Q+A: Steven Joyce interviewed by Jessica Mutch
Q+A: Steven Joyce interviewed by Jessica Mutch
“We’re not trying to be like Labour” – Finance Minister Steven Joyce
Finance Minister Steven Joyce has defended criticism
that his maiden budget this week was stepping on territory
traditionally held by the Labour party, saying family tax
credits had been a part of New Zealand for
decades.
Speaking on the Q+A this morning, Mr Joyce said
people should not be surprised that National has increased
tax credits for families and he could not see a New Zealand
without such a system in place.
“There’s always been
some form of family tax credit, and, actually, I think
we’ve improved it,” he said. “New Zealanders endorse
that approach. Perhaps not everybody, but most people
do.”
Mr Joyce said the election on September 23 did not
play a part in designing his budget. “I know the
election’s coming up, but I’m strongly of the view that,
that actually, you don’t change your approach just because
it’s election year.”
He said infrastructure was very
much on the government’s radar. “We’re also doing a
very, very big infrastructure spend. And between the
families’ package, the investment in public services and
the infrastructure, the amount of cash we now have left over
the next four years is virtually nil.”
Also, Mr Joyce
told Jessica Mutch that he didn’t think you’d ever get
rid of Working for Families.
END
Please find attached the full
transcript of the interview and here is the link on our
webpage.
Q+A, 9-10am Sundays on TVNZ 1 and
one hour later on TVNZ 1 + 1.
Repeated Sunday evening at
around 11:35pm. Streamed live at www.tvnz.co.nz
Thanks to the
support from NZ On Air.
Q+A is also on Facebook: here and on Twitter
Q + A
Episode
1712
STEVEN
JOYCE
Interviewed by JESSICA
MUTCH
JESSICA Thanks very much
for that, Greg. And also, good morning to finance minister
Steven
Joyce.
STEVEN Morning,
Jess. How are
you?
JESSICA Very
well, thank you. I want to start off by asking you – in
2008, you talked about a brighter future. Is this the kind
of budget that you had in mind when you talked about that
brighter future, and did you have Working For Families wage
subsidies, effectively, in that plan back
then?
STEVEN Well,
a couple of questions in there. The first one is – a lot
has changed in the meantime. We’ve had the global
financial crisis. We’ve had the Christchurch earthquakes.
I think in the context of what New Zealand has gone through
and in terms of what the world’s gone through and say yes,
because we’re performing as a country; a lot better than
the UK, the US, Australia, Canada, Europe, Japan at the
moment. We’ve been growing for the last sort of five or
six years, and it looks like we’re going to grow for
another four or five years. So it’s a work in progress.
But I think most Kiwis would look around the world and
think, actually, New Zealand’s doing pretty well relative
to other countries that we compare ourselves with. So
that’s good. In terms of Working For Families, well
we’ve always had in this country, long before Working For
Families, some form of family tax credit
when–
JESSICA A
wage subsidy,
effectively.
STEVEN
For people that are bringing up young families.
We’ve always had it. You go back to when I was a kid, it
used to be the family benefit. And it’s changed over the
years. There are other aspects of Working For Families that
we haven’t always had, but we’ve always had some form of
extra tax situation for parents with young families, and the
current method is indeed that family tax
credit.
JESSICA National
always talked about Working For Families in a negative way
when it first came out with ‘communism by stealth’ –
that phrase had been bandied about. Was this a bit of a dead
rat for you to swallow, having to include this in your
budget after nine
years?
STEVEN No,
no. Not at all. There’s always been some form of family
tax credit, and, actually, I think we’ve improved it.
It’s very complicated. There were five sort of different
rates for different aged children, and what we’ve said now
by standardising those, the first child, then if they’re
under 16, the parents get an extra $9 a week, and second and
subsequent children, either $18 or $27 a week. So everybody
knows where they stand, because there’s the first rates
for the first child, and then there’s rates for the
subsequent children. But as I say, it’s the current
mechanism, but it’s actually the concept’s been around
for years and years and years in terms of providing an extra
tax break for parents as they bring up young
families.
