Q+A March 10 - Corin Dann interviews Steven Joyce
Q+A March 10 - Corin Dann interviews Steven Joyce
Sunday March 10,
2012
TVNZ’s political editor Corin Dann
interviews the minister responsible for Novopay, Steven
Joyce
The Minister responsible for
Novopay, Steven Joyce, says in three months’ time he wants
school administrators’ workloads to be where they were
before the Novopay debacle.
“The ministry, coming
in, told me it was 18 to 24 months. I thought that was
entirely too much. It’s a ridiculous period of time. So I
want to see within three months a situation where, as much
as possible, workloads from administrators are back to where
they were before this thing started,” Joyce
says.
The minister also announced the ministry has
struggled to find enough skilled staff to help fix the
problems and clear the large backlog of pay mistakes.
“This week we’re setting up a
backlog-clearance unit, which is effectively going to double
and treble the size of the people working on that. Again,
it’s about bringing the resources.”
Joyce
won’t say whether the government will stick with Novopay
until he’s received the final technical report reviewing
what went wrong, due out in a couple of weeks, but he’s
already received a proposal from former payroll provider
Datacom to take over.
“They have presented us
with a proposal, which we’re evaluating at the moment. I
spoke with them last…I had a meeting with them a couple of
days ago. There's some more questions that arise out of
that. It’s based on their old contingency plan,” Joyce
says.
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Q + A – March 10,
2013
STEVEN
JOYCE
Interviewed by CORIN
DANN
CORIN
Well, good
morning, minister. Thank you very much for joining Q + A.
Your government’s under pressure on a number of fronts at
the moment. We’ve had the SkyCity report, we’ve had
Solid Energy’s woes, and, of course, we’ve had Novopay.
Six months now you haven’t been able to sort this out. Why
is it taking so long?
STEVEN
Oh, because
it’s a system that’s got a lot of difficulties, and
sadly there isn’t a button you can press that says “fix
Novopay tomorrow”. I would have pressed it a number of
times by now. I inherited a situation where it was very,
very challenged. We’ve made some progress and we’ll
continue to make progress. So we’ve announced the
remediation plan, which I think the best thing about that so
far is it’s been able to catch up with the current
processing, but there’s a big backlog of stuff which
now—
CORIN
Couldn’t you just put more bodies, more money? Beef it
up?
STEVEN
We are. It’s literally what we’re doing. And so for
example, the last pay – the biggest one so far this year,
84,000, I think, people paid about just under— We don’t
know yet the number of errors, but it’s quite similar to
the last two, which were around 2%. That’s about double
what we’d be expecting at this time. But 35,000
transactions around that, which is actually unheard-of large
numbers, and the reason for that is because of all the
issues that have been going around, so you’ve had to
actually get enough people not only to do the work but to do
all the rework that comes from the lack of confidence in the
system.
CORIN
So are you saying it’s not a matter of money and bodies
here, it’s just so complex? Even if you had all the money
in the world you could throw at this problem, you couldn’t
fix it
overnight?
STEVEN
Well, we have no shortage of money to throw at the problem.
We do have a shortage of skilled Novopay people, obviously,
and we’re fixing that up as quickly as possible. That’s
part of the
remediation—
CORIN
Why?
STEVEN
Because you can't just bring people in off the street,
because they’re already operating at more than double what
they expected to operate at and we can debate whether that
was right or not, and so just bring in people of the
street’s actually quite difficult. But they are hiring
people—
CORIN
So how did we get into a situation where there weren’t
enough people in the first
place?
STEVEN
Well, on the basis that the system was set up, they presumed
they would have enough people, but then of course they had
all the issues happen, and we can all debate about why those
issues occurred and the reasons. So then they’re chasing
their
tails.
CORIN
But is that at the fundamental heart of this problem going
forward is that you can't do this system without having
enough people to do all those different little pay systems
that there are for teachers – your relievers, your special
needs. That’s the problem, isn’t
it?
STEVEN
Well, no, not necessarily. The problem is that the system
got itself into a hole, particularly prior to, just prior to
Christmas with those holiday pay stuff-ups. That was the
point where it really became pretty difficult, and, you
know, they had issues starting up, but that was I think the
straw, in some ways, that broke the camel’s back. And then
you have a very big backlog of issues, and you also have the
issues with just keeping up with the current processing.
