobs and
incomes, 10,000 new jobs a month, consistent and moderate
increases in incomes, and the government is already trying
to soften everyone up for that dropping off, and I don’t
think that is their job; their job is to reinforce
confidence in the economy, make the decisions that’ll
continue the job growth and the income
growth.
Okay. They’re forced to work with
what they’ve got, though, aren’t they? And elsewhere in
the briefing papers that were released, there were some
other things that might be regarded as unpleasant surprises
– 72,000 houses short around the country, a prison
population blowout on the horizon, a dysfunctional Ministry
of Health, and no money for police pay rises. So have you
left Labour a disaster
zone?
No, not at all. None
of that is new. They’re trying to spin it as some kind of
big problem. I mean, the business of government is to deal
with the issues that are there, and there’s always
challenging issues. Take the police pay rises, for instance.
That came up during the election campaign. The government is
already scratching round for money because it’s spent all
the money on the tertiary policy, and it’s going to
struggle over the next few years to find enough to do things
like pay for police pay increases. That’s not our problem;
that’s their problem.
But you’ve just said
none of that is new, so if none of it is new, why didn’t
you fix it when you were in
charge?
Well, we did. Take
the housing numbers—
72,000
short.
There is a building
pipeline of 100,000 out ahead, which the government
acknowledges. That’s what the private sector and
government are setting out to build over the next four years
– four times the needed number, someone told me. So the
construction sector, as everyone acknowledges, is going flat
out – same with infrastructure. All this talk about
infrastructure deficit is nonsense. They’re building
flat-out, and the government, again, has to get on with the
job of executing with the confidence and the direction New
Zealand has that’s so positive.
So you take
no responsibility for that list of things that I’ve just
given you – 72,000 houses short, prison projections
reaching 12,000 by 2026, and no money for police pay rises.
None of it’s a surprise, but you don’t take any
responsibility for any of
it.
Oh, look, take the
prison one, for instance. We spent most of our term in
government grappling with the issues around prison numbers.
They dropped for a while, then it turned round, and they
started rising. That is a big challenge. It’s not a new
one; everyone’s been aware of it for the last few years,
and I hope we have the opportunity to make propositions
ourselves, but certainly, the government now has the
responsibility of dealing with what is a big, challenging
issue, and that is the growth in the prison population. We
never tried to hide that; it was all
published.
No, but so that was a moral and
fiscal failure on your
watch.
Well, we didn’t
get on top of the prison numbers, but there’s a pretty
basic reason for it – the courts are locking up more
people for longer for serious crimes, and they’re putting
more people who may be a risk on remand, and the current
ministers have explained that’s what’s driving it. We
agree that’s what’s driving it, and now they’re the
government, they have to come up with some
solutions.
But you didn’t do anything around
the remand thing when you were the government. If you know
that that’s the issue, you could’ve done
something.
No, we
did—well, you talk to anyone in the Corrections sector. We
did an enormous amount about reducing the reoffending rates;
we’ve built a whole rehabilitation process within the
prisons, and there’s now a great deal more understanding
of the reasons why people are getting into prison, of the
flows of people, of the costs that… There’s a toolkit
there to use, but the policy issues, we agree, are
challenging, because you’ve got to have public safety –
public safety is number one – on the one hand, but it is
expensive to have people in prison.
Okay,
well, you’ve been hypercritical of this government. Your
MPs have called them ‘hapless’ and ‘shambolic’ –
those are the words they’ve used, but you would know that
the Labour MPs and the Labour Government, they’re not
stupid. So why is it that you think that they’re going to
fail?
Well, we’ve just
been holding them to account, like you’d expect an
opposition to do. You know, they’re the government;
we’re the opposition. Really, just in the few months that
they’ve had, the lack of confidence in them is not
actually to do with us; it’s to do with the fact that they
say things and then they say they can’t do them. They say
it’s a billion trees and then half a billion trees.
They’ve senior ministers contradicting each other. That
just never used to happen in New Zealand. Willie Jackson and
the Prime Minister just had an argument last week over
whether Te Reo will be compulsory. They had a big argument
within the government publically about sanctions on
beneficiaries.
So what’s your reason that
you think this government will fail? Because, basically,
they’re keeping the same fiscal responsibility rules as
you – they’re going to have a surplus; they’re going
to keep government spending under 30%; they’re going to
lower debt to 20% of GDP, all of which was your fiscal
parameters as well. So why is this government going to
fail?
