Q+A Steven Joyce Interview
Q+A Steven Joyce Interview Transcript 21/04/13
Sunday 21 April,
2013
National’s economic development
minister Steven Joyce has told TV One’s Q+A programme that
Labour and the Green’s electricity plan will scare off
investors.
“They're talking about telling the
generators when they can generate, which generating assets
they can use, which ones they can introduce to the markets.
So nobody would invest on that basis,” Joyce told
political editor Corin Dann.
The minister said
evidence of this was seen “on Thursday and Friday when the
market dropped nearly $600 million across three companies
because they said, ‘Jeez, we’re not interested in
this”.
“I can tell you for free that right
across the energy sector, right across the investment sector
in NZ, they are saying, ‘We’d actually do less
investment in jobs and growth in the NZ
economy.’”
“That’s where the debate will
be, and we will be in favour of jobs and growth and
competitive markets, and these clowns will actually cause
real problems for the NZ economy,” Joyce
added.
Last Thursday, Labour and the Greens
announced the formation of a Pharmac-style single-buyer
agency called NZ Power if they won the next election. NZ
Power would buy electricity generated at wholesale level at
what it deemed a fair price and pass on these savings to
consumers through retailers.
The Greens say
consumers would be given 300 kilowatt hours per month at a
reduced rate, about two-thirds of the current price of a
kilowatt, and anything over that would be at normal retail
company prices. This would save most consumers between
$230-330 per month on their power bill. The average
household uses around 700 kilowatt hours per
month.
Joyce said the government had halved
electricity price increases through the formation of the
Electricity Authority in November
2010.
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Q+A
CORIN
DANN INTERVIEWS STEVEN
JOYCE
CORIN
DANN
I’ll come now to Economic Development
Minister Steven Joyce. Electricity prices have been
increasing far greater than the rate of inflation for a long
time now. They still are. We have to do something to
stop-
STEVEN JOYCE - Economic Development
Minister
Well, actually, weirdly,
the time was when Labour was in. I mean, these are
not-
CORIN
But they still are
now.
STEVEN No,
no. Let's take you through it. These are not the people to
trust with your power prices, because the vast lion's share
of power price increases occurred after Labour had a crack
at trying to change the regulation model in electricity in
2002. And then they had periods every year of massive price
increases from 2002 to 2009. It actually took Gerry Brownlee
to come in, tidy the whole thing up, introduce the
Electricity Authority, sort the thing out. And, actually,
the price increases have halved and less than half now than
what they were.
CORIN
Still five per cent last year, though, and
inflation was at 0.9 per cent-
STEVEN
Yeah, but the bulk of that was
actually distribution. And if you look at distribution, it's
about 40 per cent of the cost. So, the lines to get it to
your house and the lines to get around the country are about
40 per cent of the cost. Labour aren’t proposing to touch
that, so presumably that's the same. So we're talking about
the generation cost, which is about 30 per cent So, firstly,
these guys can't be trusted. They've got form. Secondly,
these are the same guys, including the Greens, who were
sitting out there saying they’d like an ETS (Emissions
Trading Scheme) - and the ETS would be at least double the
impact of the ETS that we've got today, which would push
prices up further. So what they're saying on the one hand is
we’ll give you with one hand a bit of a cheaper
electricity deal if this thing works, and it won't, and on
the other hand, we’ll take more of you. They're talking
about a $50 a ton carbon price, as reported by the Greens in
response to the Prime Minister's speech this year, which
would cost $400 or $500 a household. So they’re saying,
‘We’ll give you $270 on the one hand, and $400 or
$500-‘
CORIN
Ok, the issue here, though, Minister, is about
competition, whether there is competition in this
market-
STEVEN And
there is.
CORIN
Well, the five big retailers basically control over
90 per cent of the industry, and the implication is that
they are working as a
cartel.
STEVEN So
five generators is not competition? Well, that's an
interesting test, because on that basis, nobody in NZ is in
competition, therefore we should probably actually turn the
whole place into a pile of shipyards. So, here's the second
issue. It actually doesn't work. And David Parker looked at
it in 2006. He took a paper to Cabinet, and the Cabinet
said, ‘No, actually, this won't work.’ The reality is
the prices- It actually said quite clearly the cost of
generation, the cost of doing this, actually would push the
whole cost up. If you look at the areas where it's been
done, which is quite interesting, because I said on Thursday
that it was like a North Korean economic
solution-
CORIN
Which was pretty extreme, wasn't it? Come on, I
mean, that was-
STEVEN
No, it’s not. By definition, it’s socialism.
They are not just talking about the price. This is the joke
of it. They're not talking about the price; they're talking
about telling the generators when they can generate, which
generating assets they can use, which ones they can
introduce to the markets. So nobody would invest on that
basis.
CORIN
Sure. But just a second. There is a clear problem
here. We’re hearing from analysts that these companies can
effectively put maintenance into their systems so that they
can withhold supply, push up the price, that the hydro guys
can get 10 times the amount of what they are producing. That
can't be fair.
