Flogging the Country Off Does Nothing to Reduce NZ’s Debt
Flogging the Country Off to Foreign Owners Does Nothing to
Reduce NZ’s Debt
A common justification for flogging off NZ, particularly its publicly-owned assets, to foreign owners, is that it is necessary to reduce the county’s debt.
In a word: nonsense.
But don’t take our word for it. Here what the Old Master of privatisation, Sir Roger Douglas himself, had to say (in a book praising him and his mates for privatising State forests):
"I am not sure we were right to use the argument that we should privatise to quit debt. We knew it was a poor argument but we probably felt it was the easiest to use politically" ("Out Of The Woods", Reg Birchfield and Ian Grant, 1993).
He was right that it was, and is, a poor argument
Here is the relevant extract from CAFCA’s newly updated Key Facts.
Foreign
ownership does nothing to improve New Zealand's foreign debt
problem. In 1989, total private and public foreign debt
stood at $47.5 billion, equivalent to about two-thirds of
New Zealand’s Gross Domestic Product, and worth $86.4
billion in March 2015 dollars. As of March 2015, it was
$246.2 billion (or $270.9 billion including derivatives),
equivalent to 102% of New Zealand's Gross Domestic Product
despite being helped out temporarily by $20.2 billion of
insurance claims for the Canterbury earthquakes and all of
the asset sales and takeovers.
The full Key Facts
complete with sources (meticulously researched and compiled
by CAFCA’s Bill Rosenberg), can be read athttp://canterbury.cyberplace.co.nz/community/CAFCA/key-facts.html
ends