Joyce and Robertson go head-to-head with Lisa Owen
National’s Economic Development Spokesman Steven Joyce and
Labour’s Economic Development Spokesman Grant Robertson go
head-to-head with Lisa
Owen.
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Lisa Owen:
Good morning, gentlemen.
Both: Morning.
I want to
start with you, Mr Joyce. Ownership of assets is what makes
you wealthy. So what do you think of this 18,000 hectare
Lochinver Station being sold to foreigners?
Steven Joyce:
What I think it it’s election time because we’re getting
a sale of land, and therefore a couple of people now – it
used to be just Winston; now it’s Colin Craig as well –
beating the anti-foreigners drum, and I suspect we’ll see
a bit more of this between now and election day. But it’s
as regular as every three years that this comes
up.
Grant Robertson, it’s just
electioneering?
Grant Roberston: Well, no. I
mean, New Zealanders are actually sick of our assets being
sold off, and it’s the same for farms as it is for Steven
selling off energy companies. We want to see value held by
New Zealanders. We don’t get this land back once it’s
sold. It’s gone.
Joyce: Well, actually you
do.
Robertson: Well, no, we don’t.
Joyce: No, you
do.
Robertson: And it’s New Zealanders who need to have
jobs being created from assets that we own. Our message for
foreign investors is if you want to come into New Zealand,
help create jobs.
Joyce: That’s right.
Roberston:
Build a processing plant. But we don’t want to sell off
the land like this.
Mr Joyce, this
is—
Joyce: Well, actually, I need to
answer that, because, actually, I mean, Grant, you’re
interesting there, because I haven’t seen you out
protesting James Cameron’s land purchases in the
Wairarapa, so I’m assuming it’s only Chinese
investors.
Robertson: No, it’s not. The allegation is
just wrong, Steven.
Joyce: When did you go out and oppose
purchasing James Cameron?
Roberston: We’ve never
opposed foreign investment that is not productive for
year.
Mr Joyce, can
we--?
Joyce: Give me a chance. When did you
go out and actually oppose the last purchase of James
Cameron’s land? Where’s the press release on
that?
Robertson: We have been opposing the purchases of
dairy farms by anyone, and wherever they’re from, if
it’s strategic land like this—
Joyce: But this
isn’t a dairy farm. You know that, don’t you? This
isn’t a dairy farm.
Robertson: That’s right. But this
is about what New Zealanders want, and New Zealanders what
to control their own land.
Gentlemen,
gentlemen. Mr Joyce, Mr Robertson.
Joyce: So
this is not a dairy farm and this is not James Cameron,
therefore you’re opposing it?
Mr Joyce, I
just want to ask you about your own leader’s
comments.
Joyce: He’s against Chinese
investment.
Robertson: Oh, for goodness sake,
Steven.
Mr Joyce—
Joyce:
Little xenophobia from the Labour Party to start the day
off.
Mr Joyce—
Robertson:
See, this is typical of the personal politics. He doesn’t
want to debate what New Zealanders want, which is to control
their own future. Steven’s happy to sell off our future
rather than have New Zealanders in control.
Mr
Joyce. Can I ask a question please,
gentlemen?
Joyce: Yeah.
Your
own leader has said that he doesn’t want us becoming
tenants in our own country, but isn’t this exactly what is
happening under your watch?
Joyce: No,
it’s not. No, look, it’s a tiny amount. It’s actually
a ridiculously small amount of land than under Labour,
because, actually, under Labour, the average over the last
five years they were in office, 90,000 hectares a year were
sold to offshore purchasers. Under National, it’s been an
average of 39,000 hectares a year. So it’s ridiculous for
Labour to turn around—
So that’s the
point, isn’t it? More under Labour, more under National.
The pie being sold off is even
bigger.
Joyce: But let’s look at the real
benefit of international investment, actually, because, I
think, all this hysteria which Grant’s trying to stoke
this morning is actually incorrect, because there’s plenty
of fantastic examples of international investment in this
country which has brought real benefit. For example,
Whirinaki, the big forestry processer in Hawke’s Bay,
owned by OG for 43 years. The investment, it hasn’t had
much—
So are you happy, Mr Joyce, that an
enormous amount of productive New Zealand land is going
offshore?
Joyce: So, the investment hasn’t
had much—No, let me take this through. Just let me take
you through. You’ve got to let me answer the question,
Lisa. Would you like me to answer the question about the
benefits of international investment?
I’d
like you to answer that question. Are you
happy-?
Joyce: You asked me about the
benefits of international investment. It’s very straight
forward.
No, I did not ask you that question,
Mr Joyce.