We’re getting to the point where we’re keeping up with
the current processing, but now we’re getting in this—
trying to resolve this backlog of issues from the first six
months, so this week we’re setting up a backlog-clearance
unit, which is effectively going to double and treble the
size of the people working on that. Again, it’s about
bringing the
resources—
CORIN
So how big’s this backlog, then? Obviously quite big, if
you’re bringing in extra
people.
STEVEN
It’s very significant, but probably the worst thing about
it is that it takes time to solve these issues, so if you
talk to the schools, most of the emails I get from schools
at the moment are saying, “Yeah, yeah, ok, so this
payroll’s not so bad, but actually I’ve got 15 things
that need to be resolved in the last six months.” And some
of them are quite complex. Some of them are quite simple. So
making sure that there's enough people that can churn
through that as quickly as reasonably
possible—
CORIN
And these
are part of the ministry, is it? How does it
work?
STEVEN
It’s a combination of ministry and Novopay. They’re
putting in effectively a unit which is part of the money
that we’ve put up – the $5 million, which we’ll argue
about later. That’s going to be the unit that’s going
to do a lot of that clearance. And, as I say, there's been
that in place, but frankly all the additional resource
that’s been brought in so far has been thrown against the
wall of
current—
CORIN
And so you're saying that you're relatively happy with the
progress that’s being made each pay going
forward?
STEVEN
I don’t think there's a word that— “Happy” and
“Novopay”—
CORIN
(laughs) Not happy,
then?
STEVEN
No, well, look, we’re doing better, but nowhere near. The
reality is if I was a school administrator, I’d still be
pretty slacked off, and I can completely understand that. I
wake up every day thinking, “OK, how are we going to push
this ahead? If I was a school administrator today, how am I
pushing this ahead to mak e things better for them?” And I
can understand their frustration, because from their
perspective, they’re just not seeing it fast
enough.
CORIN
So are you still in the mindset that you could dump this?
That Talent2 can't
deliver?
STEVEN
We could still do that, yes, because the question we have to
ask ourselves, as well as doing all this work – and,
let’s face it, the backlog has to be cleared, no matter
who runs the system, because you’ve still got these
backlog issues that have to be solved, so that’s why you
get on and do that. But the bigger question which is the
fork in the road which we have to address next week or the
week after is are we going to say with this or actually are
we going to go to the back-up option we’ve been
developing?
CORIN
You’ll get a technical review report back, and you’ll
make a decision whether you’ll dump them
then?
STEVEN
Yes, I have the draft for the technical review now. The bit
that’s missing for me is their evaluation of the back-up
plan – ie,
the—
CORIN
What's your hunch telling you about the chances of them
surviving?
STEVEN
I’m not going to offer a hunch at this point, because
everybody will take that as a decision, and, you know,
it’s a decision that has to be made really carefully,
because no matter which way you go on that, there's pain,
right. And the last thing I want to do is create more pain
than necessary, so we have to have a cold hard look at
whether it will be quicker to remediate on the plan that
we’re operating on now and which we’re continually
ramping up or cut across back to the old system. And you
would find different views in every school about
that.
CORIN
So you’re talking to Datacom as a contingency solution.
Are they ready to pick the pieces if need be? Can they do
it?
STEVEN
They have presented us with a proposal, which we’re
evaluating at the moment. I spoke with them last…I had a
meeting with them a couple of days ago. There's some more
questions that arise out of that. It’s based on their old
contingency
plan.
CORIN
Do you think they could do it, though, if they needed
to?
STEVEN
Oh, I think they could do it if they needed to, but whether
it would be less painful than the Novopay
system—
CORIN
Right, there’d still be
issues?
STEVEN
Well, look, the reality is you can't cut these things across
in five minutes. The reality is they would still have to
deal with all the backlog and they’d also have to take
teachers back to the old system, which would then have to be
upgraded down the line to another system. So
effectively—
CORIN
So no matter what happens here, there's more pain coming
for, what, another year or
so?
STEVEN
Well, the ministry coming in told me it was 18 to 24 months.
