The Fictional Surplus And You
Rt Hon Winston Peters
New Zealand First
Leader
Member of Parliament for Northland
24 MAY 2017
EMBARGOED UNTIL
DELIVERY
Speech by
New Zealand First Leader and Northland MP Rt Hon Winston
Peters
Public Meeting,
Forbury Racecourse,
Bart Winters Room,
45 McAndrews Rd,
South
Dunedin.
10.30am, Wednesday, May 24, 2017
The Fictional Surplus And
You
It is always a
pleasure to visit the home of the Highlanders Super 15 rugby
team.
You have much to be proud of:
The peninsula, the
Octagon, your museums, Olveston and much more.
But it is
sad day when you are losing one of the icons for which you
are known throughout New Zealand.
The planned closure of
Cadbury’s factory with the loss of 360 jobs is a bitter
blow to this city.
Corporations like Mondelez believe
only in loyalty to the almighty dollar.
SURPLUS
Tomorrow we have the Budget.
Expect a lot of
smoke and mirrors.
The prime minister has already crowed
about having a supposed operating surplus of $1.14 billion
for the last seven months to January despite that surplus
being fictional.
New Zealand First call it a bogus
surplus
How can you have a surplus when you make making
massive cuts elsewhere and everywhere?
You can conjure up
a bogus surplus if you have frozen the police budget since
2010.
Or cut funding to district health boards by $1.7
billion.
Or slashed DoC funding with $53 million less
each year from 2008 until 2015.
Allowed a huge housing
shortage of over 40,000 houses in Auckland alone.
Allowed
a huge roading deficit everywhere.
Made billions
outstanding in defence promises yet kept none of them.
He
talked of tax cuts.
ACCOUNT DEFICIT
National boasts about New
Zealand’s GDP growth rate of 3.0%.
But New Zealand’s
population is now growing at 2% annually.
Accordingly, 2%
has to be deducted from GDP numbers before any real growth
can be claimed. That means New Zealand’s GDP growth is
1%.
Because without the population growth adjustment, the
numbers are totally deceptive and well below the OECD
average.
One figure the Government never mentions is the
current account deficit which is running into billions of
dollars.
Last year it was $7 billion.
And behind that
number is New Zealand’s net international investment
position – what we owe the rest of the world
That
number is now a negative $156 billion!
TRUE SITUATION
The
true state of our society can be seen all around us and that
tells a different story to Bill English’s surplus
“spin”.
Behind the boast that “NZ has the third
highest growth rate in the OECD” ordinary New Zealanders
see:
• More than 92,000 young New Zealanders aged 15 to
24 who are not jobs, training or education.
• Around
130,000 unemployed.
• And in the last 12 months we have
taken over 71,900 migrants to stay here permanently.
This
is the city of Rotorua being added year after year.
•
We have stagnant incomes and more and more workers in casual
and low paid jobs.
We have:
• A housing crisis
in Auckland that has spread to the regions and that is
turning young Kiwis into renters for life.
• Hospital
and medical services under intense pressure and surgery
waiting lists that are growing longer.
• Overcrowded
and understaffed schools.
• Overloaded roading and
public transport infrastructure swamped by population
growth.
• A growing gap between rich and poor that is
getting worse and with levels of homelessness and family
poverty rising.
• New Zealand land and businesses are
being flogged off to overseas buyers.
According to the
Overseas Investment Office 466,000 hectares of land was sold
to offshore buyers in 2016 – five times more than in
2015.
NZ SUPER
There is constant cry that NZ Super is
unaffordable.
It is affordable.
Here are the
facts:
NZ Super’s actual net cost to taxpayers is
around 3.8 per cent of GDP.
That NZ Super is taxed is
being deliberately overlooked.
NZ Super as a percentage
of GDP will stay the same even with an ageing population if
New Zealand doubles its GDP by 2050 and we improve our
productivity.