Joyce: You did. You
did.
Robertson: Are you going to guarantee, Steven, that
when this farm is sold off, this estate is sold off, that
there will be some kind of added jobs? There will be
processing coming and there will be something in the economy
for New Zealanders? Rather than just selling off
our—
Joyce: That’s one of the criteria that we put in
in 2010, so absolutely.
Robertson: And you have not stuck
to that.
Joyce: We have absolutely stuck to
that.
Robertson: No, you haven’t.
Joyce: Mr
Platitude has turned up again. He’s actually saying that
he wants to do something that is already being done and
he’s protesting that we’re already doing
it.
Gentlemen, excuse me. We’ve spoken to
sources at Tuwharetoa and other iwi who said this farm was
outside of their price bracket. $70 million. So I’m
interested to know where are the New Zealanders who are
wealthy enough to buy our own assets? Isn’t that part of
the problem?
Joyce: Well, actually,
there’s plenty of New Zealanders that are wealthy enough
to buy our own assets, but, look, the point of view is
international investment is very important to New Zealand.
It’s been very important all the way through, and it’s
important to our future. And there are plenty of examples. I
was actually at one the other day. Frucor, which is now
owned by Suntory, a Japanese company, and they’re making
big investments in their processing plant, and all the
workers are in favour of that. Now, if you take the example
of this particular company, Shanghai Pengxin, they have made
investments in the older Crafar farms. Nobody, I think, is
arguing that the Crafar farms used to be well-run. My
understanding is there’s been some good investments out of
that and more investments expected. So that’s all good
stuff. There has to be a benefit to New
Zealand—
Robertson: What Steven fails to understand
here is that New Zealanders are completely sick of seeing
their land sold off. This is about our lands and our future.
Steven, the thing is we have learned our
lesson.
I want to ask you—Mr Roberston, the
Labour Party—No, no, let me—
Robertson:
Steven Joyce refuses to learn the lesson that New Zealanders
want land retained in New Zealand
ownership.
Labour plans to stop foreign
purchases. People who are not living in New Zealand, under
Labour, would only be allowed to buy up to 5 hectares of
land. So, would you stop the sale of this
farm?
Robertson: Our criteria would
definitely mean that a sale like this would be highly
unlikely, unless—
How are you going to
police it?
Robertson: Because we’re going
to have proper criteria and limit the ability of ministers
to make decisions like the National Government did to allow
the Crafar farms to be sold off. And this one will go
through because Steven Joyce and his ministers don’t
believe in protecting that land.
Joyce: What a load of
rubbish.
Robertson: We want to make sure that there are
jobs generated when there is foreign investment, that it’s
more than a New Zealand company that owns it. Steven
doesn’t want to listen to what New Zealanders think.
(JOYCE LAUGHS) This is what New Zealanders believe. You’re
on the wrong side of this one.
Joyce: Absolutely
not.
Mr Joyce, I’d like to talk about
dairying, because land relates to dairying. This
government—
Joyce: Well, just before we
go, this isn’t a dairy farm. You know
that?
No, I do. This government has
championed—
Joyce: So would you make James
Cameron sell his land? Is that the deal,
Grant.
Excuse me. This government, Mr Joyce.
I’m trying to ask you a question, Mr
Joyce.
Joyce: Would you make James Cameron
sell his land back to New Zealanders? I just need to know
the answer.
Robertson: Be respectful, Steven. (JOYCE
LAUGHS)
This government has championed dairy,
so the primary sector – exports are up 25% since you came
into power in 2008. But manufacturing is down almost
18%.
Joyce: No, that’s not
correct.
Robertson: It is correct.
Are we a
one-trick pony and we’re now selling the pony as
well?
Joyce: Absolute rubbish. So, here we
go. Dairy is roughly 22% of New Zealand’s exports. Dairy
is 22% of New Zealand’s exports of goods and services.
It’s a great industry, does well for New Zealand and
it’s great to see it investing and growing. We have other
industries that are doing just as well. ICT, for example.
You’ve seen a lot of companies list on the New Zealand
Stock Exchange last year in the ICT sector. Food and
beverage generally. The wine industry, exports are at record
levels. There’s the high-tech manufacturing industry,
which has got excellent prospects.
So, in
terms of dairy, though, Mr Joyce—
Joyce:
But you asked me about the balance, so I’m saying the
balance is very good.
We saw this week –
what – about $4 billion go down a sinkhole because
Fonterra’s milk price payment has gone down by $1 a
kilo—
Joyce: Off record levels to slightly
back from record levels.
So are we
over-reliant, though, still on dairy?