I thought that was entirely too much. It’s a ridiculous
period of time. So I want to see within three months a
situation where, as much as possible, workloads from
administrators are back to where they were before this thing
started.
CORIN
So we can have you back in three months and
we’ll—?
STEVEN
You can have me back in three months, but I can't promise
miracles.
CORIN
Alright, let’s move on to another area quickly –
SkyCity. Because you're in negotiations with SkyCity. Have
they progressed? Are we anywhere nearer to a
deal?
STEVEN
They are progressing, but I think it would be too early to
say we’re anywhere near a deal, but the pressure is on to
come to a deal or make a decision the other
way.
CORIN
It seems to be the expectation that a deal will be done,
that all this hassle and effort that’s gone through and
the AG’s report, the message from you guys is, “Yes,
we’re going to do a deal.” Are you? Is it actually a
done
deal?
STEVEN
No, we haven’t actually said, “Yes, we’re going to do
a deal.” We do want to get on and build a convention
centre, but we also don’t want to get ourselves in a
position where it’s a deal at any cost. And the Prime
Minister has been very clear to me that we’re not doing a
deal at any cost. It has to be a fair deal to taxpayers and
to the SkyCity people. And so, no, it won't be a deal at any
cost and therefore we are prepared to walk away if we can't
get a
deal.
CORIN
So you're comfortable with, say, 500 pokies--? Could we be
in a situation where they want this much and you don’t and
so that’s
it?
STEVEN
I don’t think that would be a good idea— I mean, I know
it’s just the two of us, but I don’t think it’d be a
good idea for me to be negotiating on morning television on
that particular
issue.
CORIN
Just with the auditor general’s report, were lessons
learnt? I mean, there were serious criticisms about
favouritism in the process on SkyCity. Have you learnt
lessons from that at the very
least?
STEVEN
I think the officials have definitely learnt lessons on the
process.
CORIN
What about you guys? Not the officials, the
ministers?
STEVEN
Well, I think from our perspective, there's a very
interesting challenge here, which we do need to solve as a
country, and that is that the old style of procurement is
all about line up four equal suppliers and then make sure
they all proceed together to a competitive point, and
that’s – in quotes – “fair”. But there's lots of
examples of innovation that comes to the public sector where
somebody turns up and says, “Well, I’ve got this and
nobody else has this, so I’d like to do this with you.”
And of course we’ve got the public probity requirements
and that’s very important. So we’re doing this new
procurement policy at the moment, which will provide more
guidelines to agencies about how to deal with something like
this.
CORIN
Somebody comes to you with a good
idea?
STEVEN
Yeah, with a creative idea which is difficult to test in the
marketplace.
CORIN
Just on that procurement policy, will that also include an
element of making sure that New Zealand businesses get some
preference?
STEVEN
No, it won't give preference to New Zealand businesses, per
se—
CORIN
What about foreign businesses that work with New Zealand
businesses?
STEVEN
Well, there's a couple of things there. Firstly, we can't,
in terms of our trade deals, go out and say we’re offering
preferences, and even the Australians with the plan they
announced a couple of days ago shied away from that, and
they know why they have to. New Zealand is more dependent on
world trade than the Australians are, even, so we can't go
there. What we can do is actually do a far better job of
talking to smaller, medium-sized businesses about how they
can participate in government procurement. And I actually
think it’s been pretty shoddy, going back years and years.
You know, a lot of it’s very short-term. It’s all about
how you design the tender. And we have to get into a
position where New Zealand innovative businesses can
participate, and if they get together in groups, they can
participate.
CORIN
You're saying no preference for New Zealand businesses,
because
you're—
STEVEN
No expressed
preference.
CORIN
No expressed preference. But we talk to unions and they say
the big criticism they have of your government is that you
are not urgent enough on jobs. There's not enough activity.
Yes, you’re laying a platform for growth, with your
business growth agenda and that type of thing, but there's
no urgency. Procurement is one way to do
that.
STEVEN
I disagree completely on that. So if you just look at the
last week, right, so you’ve got a prime minister in Mexico
working on the TPP; you have the R & D grants that we
announced for Callaghan Innovation last week; we had the
East Coast oil and gas study that I was involved with with
Simon Bridges during the week; we had the RMA
changes—
CORIN
None of those are going to deliver jobs in the short-terms,
though.