Well, we’re just
pointing out the shambolic start that they’ve had. In
fact, it doesn’t need us to point it out – the public
can see it. And you do make a good point, though. The things
that are likely to work will be where they pick up the
policies in place, whether it’s water quality, whether
it’s the fiscal policy, whether it’s social investment.
They pick those up and develop them further in line with the
positive direction New Zealand’s going, then they’re
succeed in those areas. But the early indications are that
they’re disorganised and they’re relying on the crutch
of a big chequebook.
Okay, well, you’ve got
your criticisms, but other than the ideas that you think
that they pinched from you, can you name a good idea that
they’re pursuing?
Oh,
we’ve supported two things – extension of paid parental
leave, and eventually, they’ll accept our extra tweak to
it—
Yeah, but that’s one that you would
say that they stole from you, so what’s
one—?
No, we’re not
complaining about them stealing policies from us; we just
want to support things that are good for New Zealand and
criticise them where they’re going to push New Zealand
off-track. The other was the TPP trade agreement, where we
offered unconditional support to the government to get that
over the line, because these things are good for New
Zealand.
So your party says it wants to be a
strong opposition, but so far you seem to be holding things
up, asking excessive amounts of questions just to kind of
stir the pot. I put it to you that your guys are being
petulant; you’re being bad losers. So when are you going
to start to cooperate towards doing some good, if you want
the best for this
country?
Look, 44.5% of New
Zealand voted for us, and they feel strongly that they want
New Zealand to stay on a positive track, so our job is to
represent them. Now, the stuff you’ve seen in Parliament,
that’s a product of the disorganised shambles of the
government getting started up. They’re just running it
badly. They want to run the country, they should be able to
run Parliament, and actually, us putting a bit of pressure
on them, that’ll make them better at it.
So
why don’t you just get in there and cooperate and do some
good around policies like superannuation, child poverty,
climate change? Why don’t you get some cross-party
agreements going in those areas? If you really want the best
for this country, you could be a new kind of
opposition.
Well, the
government will probably raise those issues next year; it
hasn’t this year, and where they have, as I said, put up
policies that we believe are good for New Zealand, we have
supported them – the TPP. But we’re going to oppose
things like later this week, right on the eve of Christmas,
they’re going repeal our tax-cut package. That’s a
tax-cut package that was voted for by Greens and New Zealand
First, so a majority, a big majority in the Parliament voted
for those tax cuts just five or six months ago. So we’re
going to argue vigorously against them, and we don’t owe
the government a break over the fact that they’re going to
get rid of a balanced tax-cut package and misuse the revenue
that they get from it.
Okay, so, I want to
talk to you about your leadership of the National Party.
What are your top three goals as
leader?
Oh, to represent
the almost one in two New Zealanders who voted for us, who
want to keep New Zealand going in a right direction; develop
the cohesion of the team in opposition. You know, we’re
out of government – it’s quite a different world.
We’ve got to rebuild our skills and get our team cohesive,
and we’ve made a really good start to that. And down the
road, look like the alternative government with better ideas
for how to run this country, and that’s looking, you know,
a bit easier than you might’ve thought.
I
think it’s interesting you keep raising the number of
people who voted for you. Are you still sour about the way
things worked out?
Well,
it’s just a fact. In the Parliament, we have
more—
But the fact is that is that it’s
MMP and a government was formed by someone else other than
you.
Yeah, that’s right,
but it’s an odd government and, basically, a weak one. The
fact is – these are facts, Lisa, not assertions. In the
Parliament, we have more seats than New Zealand First and
Labour put together. The select committees of Parliament,
where all the work happens—
You couldn’t
form government, though – that is the
point.
I know, and we
accept
that.
Okay.
We
accept that, but that doesn’t mean that we pack our bags
and go off and cry in our milk for two years. Actually, this
is government that needs challenge, because they’ve
inherited a country in great shape, and we intend to argue
for that and not let them squander it.
All
right, so, Andrew Little stood down for the good of his
party, and as a consequence of that, Labour won. Do you
think he made the right
move?
Well,
obviously.
So could that be the right move for
you – to stand down for the good of your
party?
Well, I suppose if
it came to those circumstances, it would be pretty obvious,
wouldn’t it? But we’re not in those circumstances.
We’ve got strong public support; we’ve got a motivated
support base; we’ve got people who want us to represent
what’s working for New Zealand and make sure the
government makes the progress that it’s
promised.
Do you accept that some people are
better as wingmen than the
leader?
Well, that’s what
makes a good team work.
So are you a
wingman?
Well, I’m the
leader and probably got stronger support than I’ve ever
had.
All right, thanks for joining me this
morning, Bill English.
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