Joyce:
No, I just told you. It’s 22%.
At 22%, are
we still over-reliant?
Joyce: No, we’re
not.
Mr Robertson?
Robertson:
No, we are, because in the last quarter, export value went
down by 7.4% because of our loss in dairy. There is going to
be, for five years, an oversupply of milk in the world
market. We have got to diversify.
Joyce: Because Grant
Robertson says so. (LAUGHS)
Robertson: No. Because
economists around the world say so.
Joyce: Oh, no, no,
no. It’s Grant Robertson seven weeks out from an
election.
No, it’s actually Goldman Sachs
who says that.
Robertson: If Steven’s
going to sit here complacently believing that we can ride
the wave of commodity prices and live off the Christchurch
recovery, that’s not good enough for most New
Zealanders.
Why not stick to our knitting, Mr
Robertson? Why not stick to what we’re good at. We don’t
tell the All Blacks to go play netball, do
we?
Robertson: No, we don’t. We want to
see the primary sector succeed and add value, but we have to
do it, because if we want jobs that pay well. It’s
interesting, isn’t it? I let Steven talk, and he talks
continuously over the top of me. If we want to have jobs
that pay well, we need to invest in manufacturing. We need
to invest in ICT. We’ve got to lift schools right across
the regions. But it’s not working, Steven. It’s not
working. It’s not working because in every region of the
country other than Canterbury, there are more people
unemployed than when National took office.
All
right. I want to speak, Mr Joyce, about diversification. You
say we are diversifying. We are diversifying, you say. And
it’s important to diversify, you agree? OK. Well, your
finance minister was on radio earlier this year, saying,
‘We’re good are supplying raw materials to Asia, so why
not stick to it?’ So are you are loggerheads with your
finance minister about the direction you should be
taking?
Joyce: No, we’re flat-out
investing as I said, in our high-tech industries and ICT,
food and beverage. No, we are—
Robertson: Manufacturing
outside the primary sector has dropped.
Joyce: You’ve
been listening to David Parker, have you?
Robertson:
You’ve narrowed our economy down to logs and milk. Excuse
me a second. You have narrowed our economy
down.
We want to hear what you’re saying.
One at a time, please.
Joyce: Thank you. I
need to have to opportunity.
Robertson: You’ve had a
lot of opportunities.
Joyce: No, I need the opportunity
now. And the opportunity is that it is completely rubbish,
and Grant Robertson’s cartoon of the New Zealand economy
is completely wrong. New Zealand’s economy is growing in a
whole range of areas. It is seen as the most broad-based
economic growth currently in the world. It’s the
third-fastest growing economy in the world right now. When
we came into office, Labour left the New Zealand economy in
recession while the rest of the OECD—
Robertson: This
is nonsense. This is absolute nonsense.
Joyce: No, it’s
not. It happens to be true. When we came—
Robertson: Go
and visit a town like Wanganui.
Joyce: Excuse me, don’t
interrupt. I thought you were going
to—
Let’s give Mr Robertson a right of
reply.
Robertson: If you’re going to give
me incorrect assertions about we did… We had unemployment
down under 4%. If you go and visit a town like Wanganui or
Gisborne, you will find people there saying, ‘Where is the
support for our economy?’ Just because things are going
well down in Canterbury recovering doesn’t mean people in
regional New Zealand have got jobs with good
wages.
Gentlemen, we will pick this up after
the break. Mr Joyce, I’ll come back to
you.
Welcome back. We’re with National and
Labour’s economic development spokesmen, Steven Joyce and
Grant Robertson. Before the break, we were talking about how
to diversity our economy. I’m going to give you each 30
seconds to sum up how you think we can best do that. You
first, Grant Robertson.
Robertson: Well, the
Government’s got to be an active partner in supporting
economies right across New Zealand. We want to see regional
development. We do that by supporting new businesses, by
supporting new industries – manufacturing, forestry and
wood, ICT. To add value and to develop our primary
industries. We don’t do that by standing by, trying to
ride the wave of commodity prices and hoping that the
recovery from the Christchurch earthquake will be enough. If
we’re gonna get decent jobs with higher wages, we need to
see development right across New Zealand in a diverse range
of industries, built on what we’re good
at.
That is your time, Mr Robertson. And now,
so, Steven Joyce. Your 30 seconds.
Joyce:
Well, actually, we have now the third-fastest growing
economy in the OECD, and it’s a broad-based recovery.
