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Tuesday, April 9, 2024

Bryce Edwards: Should politicians get a big rise? Or a 7.5% pay cut?


Pay cuts, wage restraint, and redundancies are currently being forced on everyone in the government sector. Except in Parliament. It seems that politicians have decided that their salaries and budgets are the one place that is off limits to austerity and restraint. MPs are being insulated from the cost-of-living crisis endured by everyone else.

This is because politicians are in line for a big pay increase soon. This is because the parliamentarians have tasked the Remuneration Authority with coming up with a new schedule of salaries, with attention to aligning their rate of pay to top jobs in the private sector. The report comes out this month, carefully timed to avoid it being an election issue. And given the terms of reference set by the MPs, there is likely to be a big pay increase coming the way of all MPs, especially those in Cabinet.

Newstalk ZB’s political editor Jason Walls has written about this today, reporting that Prime Minister Christopher Luxon won’t comment on whether politicians should be paid more – see: Luxon’s pickle as MPs’ pay rises loom amid public sector cuts

I’m quoted in the story, saying: “At a time of a cost-of-living crisis, [an increase to MPs pay] would be deeply unpopular and will lead to a backlash.” I also say that a further rise in MP pay could be a democratic problem: “If the way our representatives live and the incomes they’re used to are so out of sync with wider society, it will make people wonder whether they are representatives or part of a distanced elite.”

The article points out that the average New Zealand wage is about 70,000, while MPs start on $163,961 a year, Cabinet Ministers and the Leader of the Opposition get $296,007, and the PM receives $471,049 a year.

The case for paying politicians much more

Newstalk ZB’s Jason Walls believes that politicians are underpaid, and should all get a big pay increase, saying that PMs deserve at least a million dollars a year “to reflect their workload and sacrifice” – see: The Prime Minister, his Ministers and every MP in Parliament are vastly underpaid (paywalled)

The “mammoth” workload and media scrutiny of the current PM is given as a reason for a higher rate of pay: “Luxon’s on record that he’s up at 4am many mornings and works past midnight”. This compares very favourably to that of those in the private sector, according to Walls: “In the 24 hours from 4pm on Monday, New Zealand’s Prime Minister will do more media than any Kiwi CEO will do in an entire year.”

Yet, according to Walls, CEOs are paid much more than Luxon. For example, the highest-paid CEO in the country – John Cullity of Ebos, earns $8.4m a year – that’s 21 times what Luxon earns. And Luxon’s replacement at Air New Zealand, Greg Foran, gets $3.1m. In contrast, Luxon’s $470,000 might not even get him into the Top 100 CEO pay rates in the country according to Walls.

Walls’ case is also bolstered by the fact that the chief executives of government departments often earn more than government ministers. He gives the example of policing: “Police Commissioner Andy Coster makes $670,000 a year, Police Minister Mark Mitchell makes $296,000 (plus perks).”

What’s more, if we want to recruit politicians from the private sector, New Zealand has to be willing to pay more, says Walls. If you pay peanuts, you get monkeys: “We want people top-of-their game to be coming into Parliament. The best minds in their respective fields. People who know how to lead and get results. Those people tend to be highly paid and the prospect of leaving a company or organisation paying you many hundreds of thousands of dollars to sit in the back of the debating chamber and speak only when spoken to is not exactly enticing.”

On Newstalk ZB yesterday, its political panel also backed up the idea that MPs need to be paid more – see: The Sunday Panel: Do politicians deserve more money?

On this, broadcaster Nick Mills agreed that Luxon should be getting a million dollars a year. He argued for some sort of “performance pay”, or perhaps that upon being elected MPs should continue to simply get the same rate of pay that they did before going into politics. In contrast, conservative commentator Liam Hehir argued for politicians to get paid a “reasonable salary” that isn’t so low that they are incentivised into corruption or graft to enrich themselves.

MPs are now part of the top 1%

There used to be some sort of relativity between what MPs earn and that of, say, a secondary school teacher. But since the 1980s, politicians have shifted the task of setting their pay to an independent authority but told them to set the pay with regard to similar jobs in the private sector. As a result, politician salaries have been spiraling upward in recent decades. MPs are now in the top 1% of income earners.

However, their salaries have been frozen since 2018. The then prime minister Jacinda Ardern took stock of the state of the economy and public opinion and said it was time for a pause. The next time salaries were to be increased, Covid had hit, and again it seemed appropriate to forgo an increase again.

The Remuneration Authority has now been told by Parliament to review their salaries with a “greenfields” approach, asking them to reevaluate how much the politicians get paid compared to the private sector, and told they can only give recommendations of the same salary or more – they’ve been directed not to reduce current MP salaries. The Authority itself has also spoken out, saying that in making their recommendations they won’t take into account what their chair calls the problem of “public prejudice” against MPs.

The recommendations, due out this month, are legally binding on the MPs. MPs will say that they have no choice but to accept the higher salaries.

Is it time for the politicians and their budgets to be cut back?

Despite the notion that their “hands are tied”, MPs don’t have to accept the Remuneration Authority’s ruling of higher pay. All they have to do is vote to change the law. They could easily vote to impose on themselves a 7.5% pay cut – the same proportion that the Government is currently imposing on government agencies.

Dr Bryce Edwards is a politics lecturer at Victoria University and director of Critical Politics, a project focused on researching New Zealand politics and society. This article was first published HERE

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Politicians (the collective) are now a clear and present danger to the freedom and rights of we the people (the individual).

Not only should we NOT be paying them to betray us and our country, we should sack the lot of them, make them all redundant.

Rodge said...

Politicians should be on performance pay. There are all sorts of measures that can be used to measure the success or failure of individuals that make up a government - similarly for those members of the opposition. Over recent years, governments have focused on ideology, not on what is good for our country and its people. They should not be rewarded for neglecting their fundamental duty.

CXH said...

The problem is politics has become a career. Go to Uni, work for a political party, get mentored and then into parliament. Now they feel their salary should equate to someone who actually generates money. Someone who employs people, so those people can pay taxes to pay their salary.

Put them back on the same as teachers and police.

Anonymous said...

Absolutely true Anon at 1.33.
Parliamentary democracy has shown its substantial corruption over the last 4 years.
A new system of ballot selection of capable, mature, experienced people there for a fixed term and paid only twice the average wage may return NZ to the decent, aspiring country it once was. They would be there to serve the nation, not themselves.
The Bread and Circus approach finished Rome. We should take note of that.

Ray S said...

Anonymous 1:33
Sack them, and then what.
I suggest now is not the time for MPs salary increases. Voters will remember who gave the OK and who benefited.
While layoffs are hitting the public service, a wise man might see the impact
voting himself a raise would have on his popularity and political longevity.

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