JESSICA But
this can’t sit comfortably with you, though, can
it?
STEVEN No,
actually, it completely does, because, as I say, we’ve
always had – and I see the logic completely in terms of
giving parents a bit of help – extra tax breaks, if you
like, while they’re bringing up a young family sort of I
think. New Zealanders endorse that approach. Perhaps not
everybody, but most people
do.
JESSICA You’ve
been given the title for this budget ‘Labour lite’. With
your campaigner’s hat on, was that the
point?
STEVEN No.
Not at all. The commentators will say all sorts of things,
and I’ve seen people say it’s too much; it’s not
enough; it’s too much here; it’s not enough
here.
JESSICA But
what about that Labour lite
phrase?
STEVEN It
completely doesn’t come to mind at all from my
perspective. It’s that we have the room to do some things
that we’ve wanted to do for a period of time. We’ve been
talking about tax changes since before the 2014 elections as
plenty of people have pointed out to us. But this is the
first opportunity that New Zealand has had to do that,
because we have a strong and growing economy which is
delivering strong surpluses, and in this budget, we’re
able to invest in infrastructure; we’re able to invest
in–
JESSICA But
it does make it easier, doesn’t it? If you can go into
that Labour territory a little bit, four months out from an
election, your MPs can stand up and say, ‘Well, actually,
we’re doing this; we’re doing this; we’re doing
this.’ That must’ve been on your mind when you were
crafting
this.
STEVEN No.
I just don’t think of the budget in terms of the election
cycle, which may sound
strange–
JESSICA You
don’t think about the
election?
STEVEN I
mean, you’re not driving it for the election, because
I’m strongly of the view
that–
JESSICA But
that must have been in your mind. Come
on.
STEVEN No.
I mean, I know the election’s coming up, but I’m
strongly of the view that, that actually, you don’t change
your approach just because it’s election year, and I think
we’ve shown all the way through nine different budgets
that actually we haven’t taken account of where we are in
the cycle, because I think the public are smarter than that.
I think they look through any sort of election-year approach
and think, ‘Okay. Where is this heading overall? What’s
the trend overall? And are they making the sort of decisions
I’d want them to make in the same situation?’ And I
think that’s where, hopefully, most people will see the
balance.
JESSICA Let’s
have a look at the tax brackets, then, because you’ve
adjusted those. Why not change them straight away? Why wait
until April? Because doesn’t that look like this is an
election year
bribe?
STEVEN I
think it’s completely impractical to change them. The
first thing I asked the IRD when I started to talk about
this was, ‘Can we do this stuff in October?’ For the
same sort of questions, before the election date had been
decided. And they said, ‘Minister, we’re in the middle
of this IRD business transformation. Whoa. Here’s a
hundred different reasons why this would be a bad
idea.’
JESSICA You
could’ve done it, though,
right?
STEVEN We
might have been able to push it. But as it turned out, it
may have even looked more cynical to people, because it
would’ve been seven or eight days after an election, and
people would say, ‘Well, that’s even more cynical.’ So
1 April is normally the time we change, and that’s why
it’s there, and literally because the IRD is in the middle
of one of its biggest ever system changes, and they said,
‘Just don’t try and break us on the way
through.’
JESSICA The
accommodation allowance was another big spend in the budget.
Will that simply be passed on to landlords, and is there
anything wrong with
that?
STEVEN No,
I don’t believe it will. We tested that pretty thoroughly
with MSD. The last time there was a significant change was
2005. And look it’s the theory of the opposition always
that, ‘Oh, the accommodation supplement always goes to
landlords.’ Well, in effect, it does, because it
subsidises people’s rents that they would otherwise be
paying themselves. But in terms of ‘does it push up
rents?’ MSD’s done some work which we asked them about
after the 2005 – they’ve done it more recently –
‘Well, did it push rents up or not?’ And they couldn’t
find any evidence of
that.
JESSICA But
you do admit that that obviously will go into the pockets of
landlords.
STEVEN Well,
no, because essentially only the
people–
JESSICA Because
it’s helping people pay for their
rent.
