NZ Institute calls for tough-love budget
Tough-love budget called for to prevent NZ’s long-term decline
April 28 – The New Zealand Institute isn’t aiming to make friends with its prescription for the economy.
In its pre-budget report, the privately funded think-tank suggests scrapping proposed income tax cuts, reviewing Working for Families and health spending, and creating new sources of revenue such as from property taxes.
The global recession is a “small window of opportunity” to re-launch itself “as a magnet for business and talent” the institute says in the report. The budget should focus on growing the revenue, rather than tightening the belt, it says.
“The temptation will be for the government to ignore this need for strong leadership and vision about how New Zealand will position itself to compete, and instead focus the budget exclusively on cost control measures and tightening existing policies,” research director Benedikte Jensen and researcher Chye-Ching Huang wrote in the report.
New Zealand’s economy is forecast to contract 2.8% this year, the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development said in its country report. Global growth may emerge in 2010 and 2011 but the New Zealand economy risks “degenerating over the long run” because of the projected high and ongoing levels of public debt and budget deficits.
“Persistent deficits and high debt levels would stunt
growth, reduce the government’s ability to invest in
critical social and economic needs, and increase New
Zealand’s vulnerability to future economic shocks,” the
report says.
The institute bases its assessment on
the Treasury’s December Economic and Fiscal Forecasts and
Treasury Secretary John Whitehead’s presentation to the
2009 Job Summit in February.
The forecasts have gross public debt soaring from 17.5% of GDP last year to 38.6% by 2013, and reaching 38.6% in 2023. That’s out of whack with projections for some of New Zealand’s significant trading partners, with the U.K.’s deficit forecast to peak at 5.3% of GDP in 2010 and Australia’s reaching no more than 2.8% of GDP over the next five years.
The institute sheets home much of the blame for the widening deficits to tax cuts eroding government revenue. New Zealand stands out from other developed nations in delivering so much of its fiscal stimulus in the form of tax cuts rather than spending.
The New Zealand Institute’s Budget Prescription:
Radically improve New Zealand’s growth prospects by:
1. Investing
in key services and infrastructure (such as broadband and
transportation of exports).
2. Boosting business
innovation.
3. Managing government assets such as SOEs
more aggressively to support domestic growth.
Reduce deficits by addressing both the tax and spending sides of the ledger without creating future social deficits by:
1. Ensuring existing policies support vulnerable
communities and work incentives such as Working for Families
are well targeted.
2. Control cost growth in areas such
as health where increased spending hasn’t been matched by
higher output or quality.
3. Cancel planned individual
tax cuts, which are poorly designed either to support
vulnerable communities or stimulate growth.
4. Redirect
cost-control savings into temporary measures to prevent
future costly social deficits, such as work or training
programs for unemployed youth during the
recession.
Address under-investment in productive areas such as business capital investment, eg:
1. Retain and
enhance savings policies such as KiwiSaver.
2. Consider
re-weighting the tax mix away from investments in
productive, mobile assets and towards consumption, and
investment in immobile assets such as real
property.
(Businesswire)