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Thursday, September 25, 2025

Kerre Woodham: The Government has a lot of work to do


I have to say that the Herald's Mood of the Boardroom survey pretty much sums up my mood too. Yes, there are some excellent and capable ministers doing great work within their portfolios, and let's not forget how rare and wonderful that is, given the past administration. Come in Erica Stanford, Winston Peters, Chris Bishop, Simeon Brown – all good performers, all doing well, all delivering.

But when it comes to the economy, one of the main platforms upon which National campaigned, the performance is less than impressive. CEOs have sent a clear message to Finance Minister Nicola Willis in the survey. She has to hold the pro-growth line, sharpen delivery, and set out a long-term vision that brings investors back on side. The Government's going for growth agenda has five key pillars: developing talent, competitive business settings, global trade and investment, innovation, technology and science, and infrastructure, which form the backbone of Willis's economic strategy.

In the beginning, New Zealand's business leaders gave Willis the benefit of the doubt. In 2024, the CEOs credited her with a strong start. Not anymore. She failed to make the top 10 top performers in the survey. As did Prime Minister Christopher Luxon. He came in for some criticism. Business leaders said he needs to listen more. He's got a mantra that's started to grate, and he knows that. They say he rates very highly when it comes to ensuring his cabinet ministers are focused and delivering. True. He actually rates reasonably well on keeping a coalition together. But the report found Luxon did not score well for building business confidence, his own political performance, and on transforming the economy. So, on those areas, he's got a lot of work to do, as Forsyth Barr managing director Neil Paviour-Smith told Mike Hosking this morning.

“There are reasons to be optimistic, but hoping is not a strategy. And the business community is looking for stronger leadership from the Prime Minister and Finance Minister around some of these core long-term issues and the structural deficits of New Zealand.”

They are mainly concerned, the business leaders, with boosting productivity. They want a step change that includes a boost in skill, innovation, and technology, not tinkering around the edges. They say they need to see a programme for retraining and reorienting the workforce, especially those at the lower end of the wage spectrum. They say that tax and regulatory settings need to be reformed. We need to accelerate research and development and grow high-value sectors. Infrastructure, well we talked about that yesterday. There's a need for delivery of infrastructure, not just more announcements. They want shovel-worthy projects ready as financing costs ease. Immigration and education settings came through strongly. We've lost a lot of highly skilled people out of the construction industry in the last 18 months.

Now with the taps about to turn on, how do we ramp up to ensure there's capacity in the market? They also called for a compelling vision that stretches beyond a three-year election cycle. Again, what we were discussing yesterday. So there's a lot to work on. And Christopher Luxon and Nicola Willis would do well to heed the advice, the criticism, and the positive remarks made by the business leaders. All of these things we know, and all of these things we've said.

And while it is true that Labour, the Greens and Te Pāti Māori aren't inspiring confidence amongst business leaders to put it mildly. As a country, we need more, we should want more than the least rubbish of two coalition governments. Waiting for the economic cycle to finish its rotation is not the vision New Zealanders were promised when a centre-right government was elected.

They said there would be growth, there would be productivity, that good times were coming. Yes, it was a mess. They said they had the answer. They promised that. This coalition government, the National Party in particular, has to do better. Not just for the sake of their own political futures, but for the sake of the country.

Kerre McIvor, is a journalist, radio presenter, author and columnist. Currently hosts the Kerre Woodham mornings show on Newstalk ZB - where this article was sourced.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

As predicted, the inept and dishonest Willis is bringing the Luxon government down.

Stuff reported Kiwi families pay $10,000 a year extra on food because of the price colluding supermarket duopoly.

Productive, exporting, NZ companies, could grow and pay their staff more if the money swindled by supermarkets was available for them to invest and improve.

Instead of asking ALDI and LIDL what was stopping them making the short hop across the tasman, Willis conducted a 2 YEAR study which predictably discovered nothing previous studies hadn't already told us, and which Willis proudly announced ALDI and LIDL didnt participate in.

Big business CEOs have found Willis out, it's time Luxon found a way to manouvre a clever and honest financier into the finance minister position!

Ps it's worrying when the new reserve Bank governor uses her first public appearance to boast about being the first woman rather than discuss NZs inflationary causes and challenges, and how to resolve them.

We don't care about your gender! We need you to call out the high inflation, low productivity, illegally price colluding: banking, electricity, insurance, and supermarket sectors; and make recommendations to fix them.

Anonymous said...

Simeon Brown lol what are you smoking

Peter van der Stam, Napier said...

I am wondering why Aldi and Lidl are not interested.
The costs and tax too high??
Why not look at Ireland and Argentine. They seem to do very well.
I am in Europe at the moment and being scared stiff when I come back and have to go to the supermarket. Approx 35-to 40% dearer.

Gerry Sanders said...

The 3 key economic problems in NZ are almost impossible to resolve, basically because the population will not allow it ! These are :-

a) the assault on all forms of mining viz. oil, gas , coal, minerals, nuclear usage etc which has pushed up energy costs.

b) The Waitangi Tribunal which has allowed Iwi to extract $160 billion from the economy and continue their tax-free plundering unabated. This figure could now pay off the whole National Debt.

c) over-regulation of everything from farming, immigration and construction to business and tax which has strangled the economy..

We all love virtue-signalling too much to give it up in favour of hard-nosed business decisions and until this changes expect a declining economy.