STEVEN
No, that's not right. It's all about the quality of
the regulator, and, actually, we've got the evidence. We've
put in place. We've lowered the increases
dramatically-
CORIN
Are they still doing that, though? Are they still
withholding supply?
STEVEN
Well, I'm not aware of the details, but I can tell
you in terms of what the consumers are seeing, we've got
inflation down to 1 per cent so you either say to yourself,
‘Do I trust Labour and the Greens, who have cost-plus
approach to these things, who left inflation at 5 per cent
when they left office? Or do I trust the National
Government,
which-?’
CORIN
But that is a key issue - trust. Because your
argument, really, is just wait. Hang on a second. It's
coming right. That's what Simon Bridges was saying after
this.
STEVEN No,
it’s not, actually. It's literally working better as we
speak today.
CORIN
But it's still 5 per cent So for the pensioner who
is on a fixed income. They've got a 5 per cent increase in
their power bill. Inflation is at 1 per cent. That's a big
chunk of their
costs.
STEVEN
I’ll come back to it again. It's literally 1 per
cent. Now, you look at some of the examples internationally.
You criticised me on North Korea, but that's what it is.
It's socialism. So you go out and say, ‘Ok. South
Korea.’ That's one of the examples which was thrown at me
after that comment on Thursday. South Korea, their company
which they have does this has lost money four years in a
row, has got power shortages, has been selling electricity
at less the cost of production, because that's actually been
by government fiat, and they are in trouble now, and they've
got to solve the problem. Texas is another example that
they've used. In Texas, they've just announced they are
putting up wholesale prices 50 per cent in a desperate
attempt to encourage people to generate electricity in
Texas. These are poor models by comparison to the NZ model.
No model is perfect, and you do have to work hard on the
regulator. And I very much believe in strong regulation to
keep prices down for consumers.
CORIN
So where do consumers end up
now? Can you guarantee that prices aren't going to keep
going up at 5 per cent a
year?
STEVEN No,
you can't, but this is actually a much bigger issue,
frankly, than just talking about electricity generation.
This is an issue of confidence in the economy, and I
actually think that's by far the bigger issue that we are
talking about here. Now, David Parker wishes all that away.
He says companies like Contact will just cope. Well, I tell
you how they cope. They stop investing in the NZ
economy-
CORIN
Now, I want
to-
STEVEN No, no.
It's very important that we get to this
point.
CORIN
Sure.
STEVEN
Very important that we get to this point, because
this is actually the crux of the thing. The important point
is that you need investment and jobs and growth in the NZ
economy-
CORIN
Why would they stop
investing?
STEVEN
Because reality is if you're being told what you
can earn, what you can invest
in-
CORIN
Yeah, and you're going to be told you can earn a
nice long-term, guaranteed income stream from NZ
Power.
STEVEN No,
absolutely not. I tell you, they'll be out. They'll be out
in five
minutes.
CORIN
That means you can then say, ‘Right. I know for
the next 20 years I’ll be delivering a 5 per
cent-
STEVEN Well,
don't listen to me. Listen to the evidence on Thursday and
Friday when the market dropped nearly $600 million across
three companies because they said, ‘Jeez, we're not
interested in this.’ And its broader than that. As you
know, JBWere came out yesterday and said, ‘We’d invest
less in the NZ economy.’ I can tell you for free that
right across the energy sector, right across the investment
sector in NZ, they are saying, ‘We’d actually do less
investment in jobs and growth in the NZ economy.’ And
that's where this will be fought, actually, because the
Labour Party don't understand that. When they were in
office, they did a whole bunch of things which actually
slowed down, they left a moribund sharemarket. They said,
‘These people will cope with these things.’ And what
happened was that we had much less job growth in NZ, and we
went into recession because their silly economic policies
like this one actually froze out investment. That's where
the debate will be, and we will be in favour of jobs and
growth and competitive markets, and these clowns will
actually cause real problems for the NZ
economy.
CORIN
Economic Development Minister Steven Joyce, thank
you very much. I want to come back to David Parker on one
point. Are you going to scare off investors? JBWere have
said they want to go. We've had Doug Heffernan suggesting
that he wouldn't have spent $1 billion if this policy was in
place.
DAVID PARKER - Labour Finance
Spokesman
There’s a 170-page World Bank report showing that the
going to tender for the next power station is competitive.
Can I just also say that one of the nonsense arguments from
the minister then was that somehow carbon pricing will make
these price- Well, actually, it's exactly the opposite,
and you should understand that. Because at the moment, you
price hydro in, there is no price of
carbon-
STEVEN You
want to take with one hand and give with the other.
CORIN
Gentlemen, we have to leave it there. This is a
fascinating debate. I think we're going to have a lot more
on it. Thank you very much, David Parker, Labour’s Finance
Spokesman. Economic Development Minister Steven Joyce, thank
you very
much.
ENDS
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