STEVEN Well,
actually, people are already paying for their rent. What it
will do– They’re paying their rent now. What it will do
is go into their pockets, and they’ll have more after
their housing costs, and that’s really important. For
somebody with a couple of young kids in West Auckland or
South Auckland, could be getting up to over $100 a week more
depending on their circumstances, and that’s a big lift to
support them as they bring up their children. And I have to
say it’s one of the things I’m most proud of in this
budget – is that we’re getting the opportunity to do
that.
JESSICA When
you look at the things that we’ve talked about this
morning, effectively a wage subsidy and a rent subsidy –
people aren’t getting paid enough, and they’re not able
to pay their rents. Do you feel like there’s something
fundamentally wrong with the system if the government has to
subsidise these
things?
STEVEN Well,
a couple of things. The largest amount is actually around
tax changes – so the threshold going up from $14,000 to
$22,000, providing $10, $11 a week to anybody earning within
22K. And then the threshold adjustment for $48,000 to
$52,000, those are the biggest elements of the package, and
they are the most important in terms of that. But actually
we are keen as I say to see young families do a bit better
and particularly those on lower
incomes.
JESSICA But
surely the government have to help with that,
though.
STEVEN Well,
ultimately, a stronger economy helps with that most of all.
And we’re seeing that with increasing wages and increasing
employment.
JESSICA But not
enough, though, is
it?
STEVEN Well, I
think it’s definitely a work in progress. But we’re
doing better than nearly everywhere else in the world. So in
terms of developed countries, we have the second highest
employment rate across the whole of the OECD. So that’s
good progress. And that will bring to bear on wages and so
on over time. And as wages go up, these support packages
abate. So the more you get, it comes off your Working For
Families or your accommodation supplement. And absolutely
that’s the aim of the exercise is to get us to that point.
Which is why we put so much money into this whole tech area,
you know, lifting all those tech jobs and that sort of
thing.
JESSICA In
terms of going forward, though, if you stay as the Finance
Minister, when would you see the Working For Families come
down and the supplements come down? Can you see a time when
we’re not going to need those any more, that the economy
is in such a
situation?
STEVEN Well,
you’ve already seen that a bit. So it peaked at, sort of,
2011. And then as the economy’s recovered, the number of
people dependant on Working For Families has declined. And
the Labour Party see that as a failure; I see that as a
success that we are actually having less people dependant on
Working For Families than before. And as their incomes rise
and more people get into jobs, that’s exactly what’ll
occur. So I think we are seeing that. The evidence is that
we’re seeing that. And I’m sure that we’ll continue to
see that in New Zealand, particularly if we keep investing
in areas of the economy that are going to be the higher paid
jobs of the future. And that is in that tech area, the
innovation area. You know, you had Peter Beck’s rocket go
up this week. I mean, that’s just the biggest example of
some of the stuff that New Zealand companies are doing right
now.
JESSICA When
would you like to get rid of Working For
Families?
STEVEN I
don’t think you’d ever get rid of it, for the reasons I
was talking about before, in that we’ve always had a
method of supporting young families during that period
where, you know, perhaps lower incomes.
JESSICA But
that’s surely a sign that the economy isn’t working if
the government needs to provide that support to working
families.
STEVEN As
I say, it’s been going on for 50 years. It just basically
says that when you are bringing up a young family, you have
probably more direct needs than somebody who’s perhaps
single or their families are not at home. People actually
accept and I think support the idea that in effect, they pay
less tax over that
period.
JESSICA But
surely, that would be the definition of a success as a
Finance Minister to not have to have those any more.
STEVEN That’s a
comparative thing, though. It’s basically saying people
outside of those situations in effect pay a bit more tax,
and somebody with a younger family pays less tax. And as I
say, I think that’s a political view that most New
Zealanders support.
JESSICA This must’ve felt quite good, this budget, for you, because it was a bit of a catch-up budget, wasn’t it? You’ve been scrimping and saving, or Bill English has been scrimping and saving, and this money now had to be spent, didn’t it? It was catching up.
