NZCPR Weekly - Everyone Pays
NZCPR Weekly
Everyone Pays
In this issue, NZCPR Weekly
looks at the impact of five of Labour's proposed new laws,
Guest Commentator Prof Richard Epstein examines the causes
of our declining productivity, and the weekly poll asks your
attitude to regulation. On the NOTICEBOARD is a message from
John Boscawen who invites you to join his protest against
the Electoral Finance Act. If you believe the NZCPR makes a
difference, please click here
Last week renowned
economist and author Thomas Sowell published a column in
which he shed light on the origins of Fascism. He explained
that 'real' Fascism was introduced into Italy after the
First World War by Benito Mussolini and was popular with the
political 'left'. He said, Fascists were completely against
individualism in general and especially against
individualism in a free market economy. Their agenda
included minimum wage laws, government restrictions on
profit-making, progressive taxation of capital, and 'rigidly
secular' schools. Unlike the Communists, the Fascists did
not seek government ownership of the means of production.
They just wanted the government to call the shots as to how
businesses would be run. He describes how Fascism's
industrial policies attracted the political 'left' but
public opinion eventually forced them to back off: In short,
during the 1920s and the early 1930s, Fascism was not only
looked on favorably by the left but recognized as having
kindred ideas, agendas and assumptions. Only after Hitler
and Mussolini disgraced themselves, mainly by their brutal
military aggressions in the 1930s, did the left distance
themselves from these international pariahs. (To read Who
is Fascist? click here Sowell's comments have a familiar ring. Since Labour
became the government in 1999, more than 3,000 new
regulations and almost 1,000 new laws have been introduced.
At any moment in time it is highly likely that any one of us
is breaking some obscure law and those in business almost
certainly are. The enlisting of recruits charged with the
responsibility of administering and monitoring these new
laws has undoubtedly been a factor in the dramatic rise in
the number of public servants over that period from 29,000
to 46,000 today. These new laws and regulations put
enormous strain on small businesses, many of whom are
struggling just to keep their heads above water. The cost of
jumping through the hoops set by government, filling in
their forms and acting as their tax collector has been
estimated to be $3,000 per employee per year. Complying with
the tax code alone costs businesses $1.5 billion. Not
only is this cost a burden, but our best and brightest
business leaders - those very people we depend upon to
create economic wealth - are hog-tied in red tape and
"compliance". With small business being the engine room of
economic growth, this loss of productivity has a
far-reaching effect on us all. Everyone pays, through higher
prices, less innovation and fewer choices. Richard
Epstein, the James Parker Hall Distinguished Service
Professor of Law at Chicago University and the Peter and
Kirsten Bedford Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution, is
this week's NZCPR Guest Commentator. He explains, "It is now
eighteen years since I first visited New Zealand. That
period of time is long enough to document the early rise in
growth during the period between 1992-2000, followed by the
much more anemic growth in the period between 2000 and 2006.
The rate of economic growth was about 2.7% in the first
period and 1.3% in the second. The point of the divide is no
accident, for the year 2000 marks the rise of the current
Labour government to power". In his article 'Declining
Productivity a Way of Life', Richard explains that the
deregulation of the labour markets, which occurred in the
early nineties through the introduction of the Employment
Contracts Act, was largely responsible for the increase in
productivity. He concludes his article with a caution:
"Productivity can suffer the death of a thousand cuts. The
policies that lead to prosperity in periods of downturn are
the only policies that will keep productivity going forward
once the downturn is ended. There are no once-and-for-all
fixes in dealing with economic systems. The good work of
the Employment Contract Act cannot survive indefinitely
after its demise. Legal reforms do not depreciate instantly
if they are not maintained, but depreciate they do. There
is never a period of time when any nation can coast on its
laurels and assume that the problem of production has taken
care of itself so that the larger task of income
distribution can begin". To read his article click the
sidebar link>>> Clearly government has a role in passing
laws to enable the efficient provision of core public
services, the maintenance of essential infrastructure, and
the proper functioning of society's basic institutions: the
rule of law, the protection of private property and the
freedom to contract. Problems arise when governments
introduce unnecessary laws and regulations for political
purposes rather than the public good. Too many laws, like
the micro-chipping of dogs, are made so the government can
be seen to be 'doing something'. These sorts of regulations
restrict freedom, impose direct costs on the public, are
largely ineffective, and often delay any real solutions
being implemented. But worse still, once a bureaucracy
has been set up to administer the new law, other new laws
are likely to follow - like the new Dog Control Bill that is
presently in front of a Select Committee (submissions close
Feb 29). This follow-on from the dog microchipping law
blames dog breeds for bad behavior rather than owners. This
is akin to blaming cars for accidents instead of drivers!
