The Mighty River Power (MRP) share float is being rushed
through by a National minority government anxious to score a public relations
victory. For prime minister John Key, the float is his chief hope of
leaving behind a political legacy to be remembered after he has claimed his exiting
knighthood.
There will be tension between Mr Key, who would want to get
the shares away come what may to help him win his gong, and finance minister
Bill English, who should seek the highest possible price to pad out the
government’s ailing books.
There will also be tensions between the Kiwi mums and dads
with their pathetic $2,000 maximum share allocations, and institutions and
foreigners who would want some serious shareholdings.
If the mums and dads hang on to their paltry and fragmented
token allocations, they’ll easily be trampled over by larger stakeholders and
relegated to futility.
If these same dupes sell into the stagging frenzy, then the
IRD should rightfully claim its taxation dues without government interference
in service of the cause of capitalist populism.
Of great interest will be how the government as vendor of
the shares discloses truthfully the risks to MRP shareholders from legalised
looting by Maori tribes.
The government has a legal and moral duty to disclose this
Maori tribal risk factor clearly and honestly in the prospectus for MRP shares
and deserves to be sued by adversely affected shareholders if it fails to do so.
From the outset, the mixed ownership model (MOM) of partially
sold down state-owned energy enterprises was beset by smarty-pants general
election tactics and irresponsible failure to ensure that public policy was internally
coherent.
At the 2011 general election, the government proposed the
selldown as an assumed easy win that would help balance its books, yet
overlooked entirely the risks posed by the Maori water grab and its own frenetic
garage sale of Treaty of Waitangi settlements under the hubristic sway of Christopher
Finlayson.
The negligent incoherence and reckless lack of attention to
detail of the government’s casually thrown together policies was brutally
exposed when it was forced to amend its MOM enabling legislation with clause
45Q(1).
This clause states that, “Nothing in this Part shall permit the Crown to act in a
manner that is inconsistent with the principles of the Treaty of Waitangi (Te
Tiriti o Waitangi).”
Given that the
government is bound to maintain at least a 51% equity interest in its
partially-privatised energy assets, the score at this point is Maori 1,
potential shareholders nil, because the government as majority shareholder will
be hobbled by Treaty principle pandering.
To aggravate
matters further, Mr English ran amok promising Maori tribes MOM shares on government
credit to get them to support partial privatisation over the Maori Council’s
litigious opposition.
No one believes
that Maori tribes will ever repay their government loans advanced to buy the
shares, and thus public assets are handed over to private interests gratis without
ordinary New Zealanders being fairly compensated.
Maori tribal MOM
shareholders plus the government with its Treaty-bound 51% minimum equity will
always outvote all non-Maori shareholders in this pretty demonstration of
Treaty partnership apartheid.
Maori 2,
potential shareholders nil.
MRP’s electricity
generating catchment is comprised of the Waikato river and its tributaries.
By sheer
coincidence, we have Treaty settlement acts of Parliament rammed through by Mr
Finlayson that privilege Maori tribal dwellers along these same rivers above
all other human beings on planet Earth, including race-based grants of
statutory powers equal to those of democratically elected local authorities.
Witness the Waikato-Tainui Raupatu Claims (Waikato
River) Settlement Act 2010 and the Nga Wai o Maniapoto (Waipa River) Act 2012.
These
Parliamentary acts have the potential to affect MRP shareholders and must be
fully explained in the share prospectus with respect to their impacts and risks
to other non-tribal investors.
Stung by criticism from
Federated Farmers' Don Nicolson that Maori tribal co-governance over the
Waikato river was flawed and undemocratic, Mr Finlayson wrote in 2010 that “This is not an issue of separatism.”
“The
interests of the iwi here are the same as the interests of all New Zealanders -
and that should not come as a surprise.”
Let’s
just wait and see if Mr Finlayson’s self-serving optimism
is justified once equity in MRP comes into play.
Odds
on, we’ll be surprised and not in a pleasant way to discover that the Key
government has handed MRP’s electricity generation over to Maori control.
From
the outset, the government didn’t make certain its MOM float proposals were
consistent with the runaway locomotive it let loose with its hasty Treaty
settlements.
There’ll
likely be tears before bedtime for the mum and dad MRP shareholders already
savaged by dodgy finance company failures.
Maori
3, potential shareholders nil.
2 comments:
Apart from the very clear explanation by Michael, that, in the final analysis Maori will be the absolute winner. Plus that pathetic statement by Mr. Finlayson; who is renowned for “running with the hare and hunting with the hounds” (and has been paid by both) that there is no separatism.” Dear me ! Is he espousing that all his policies make us one people, what an extraordinary way to go about it.
My main concern is that the present Labour/Green coalition outside of their very vocal and written condemnation of this whole project have NOT REVEALED what they intend doing about this privatisation once they assume power?
Perhaps Mr. Shearer or one of his future Ministers could enlighten us on their policy, are we to expect a re-nationalisation of Mighty River Power into either total Government control; or a return to the present system which combines very successfully, the “worst of two worlds”?
I wait with baited breathe, although I am not holding it for long!
Brian
I suspect it will become inevitable that maori will be given a slice of "share plus" in MRP. I realise that this goes further than English's promised MOM to tribes, but just wait, he might even take lessons from Findlayson about that. Michael C is quite right in that "mums & dads" shareholders will become insignificant in the big picture.
What would a Labour coalition government do ? NOTHING, why would they, suddenly there is several billions available (assuming its not spent already) to further social policies that will keep the country down where it is now.
Unfortunately I cant not buy electricity from MRP but from our local electricity "retailer". Who knows where they buy electricity from.
From the day the electricity reforms kicked in, the whole sector has been fiddled with to the extent that the public have little or no idea what is what. Sadly, very few probably even care.
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