It’s acknowledged by nearly all economists as being across
the whole range of sectors, and the challenge is to simply
continue what we’re doing. But, funnily enough, I agree
with Grant that it’s actually about encouraging investment
in ICT and high-tech manufacturing and so on. That’s
exactly what we are doing, and we’re seeing that happen
across New Zealand. Funnily enough, it’s the regions that
are leading the economic recovery. Eight out of the 11
regions have lower unemployment that Auckland, and I go
around the regions, and there are all these
manufacturing—
And that’s your time,
Mr Joyce. Right. I’d like to move the conversation on to
jobs and wages. Grant Robertson, Labour wants to raise the
minimum wage by 2 bucks an hour. Do businesses really have
an extra $4000 sitting in the coffers to pay every worker a
year? Because that’s what it’s gonna
cost.
Robertson: Well, the way I look at it is
that workers in NZ deserve to earn a wage that allows them
to live and support their family, and at the moment, we’ve
got 100,000 working families who are reliant on some form of
benefit or going to a food bank—
But if
businesses can’t afford that, Mr Robertson… If
businesses can’t afford that, then people will lose jobs,
and the estimates are that this could cost us 6000 jobs a
year.
Robertson: Those figures are hugely
challengeable, and in fact, Treasury said a couple of years
ago that there would be probably no job losses. When Labour
increased the minimum wage by over 70% when we were last in
office, unemployment dropped hugely. This is important for
New Zealanders –to earn the wages that allow them to
support their families. None of us could live on $14 an hour
and support a family. $16.25 is fair. It’s
affordable.
Mr Joyce. 100,000 people are on
the minimum wage in this county, around about. This is a
low-wage economy. What are you doing to fix
that?
Joyce: No, it’s not a low-wage
economy, but there are people on low wages. I agree. But the
challenge is also keeping people in jobs and growing
employment. Unfortunately, Labour’s solution is actually
to say there’ll actually be a lot of people that go into
unemployment as a result of an artificial increase in wages
when there’s no productivity increase. So the challenge is
actually to encourage the very sort of investment that Grant
was critical about at the start of the programme. To
encourage more job opportunities for New Zealanders to grow
their businesses, and that employs more people. That’s the
way you grow jobs, and we’ve grown 4000 more jobs in the
last year, which is actually the highest job growth in a
decade.
Robertson: The thing about people on the minimum
wage is that they will spend that money, and it goes back
into the economy right away. It will actually help create
jobs and produce that, because we recognise that New
Zealanders deserve a chance to move from $14 an hour that
Steven Joyce thinks is good up to $16.25 an hour. We think
that’s fair. We think that’s affordable, and it will put
money into the economy.
Joyce: So what’s the magic of
$16.25, and why don’t you go a lot higher than that?
Because if you’re argument is correct, that’s what you
do. The reason you don’t is because of the loss of jobs
that’s caused by artificially putting up wages. And if you
don’t believe that, then sorry. You need to take economics
off the front of your title because, actually, that’s what
happens.
Robertson: This is about creating a much fairer
economy. Steven is quite happy for the rising tide of the
economy to lift the super-yachts but now the ordinary
people. We wanna make sure that everyone gets a fair share
of economic growth. Steven might not care about that, but we
do.
Joyce: I do need a chance to respond to that, and the
simple reality is that’s exactly how you invest in jobs
and growth; encourage investments so employers employ more
people at higher wages. And that’s what this government is
doing.
Robertson: That’s what our rate’s
about.
Joyce: I thought you were going to give us a break
this time? Now, you’re saying that I was
interrupted.
Robertson: Carry on. Go for your
life.
Excuse me,
gentlemen.
Joyce: I do need to finish that
response.
I want to give you an opportunity to
talk about the regions. You raised the regions there. As
Auckland and Christchurch are going gangbusters, there is
concern in the regions… there’s concern in the regions
that they’re not doing as well. So what are you gonna do
for those people that you’re not already
doing?
Joyce: Eight of the 11 regions have
lower unemployment that Auckland right now, and I can tell
you for free, cos I spend a lot of time travelling around,
that in places like Rotorua, they’re desperately trying to
get skilled people to come and work in their industries and
in Southland. And, actually, we need more people to move
into those regions to actually take up the very many job
opportunities that are there. South Island unemployment and
we’re not talking about Christchurch. We’re talking
about around the whole South Island—
You
don’t need to do anything for the
regions?
Joyce: We are doing things for the
regions now, but I tell you what you don’t do is try and
invest in railway lines that nobody uses. What you do do is
invest in things that actually encourage growth, and
that’s including the roading network, for example.
Ultra-fast broadband, for example. Whangarei – New
Zealand’s first fully fibred city. And the other thing you
don’t do is put things like big carbon taxes, big water
taxes and big capital-gains taxes on regional businesses and
force them to pay the same wages as Auckland.