Sometimes laws are passed that appear very heavy-handed.
This was certainly the case a few years ago when Labour
decided to introduce legislation to punish all landlords for
the problems caused by a few. Fortunately, landlords
responded by putting in massive numbers of submissions and
Select Committee members were forced to admit that draconian
law changes were unnecessary. Labour is now using this
'sledgehammer to crack a nut' approach to real estate
agents. Having ignored repeated calls by the industry to
authorise tougher penalties for disciplinary measures -
something only the Minister had the power to do - the
government has decided to impose draconian state control
through the Real Estate Agents Bill (submissions close Feb
29). Regrettably, the driving force behind Labour's
plethora of law changes is ideology. Take the case of the
Housing Affordability Bill (submissions close Feb 29). While
the government claims that the compulsory acquisition of
property will solve the house affordability crisis, research
shows that such schemes which confiscate property rights and
cause government-related costs to be passed on to other home
buyers, are a massive failure. In the US they reduced
housing supply by an average of 10 percent, and increased
house prices by 20 percent. If government really wants to
help make homes more affordable, lower taxes and lower
interest rates would go a long way to achieving that goal!
(See Do Affordable Housing Mandates Work
The Electricity Industry Reform Bill (submissions
close Feb 29) is another triumph of ideology over common
sense. Labour's obsession with global warming has led them
to set an impossible target of 90 percent renewable energy
by 2030, to impose a ten-year moratorium on new thermal
generation - in spite of low lake levels - and to
dramatically over-estimate energy efficiency
reductions. Most of us want to know that when we click the
switch the lights will come on, and when we open the power
bill the charges will be reasonable. But with the
Government's energy strategy in a dangerously chaotic state
- amid claims of political interference in the Electricity
Commission - blackouts and price hikes are definitely on the
cards. (See "New Zealand's Energy Strategy"
The Climate
Change Bill (submissions close Feb 29) is a radical piece of
legislation which will impose critical economic risks on New
Zealand. According to economic consultants Castalia,
Labour's experimental emissions trading scheme will create
substantial economic uncertainty. By exposing New Zealand
businesses to volatile world market carbon prices, our
government is planning to impose costs on business and the
country that no other government is prepared to do. In the
words of Castalia, "The overall thrust of the Bill is clear:
the Crown wishes to transfer all risks associated with the
implementation of climate change policy to business and
households". (For further information click here
The Bills
described, along with a number of others, were passed under
urgency before Christmas. Submissions close on February
29th. Full details on the Bills can be found on the NZCPR
website - click here
If
you are concerned about these new laws, I cannot urge you
strongly enough to have your say. Submissions do not have to
be complex. In fact the simpler and more straight forward
they are the more likely they are to be read! Further, with
the current regime having restricted our freedom of speech
for the whole of election year, we should make good use of
this opportunity to say what we think about these proposed
new laws - while we still have the chance! NZCPR POLL
This week's poll asks: Do you believe Labour's regulation
agenda has been good for New Zealand?
NZCPR
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If you have a change of
address, please note your old address and your new one and
click here NZCPR Commentary DECLINING
PRODUCTIVITY AS A WAY OF LIFE Prof Richard Epstein The
impact of the 1990 reforms were quickly apparent. In
December 1991 trade union membership stood at 33.9 percent
of the work force. By December 1992 that figure had fallen
to 27.8 per cent, and by December 1999 that figure fell to a
low of 16.7 percent. ... http://www.unityforliberty.net.nz/petition.html>
NZCPR UPDATE POLL RESULTS Last week's poll asked: Do
you view the plan of the Maori Party and the Greens to
jointly hold the balance of power as a threat to the future
of NZ? Results: Yes 94%, No 6% To read comments click here
Feb 29 is the
closing date for submissions on contentious Bills: - Real
Estate Agents - Emissions Trading - Energy Strategy -
Affordable Housing - Dog Control More details
ENDS
PROTEST MARCH John Boscawen' invites you to join
his 2008 campaign against the Electoral Finance Act - march
down Queen Street Auckland at 2.30pm Sunday March 9th from
the Town Hall - full details