Roar Of Approval For Business Compliance Cutting
Roar Of Approval For Business Compliance Cutting Work
Business is giving the Ministerial Panel on cutting compliance costs the biggest thumbs up possible, the Employers & Manufacturers Association (Northern) says.
"The recommendations from Alan Dunn's committee are extremely wide ranging with virtually all of them getting huge applause," said Alasdair Thompson, EMA's chief executive.
"The report, and the response its getting, must tell Government how critically important these issues are to business.
"The EMA endorses the call by Business New Zealand for Commerce Minister Paul Swain to keep faith with business on the report's recommendations.
"To do this the Minister needs to have a commitment from Cabinet on a set of credible compliance cutting measures out before the year's end.
"Such a request would not be onerous as many of the report's recommendations involve relatively small adjustments and apply equally across several different areas.
"For example, enabling electronic interactions with Government agencies covers critical issues from tax to the collection of statistics, hazardous substances and the RMA.
"Compliance with all of them could benefit enormously if Government simply agreed to make the cutting of business compliance part of the terms of reference of its own e-Government (E-CAT) strategy, as the report recommends.
"We wholeheartedly endorse the call for Government to address its own adoption of electronic transactions capability under urgency.
"Many of the report's recommendations apply equally to local government including the development of a framework to ensure standardisation and certainty in applying for resource consents.
"We like the suggestion too for all councils to appoint a business liaison officer, and for the emphasis on training and education programmes to ensure the rate of compliance is raised.
"As the report says in endorsing these for the HSNO Act 1996, 'we should have learnt from the repercussions of (their) absence when the RMA was introduced.'"
Ends
Spark: New Report Sets Out Outcomes-Led Approach To Lift Rural Connectivity Using The Right Mix Of Technologies
Bill Bennett: Fixed Voice Rules Head For Deregulation
UN Department of Global Communications: United Nations Proposes New Global Dashboard To Measure Progress Beyond GDP
Banking Ombudsman Scheme: Fraud Check Delays Well Worth The Inconvenience, Says Banking Ombudsman
Asia Pacific AML: NZ’s Financial Crime Gap - Beyond The 'Number 8 Wire' Mentality
Westpac New Zealand: Kiwi Households Adapting Despite Widespread Cost Pressure Concerns, Westpac Survey Shows