Robertson:
This level of complacency about the regions is what’s
really worrying people out there. We’ve got one of our
most respected economists saying that we’re going to have
zombie towns in New Zealand. Saying there’s gonna be
zombie towns. Steven’s happy for zombie towns to be
created. We want to make sure that places like Wanganui and
Gisborne and Rotorua actually do have industry, and we’re
gonna support that with economic upgrade and forestry and
wood and ICT. That’s not happening under
National.
11 of the 16 regions experienced
growth in the first quarter of this year. So this government
is working for small-town New Zealand, isn’t
it?
Robertson: No, they’re not. Coming
from a very low base. All you have to do is go to a place
like Wanganui or Gisborne, walk along the street and play
the memory game of what shop used to be where an empty
window is now. Those economies want Labour and other
governments to invest with them.
Labour’s
going to investment $200m into a regional development
package. But, actually, what you’re gonna do, isn’t it,
is do a few hero projects in these places that, potentially,
will turn to white elephants. Mr Joyce raised the
Gisborne-to-Napier rail link. You’re gonna invest lots of
money in that, and it only carried 2% to 3% of freight when
it opened. How is that gonna
help?
Robertson: The thing is that these
projects have got to be a part of a regional economic plan.
If we look at the region like the East Coast of the North
Island, if we get in there and develop their wood-processing
industry, there will be a lot more freight to go on that
railway. There’ll be a lot more freight to go into ports
as part of a coastal shipping strategy. We actually have to
back these regions rather than say we’re gonna leave that
to be zombie regions. We have to have infrastructure that
will support that. The projects that we will back will be
ones that actually are part of a regional economic growth
plan and part of what local communities want. We’re not
gonna abandon them like this government.
Joyce: Well,
I’m sorry. I need to—Can I respond to those things?
Because Grant is out to create all these straw people. He
makes all these accusations about how the Government is
behaving, and he’s completely wrong—
Mr
Joyce, respond or we can move on.
Joyce:
Well, no, I will respond to that. The reality is we are
encouraging investment in those regions and getting very
good investment. But the idea of suggesting that just
because you open up that railway line – which, as you
correctly point out, is getting about 2% of the freight on
it – will suddenly change things again is a fool’s
paradise. And that, unfortunately, is Mr Robertson’s
paradise. I am ambitious for New Zealand, but there’s no
point creating white elephants everywhere.
Mr
Joyce, I want you to…. Mr Joyce, you raised the issue of
investment. And so new ideas is the next big thing that
comes out of R&D. So what I’m wanting to know – you
spend about 1.3% of GDP on R&D, and the average OECD country
is 2.4%. What are you doing to increase
that?
Joyce: We are looking to double the
companies’ investment in R&D, and we’re having real
success in doing that. We’ve seen a very significant
growth with the introduction of Callaghan Innovation.
We’ve now got 563 companies around the country who are
getting assistance with their R&D. We’ve got 300
postgraduate people alongside those
businesses—
The Greens are gonna spend $1
billion over three years. Can you match
that?
Joyce: Well, actually, that’s not as
big a growth as we’ve been getting, and that’s the irony
of it, and that’s where the Greens actually need to go and
look at what’s actually happening.
Robertson: What we
need here is to give researchers and developers some
certainty. We’re gonna bring back research and development
tax credits rather than making them subject to the lottery
that the National Party set up for grants. There’s a place
for a grant scheme, but what companies need is certainty
that they will be backed. 15% R&D tax credit – we‘ve got
to do better in innovation. We only do that when we give
certainty.
I just want to ask you one final
question. I would like a brief response from both of you. If
you had $10 million cash, Mr Joyce, in your bank account,
why would you invest it in New
Zealand?
Joyce: Because New Zealand is full
of productive and exciting individuals who have innovation
and creativity at their heart. They are great and
resourceful. They come up with new ways of doing things all
the time. When I get to travel around the country, as I do a
lot, I get the privilege of seeing an amazing array of
companies. For example, Stabicraft in Invercargill. All
these companies that are doing a fantastic job, and I would
invest in those.
Mr Robertson, $10 million cash,
why would you put it in New Zealand?
Robertson:
Because there are people with fantastic ideas. We’ve got
an incredible natural environment that we can protect and
also enhance through that investment, but also because it
will be worth it under a Labour government because we’ll
have a capital-gains tax and investment, and that economy
will be better than how it is.
Thank you for
joining us this morning. Steven Joyce and Grant Robertson.
Thank you,
gentlemen