STEVEN Well, it’s not catching up. It’s actually the first time we’ve had the opportunity, because we haven’t had the opportunity before. And as I say, we’ve been talking about it for three or four years. But we now had the capacity. We’ve got rising surpluses, an opportunity to do some things. But it’s important to note that we’re also doing a very, very big infrastructure spend. And between the families’ package, the investment in public services and the infrastructure, the amount of cash we now have left over the next four years is virtually nil. So there’s not a lot of wriggle room beyond this. And the infrastructure spend is massive. It’s $32.5 billion that this government will spend on new capital infrastructure over the next four years, that’s 40 percent more than the last four years.
JESSICA Let’s talk about that a
bit more. Because Phil Goff came out, the Auckland mayor,
and said it doesn’t seem like it’s visionary to
spend.
STEVEN I
think he might be being a little
political.
JESSICA But with his Auckland mayoral hat on.
STEVEN And his Labour Party membership in his back pocket.
JESSICA But, you know, you’ve got to say as the mayor of our biggest city, his opinion that it wasn’t very visionary and didn’t really seem to help his city.
STEVEN I think I’ll skip the opinion and focus on the --
JESSICA So, what do you say to that? Was it visionary when it comes to things like infrastructure? For a lot of Aucklanders sitting in their car, they think, ‘Ooh, what are you doing in the short term about this?’
STEVEN Absolutely. Well,
there’s actually construction work on every single
motorway bar one in Auckland right now. And that’s one of
the reasons – not the only reason, but that’s one of the
reasons – it’s slower. So Phil was arguing, you know,
sort of complaining about the time it took to come in from
the south, well, one of the reasons why we’re spending
$250 million widening this other motorway by 50% in each
direction. So that’s a very big investment. It’s also in
that budget the east-west link that gets the eastern suburbs
out to the airport and to the airport suburbs. That’s very
important. And also you’ve got the CRL, which, of course,
is the really big-ticket item, and there’s some really
significant money going into that. So actually, if outsiders
look at Auckland, they might say, ‘Gosh, you guys are
getting a lot.’ But they should be getting a lot.
JESSICA But can
you see why it doesn’t seem visionary, though? Can you see
why it just seems, ‘Yep, we’ll build a new road here, a
bit of this here’? Can you see why he said
that?
STEVEN Well, no, I don’t even know why people would ever, sort of like what’s innovative, what’s visionary?
JESSICA Something innovative, something different – something that we haven’t thought about before now that we’ve got this extra money.
STEVEN Well, what we need to do is keep chunking away on the things that make the difference. And actually, we could all talk about, you know, monorails to wherever or whatever the current thing is, but actually, it’s building capacity on our roading system, on our rail system. It’s the hard yards that is required to do. And there are more projects coming.
JESSICA From private funding? Is that how that will work?
STEVEN No, first there’s the Auckland Transport Alignment Project, which both the council and the government bought into. We haven’t allocated all the money that’s sitting out there over the next few years. There’s significant sums of money. We’re in the process of talking with the council about the next project I suspect –
JESSICA More private funding?
STEVEN We’ll have a
combination of private and public funding, I’m primarily
talking –
JESSICA For
just roading projects or for infrastructure
projects?
STEVEN I’m primarily talking about public funding here, at this point. You know, there is discussions going on about what the next projects are, so perhaps Phil’s making a bit of a bid for more visionary stuff which is still to come. But also, actually, we do need to keep bringing in further private-sector investment as well.
JESSICA For roading and rail and things like that?
STEVEN And water infrastructure.
JESSICA So we would see private ownership of that? That’s what you’re saying?
STEVEN Well, not necessarily long-term private ownership, but potentially private funding of some of the expansions that we’re looking for. Because as I say, we’ve got the biggest ever amount of money that’s ever been spent in New Zealand on infrastructure over the next four years. We’ve got councils having to spend quite a bit on infrastructure. And I would argue that we should bring in more private-sector funding, and I’m going to talk more about that in the next few weeks.
JESSICA We’ll have to leave it there, but thank you very much for your time this morning.
STEVEN Cheers.
Transcript
provided by Able.
www.able.co.nz