The opponents of NZ Super have four
features about them:
- They can’t make out a
financial argument to support their view.
- They
mistake population trends,
- They ignore the 87,000
we have allowed in here in the last 15 years to get full NZ
Super after just 10 years,
- They recite overseas
population trends and percentages when they know they have
no relativity to NZ‘s situation.
INFLATED BY
IMMIGRATION
Affordability
has been threatened by mass immigration for much of the last
two decades.
When Labour was bringing in 50,000 net the
equivalent figure in Australia was just 80,000 - for that
far bigger economy.
It is utter madness to take in net
almost 72,000 new immigrants a year as we are now doing.
When the UK target is just 100,000.
Section
70
New Zealand First will
end the Section 70 anomaly in the Social Security Act. Just
as we did with the surtax and tinkering with the Super
formula. (Our 66%)
This affects a specific group of
people who are entitled to an overseas state pension.
As
a result of section 70, around 70,000 people receiving NZ
Super have some level of deduction made.
It is an anomaly
and unfair to those affected.
NZ First is committed to
ending this anomaly.
Realm
countries and NZ Super
And
we are going give retired, or near retireds, in the Realm
countries, Cook Islands, Niue and Tokelau, the right to pick
up their NZ Super in the Cooks, Niue and Tokelau without the
“five years back in NZ rule” being so unfairly applied
to them now.
It is an abject disgrace that the National
Party says we can’t afford to do this which will be
available to only a few hundred yet give full NZ Super to
over 87,000 who have come to this country and acquire full
NZ Super, and all its benefits, after just 10 years
residence here whether they have made any contribution or
not.
A HISTORY YOU CANNOT TRUST
Unlike National and Labour, who have repeatedly back-tracked on NZ Super, we have never diverted from our stand.
SECRET TO AFFFORDABILITY
The secret to maintaining NZ
Super’s affordability is increasing the size of our
economic cake, restoring productivity, and controlling
immigration.
This is achievable, but not with present and
recent policies.
We have unlimited economic
potential.
But we cannot sustain the large number of
immigrants who are coming here.
With a stable population
and increased productivity, the affordability of NZ Super
will increase further and raise our living
standards.
It’s as simple as that.
NOT OPPOSED TO IMMIGRATION
New Zealand First is not
opposed to immigration.
But we want controlled
immigration.
We need to take our foot off the accelerator
and bring immigration back to sustainable levels.
To
10,000, not nearly 72,000.
We must have high quality
skilled immigration.
What we have instead is mainly
low-skilled immigration.
WORKING FOR GREY POWER
New Zealand First values our relationship with Grey
Power.
We have shown our loyalty to Seniors in countless
battles.
We continue to fight for your interests.
In
2015 we brought our SuperGold Health Check Bill before
Parliament.
The intention of the bill was to provide
three free GP visits with the SuperGold Card each
year.
Grey Power supported this bill.
Unfortunately
National, Act and United Future did not.
This gruesome
threesome made sure our bill did not pass its first
reading.
It lost by a single vote.
We are not giving
up.
We intend bringing this bill back to
parliament.
Also we want free eye tests for SuperGold
Cardholders once a year.
It is a great concern to us that
one in seven New Zealanders over 50 will develop Macular
Degeneration.
This condition causes 48% of cases of
blindness in New Zealand.
About 1.5 million New
Zealanders are at risk of developing Macular Degeneration
and by 2030 the number of sufferers will increase by
70%
It is estimated that Macular Degeneration annually
costs New Zealand $200 million, from lost productivity and
increased medical costs – including people entering care
facilities at an earlier age.
We believe prevention is
better than cure.
PUTTING
NEW ZEALAND AND NEW ZEALANDERS FIRST
New Zealand First is a party which stands for equal opportunity for all.
We are a party which believes in looking after our citizens, young and old, and working in their best interests.
It’s all about putting New Zealand first, and Kiwis first.
ENDS