StatCounter

Monday 9 March 2009

One Country stands out against the background of fiscal irresponsibility

One Country stands out against the background of fiscal irresponsibility and that is New Zealand. The Wall Street Journal reports that:
"Mr. Key's coalition government, which includes parties to the right and left of the Nationals, has moved fast to implement a program of tax cuts, regulatory reform and government retooling. He won't label it supply-side economics and smiles when I ask if he's a Milton Friedman or Friedrich Hayek acolyte. "I'm not deeply ideologically driven," he says. "I believe in good center right politics."

...

Mr. Key's program focuses first on personal income tax cuts, which -- given that the new top rate, as of April 1, will be 38% -- are still high, especially when compared to Hong Kong and Singapore. "We just think it's good tax policy to lower and flatten your tax curve," he says. "People will move in labor markets and they look at their after-tax incomes."

Cutting the corporate tax rate -- which is now 30% -- isn't as crucial just now as keeping liquidity flowing, Mr. Key argues. "A lot of [companies] won't pay tax if they don't make money," he reasons. "So they might be slightly less focused on corporate tax in the immediate future. Longer-term, they will be." Why? Corporate money is "mobile." "If you really are out of whack with the prevailing corporate tax rates, and there's been a global shift toward countries lowering their corporate tax rate, then you're not likely to attract capital, or you're likely to lose capital." Mr. Key and his coalition partner, the ACT Party -- Mr. Douglas's party -- want to eventually align personal, trust and company tax rates at 30%.

For now, the prime minister is focusing on chipping away entrenched regulations that drive away foreign capital -- a contrast to the U.S. and Australia, which are reregulating their markets in the wake of the financial crisis. "Good regulatory reform can be an important catalyst toward driving economic growth and coming out of the recession faster," Mr. Key says. His government is revising legislation meant to protect New Zealand's pristine environment from private-sector development but misused by greens to stymie all stripes of business plans.

Big government is also coming under the gun. Mr. Key launched a "line-by-line review" of every government department, and committed the government to cap new spending in its May budget. "If we want to fund new initiatives, we by definition have to stop [funding] some of the things we don't think were working. . . . We're just getting better value for money."

The Key government also is wary of climate change orthodoxy. "Half of all of our emissions come from agriculture," he says, meaning cows "burping and farting." "We don't have an answer to that. . . . So at the moment, we either become more expensive or we cut production. And neither of those options are terribly attractive." Mr. Key is reviewing the economic impact of the previous government's cap-and-trade plan. "New Zealand needs to balance its environmental responsibilities with its economic opportunities, because the risk is that if you don't do that -- and you want to lead the world -- then you might end up getting unintended consequences.""


Maybe New Zealand is the place to emigrate to.

4 comments:

Falco said...

The article sounded very odd and I couldn't put my finger on why for a minute. Then it struck me, this must be what a sane politician sounds like.

Anonymous said...

"Maybe New Zealand is the place to emigrate to."

I hope so, seeing as I'm there already - just over a year in.

I could do with some good news.

Not a sheep said...

How has the move been? Quite seriously how easy was it to get NZ residency?

Anonymous said...

Get a job, pass the medical, no criminal convictions. And be under 56. It helps if the job is in an area of skills shortage. There is a points based system and having enough points on your 'Expression of Interest' will result in being invited to apply for residency. Start here: http://www.immigration.govt.nz/

There are agencies that will help you out, for a fee of course. I used these guys: http://www.emigrationgroup.co.uk/

There are loads of hoops to jump through and everyone seems to be dipping into your wallet, but having the NZ Residency visa on your passport makes it worth the effort. See what other expats make of it all here: http://britishexpats.com/forum/forumdisplay.php?f=83