I have been trying
to work out which one of three serious threats to our economy is going to hurt
the government most.
Two of them are of
their specific doing, so perhaps they're slightly blinded to the pending
trouble.
One is a direct
result of their actions although at least in part affected by matters beyond
their control.
One is the Fair
Pay reforms to our workplaces. Two, the capital gains tax. And three, our economic
growth.
Now one and two
are policies they deliberately and presumably enthusiastically promoted.
The Fair Pay
recommendations are just that, it's possible the madness drummed up by the
committee led inexplicably by Jim Bolger, could in part be rejected or watered
down, you would hope so, but don't hold your breath.
But if this
government thinks New Zealanders want a return to the 70's and 80's in terms of
sector wide agreements, and a banning of individual contracts, then they need
their heads read.
When given the
choice in 1990 by the Bolger government, we embraced choice, we opted for
individuality, we backed our own talents over the Victorian shackled views of
the unions who'd held this country to ransom for decades.
The professions
that remain heavily unionised are there in 2019 for all to see.
All troubled, all
aggrieved, all involved in ongoing industrial action ... 2018 was full of their
plight.
The capital gains
tax though, might be counteracted to a degree with the promise that overall,
the tax system and its changes would remain fiscally neutral.
If labour go into
election year offering most workers a personal tax cut to offset the CGT
imposed on comparatively a few, they may get away with it.
But the bit to
watch, that few if any seem to have picked up on, is at what rate are they
pinging you on CGT. The suggestion seems to be the marginal rate which means 28
or 33 per cent. That is a spectacularly high rate, Labour before they dumped it
in campaigning on it last time, had it at 15 per cent ... good luck selling it
at more than double that rate.
But it does play
to Labour's base, how many traditional Labour supporters have shares and
investment homes, the sort of thing a CGT will capture.
If the Labour
voters see the "rich pricks" (Michael Cullen head of the committee
making the recommendations) getting taxed and they get money in their pocket
then the wider fall out may be able to be managed.
And then three,
growth.
Most people have
missed this, given the number came out just before Christmas.
Our Q3 GDP was 0.3
per cent, which is abysmal.
Add that to Q1 at
0.5 and Q2 at 1 per cent and you have the calendar year ending September at 1.8
per cent growth.
You would need
Q4's number to be 1.7 per cent to get us to the international average, to even
get us within range of our major trading partners.
Will we get 1.7
per cent in Q4 ? No we will not, nor indeed anywhere close to it.
Which means we
will in all probability be growing annually at little more than 2 % per cent
which is an indictment on this government's performance.
They have taken a
rock star economy and strangled it.
They will look to
blame international uncertainty, don't believe them.
The IMF forecast
for global growth is an average of 3.5 per cent. We should be doing that or
close, we are not.
And having ended
the calendar year with anaemic growth, chuck in a capital gains tax and see
what that does to investment intention. And lock our workplaces back up in a
way Jim Knox and Ken Douglas would have been proud of.
And the three
issues calamitously and spectacularly come crashing into each other.
On the upside,
that may make Kiwibuild look like a clever idea that's a raging success.
Mike Hosking is a political broadcaster on Newstalk ZB, who has hosted his number one breakfast show since 2008 - see HERE.
1 comment:
Remember when Jacinda publicly stated that , and I quote,"It is patently obvious that capitalism has been a blatant failure". As far as I am concerned her left wing crap is a blatant failure as proven all around the world where it has been tried and failed. If a country obtains a growth of 25, then that is what inflation is, we are going backwards.
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