Business NZ Update
ARC differential danger - Holidays Act blooper - Outsourcing hot potato
ARC DIFFERENTIAL DANGER Business ratepayers all over NZ could have much to lose if the Auckland Regional Council imposes a differential rates system - because other regional councils might follow suit. The ARC's 2004-2014 community plan is looking at the option of making business ratepayers pay 1.5 times as much as residential ratepayers. Business ratepayers are a small sector of the community and vulnerable to the majority voting against them - the Local Government Forum says it's undemocratic to allow a majority to impose a monetary burden on a minority. NZ businesses already have to contend with a differential in many city and district councils and already pay disproportionately more rates than residential ratepayers. Contact nclark@businessnz.org.nz.
ANOTHER BUSINESS DIFFERENTIAL - FIRE A revamp of fire service funding could be costly for business. The Department of Internal Affairs' review appears likely to recommend property-based funding for the fire service. This could turn out to be as unfair as the current insurance-based funding system. The current system levies only those who purchase insurance, allowing those who do not insure their property to free-load on those who do. In the same way, a property-based system could levy only those who own property, giving others a free ride. Instead of introducing a differential biased against the business community, the fire service should be funded equitably, from everyone's taxes. Business NZ will be watching the progress of the review. Contact pwhitehouse@businessnz.org.nz.
HOLIDAYS ACT BLOOPER Another blooper in the Holidays Act has come to light - an employee can throw a sickie on a public holiday and still get paid rate and a half. The Labour Department says rate and a half must be paid because the relevant daily pay definition says you must pay what the employee would have received if he or she had worked. So it's quite possible to throw a sickie and still get the penal rate. You don't need a medical certificate for one day's absence. Contact bburton@businessnz.org.nz
EMPLOYMENT BILL TREATS EMPLOYEES AS A COMMODITY The Employment Relations Law Reform Bill treats labour as a commodity, EMA's Alasdair Thompson told the Select Committee in Auckland last week. "If the bill succeeded in pushing people into unions and into the old style multi employer collective agreements along the lines of national awards, businesses again would be forced to treat their staff as a bulk lot without their individual contributions to bring to their workplace." EMA led a 200-strong delegation into the select committee hearing to emphasise the depth of business opposition to the bill. This week the select committee will hear the submissions of 27 businesses and organisations in Dunedin.
80s REFORMS BROUGHT GROWTH IN THE 90s The 1980s reforms
are likely to have raised NZ's per capita GDP says a recent
Treasury paper NZ Economic Growth: An Analysis of
Performance and Policy. The paper says the reforms of the
1984-93 Governments paved the way for growth more than four
times bigger in the 90s than the 80s. But the paper also
highlights some of NZ's enduring problems - low capital
accumulation, a slow rate of infrastructure growth, and a
comparatively low level of basic educational achievement
among younger NZ workers - that must be fixed to get living
standards as good as those in the highest-growth countries.
The paper, which also recommends a flat tax for economic
growth, is on www.treasury.govt.nz
AUSTRALIA TRUMPS NZ ON
COMPETITIVENESS Australia has shot up the world
competitiveness index, coming in fourth behind the US,
Singapore and Canada in the 2004 survey. NZ has slipped
from 16th to 18th. The survey ranks countries on their
environment for business competitiveness. High corporate
taxation and high indirect taxation are among the issues
responsible for NZ's slide. Contact
nclark@businessnz.org.nz. OUTSOURCING HOT POTATO
Outsourcing (contracting out) is becoming a political issue
in several countries. State governments in Australia are
attempting to redefine independent contractors as employees,
to re-regulate commercial contracts through labour law, and
to make all companies in a contract chain responsible for
payments to the person at the bottom of the contract chain
in the guise of protecting vulnerable workers - the moves
are being firmly contested by Australian contractor
organisations. In the US, outsourcing to other countries is
becoming an issue in the Bush/Kerry presidential contest,
leading both contenders to talk protectionism in varying
degrees in the face of a sluggish US job market. However
the Federal Reserve Bank of New York says all that's
happening is that jobs are disappearing from some sectors,
like manufacturing, and being created in new ones, like
mortgage broking, and the lag between the two is causing the
slow job market - outsourcing is not the villain. (The Bank
says the current situation is like the 'jobless recovery' of
the early 1990s that eventually created the longest economic
expansion since WWII.) Meanwhile, outsourcing seems to be
both officially funde PAY EQUITY REPORT COMING A report
on pay equity proposals for the public sector is due this
week Business NZ's Simon Carlaw says businesses would have
significant concerns over a public sector scheme creating
pay benchmarks that could raise expectations in the private
sector, where there is a competitive environment and no
underpinning by tax revenue. There was also concern at the
costs of setting up an arbitrary centralised wage-fixing
mechanism that would be required for a pay equity scheme to
be set up. Pay equity as instituted by the previous Labour
Government was recognised as an inhibiting factor on
business growth and the economy, and as a result was one of
the first pieces of legislation overturned when the National
Government came into power in 1990. GROWTH STATS MARCH
2004 HIGH POINT FOR BUILDING CONSENTS * Seasonally
adjusted building consents declined by 6.1% in March but
were still higher on a year on year basis. * 3,037
building consents were issued in March, the highest March
total since 1976. Total consents for the year to March were
31,423, an 11% increase on March 2003 and 62% higher than
2001. Between 2001 and 2004 residential consents values
doubled. * Estimated resident population data, also
released this week, shows that population growth has slowed,
but still rose by 56,700 (1.4%) in the year to March.
Consents for new residential dwellings in the year to March
numbered 31,423, of which 5,089 were
apartments. * Non-residential building consents increased
by 53% from March 2003 and by 14% for the year ended March.
* There was growth in most categories, including an 11%
increase for factories and industrial buildings in the year
to March. Hotels & motels, shops & restaurants and office &
administration buildings also had strong growth. * The
trend growth rate in March was a 0.9% increase from the
previous month, the lowest month on month result since May
2003. The trend growth rate has been slowing since Oct
2003 IMPORTS RISING * Imports in March 2004 were 10.4%
higher than in March 2003 and increased by 7.1% on a
seasonally adjusted basis from Feb * Imports from China
are still growing strongly, rising by 44% in March and 12%
in the 12 months ended March. Total imports increased by
just $187m over the 12 months ended March, an increase of
0.6%. Over this period imports from China increased by
$308m, while imports from our three largest suppliers (Aust,
US and Japan) all declined over this period WHAT'S NEW on
www.businessnz.org.nz * New
Chief Executive for Business NZ * Manufacturing activity
picks up in March * ANZ-Business NZ PMI for March 2004
* Tauranga and Taranaki top metropolitan and regional
councils * Hot Councils 2004 Award full ranking
list * Hot Councils fact sheet Maori Business and
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