STEVEN
Oh, yes, they are. No, yes, they are. You talk about things
like the convention centre and the Hobbit movies, and you
talk oil and gas. This week, Methanex announced they’re
firing up that third train at Waitara Valley. That’s 500
jobs in Taranaki right
there.
CORIN
But we lost 23,000 jobs in that December
quarter.
STEVEN
No, well, that’s not
correct.
CORIN
Yes, it is. That was the employment rate, not the
unemployment rate. The employment rate. There were 23,000
less jobs in that
quarter.
STEVEN
That’s according to the HLFS, so let’s go through that
for a quick couple of minutes. Firstly, they’re mostly
part-time jobs, and the difficulty has been, there's no
doubt about it, when you're actually in tight financial
times, when people are saving more, the biggest issue— the
industries that generally soak up part-time jobs, which is
retail, and that’s an industry that hasn’t gone well for
some years, and you can't magic that away. That’s called
the global financial
crisis.
CORIN
But surely in December, in that period, you would have
expected lots more extra retail jobs. You would have
expected the economy to soak up those
jobs.
STEVEN
Well, you’ve read the critique of HLFS. The QES came out
in the same week, and said that we’ve 56,000 more jobs in
the last two years. The actual PAYE numbers again came out
this week. The PAYE numbers, you know, as part of the
government’s books are actually up significantly, and the
number of people on unemployment benefits, which is actually
where the rubber meets the road, is
down—
CORIN
They say explaining is losing. You're having to fight on the
numbers.
STEVEN
Oh, yeah, but the numbers— You're always fighting on the
numbers, you know. One quarter the Opposition are on about
the QES because that’s down. The next, they’re on about
something else. That’s the politics of it. You come back
to the whole issue of jobs, which is really important, and
that’s all about encouraging investment in the New Zealand
economy. Now, the Opposition’s solution is to try and
protect all existing investment and not encourage new
investment.
CORIN
But this
is—
STEVEN
Hang on. But our plan is that you have to acknowledge that
sometimes businesses become uneconomic, but it’s all about
how you encourage new investment in the economy. So right
across the economy, we’re encouraging that new investment
– whether it’s in food processing and manufacturing,
whether it’s in oil and gas and so on. And we’re saying
we’re prepared to encourage that new
investment.
CORIN
But are you encouraging manufacturing? Because manufacturing
is struggling and manufacturers are turning up to this
committee and saying – the Opposition’s committee –
and saying, “We’re dying here, and you guys don’t care
about it.” You're quite happy to give farmers help for
drought relief. You give them money for their irrigation
funds and those sort of things. Why not
manufacturers?
STEVEN
And exactly that’s what we’ve done. So in the last week,
$25 million in R & D, co-funding subsidies to eight New
Zealand businesses – including one who happened to be at
the Opposition’s manufacturing inquiry – to move them up
the innovation
chain.
CORIN
But you know very
well—
STEVEN
Hang on. No, no, hang
on.
CORIN
…the issue is the dollar. That’s eight businesses
you’ve
chosen.
STEVEN
No, those ones have applied for the money, obviously. But
you come back and you look at the TIN100, which is the
technologically advanced IT
companies—
CORIN
IT companies,
yeah.
STEVEN
Not just IT. High tech. People like Gallagher’s, people
like Douglas Pharmaceuticals, people like Fisher & Paykel
Healthcare. Most of those are doing very well, and if you
look across New Zealand’s manufacturing sector, what you
see is that those that have the more unique products, that
have the greatest level of innovation that is valued
overseas are actually doing very well. Some of them aren’t
doing so well, but the reality is that’s the way through
this. Sitting there and trying to pretend that we can be the
old fortress New Zealand the way the unions want, that we
can just put up the walls and pretend that the world
hasn’t changed – well, sorry, that’s ‘70s thinking,
and that would be a one-way path disaster. And you can look
at Spain, you can look at Greece and that’s the way that
ends
up.
CORIN
Steven Joyce, Economic Development Minister, thank you very
much for your
time.
ENDS