Regulation in New Zealand and Australia
Regulation in New Zealand and Australia
Roger Kerr
21 September 2006
Trans-Tasman harmonisation of regulation should not be pursued for its own sake.
If New Zealand and Australia both strive for the best regulatory policies, that will produce natural convergence.
Narrow differences might tip the scales in favour of common rules.
Deregulation in New Zealand has given way to re-regulation and is making business operation harder.
In 2005, 9,327 pages of new regulations or Acts were published, the most in New Zealand’s history.
Major examples of re-regulation include:
– electricity: there have been moves back to
centralised control. The chairman of the Electricity
Commission has described the industry as being in a
“mess”;
– telecommunications: proposals to unbundle
the local loop would have to generate benefits of $1500 (in
NPV terms) per household to be justified, which seems
implausible;
– the labour market, where there is a push
towards national awards and more industrial
disruption;
– banking, securities market, competition
law, building and land regulation.
The growth-reducing impacts of re-regulation are additional to those arising from rapidly increasing government spending, the unravelling of tax policy, and renationalisation.
The discipline of regulatory impact statements is inadequate, partly because of the limitations of cost benefit analysis.
New disciplines, in the form of a Regulatory Responsibility Act, are needed to improve both the stock and flow of regulation.
A key feature should be a requirement to consider the payment of compensation where the value of property rights is significantly affected by regulation.
See also:
ENDS