Minister Also Wrong On NZ’s Labour Productivity Growth After The ECA 1991
A policy paper released today by The New Zealand Initiative rebuts the Minister of Workplace Relations and Safety’s claim to a select committee that New Zealand’s labour productivity growth rate since 1991 was 46% below that of Australia.
On figures recently supplied by the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment, the correct figure was 30%. A marginally more sophisticated trend analysis reported in the policy paper puts the difference at 23%.
In making these errors, the Minister sought to discredit the Employment Contracts Act 1991. He is trying to justify a return to trade-union-dominated wage negotiation regulations, as advocated by the CTU.
Our 15 July Policy Note, Minister hopelessly ill-informed on labour market statistics, rebutted other aspects of his statistical claims. It also included two charts that showed that New Zealand’s trend rate of labour productivity growth since 1991 has been faster than before 1991, both absolutely and relative to Australia,
Today’s policy note calculates that New Zealand’s labour productivity growth was 54% below Australian's between 1964 and 1990, much worse than the above 23% margin.
The author of the Policy Note, Dr Bryce Wilkinson, concludes that “if New Zealanders’ wellbeing were its central concern, the government would be focusing on lifting productivity growth, not impeding flexibility and productivity with its Fair Pay Agreement Bill.
Read our policy point: Faster trend Labour productivity growth after the ECA 1991, here.
About
The New Zealand Initiative
The New Zealand
Initiative is an evidence-based think tank and research
institute contributing to public policy
discussion.
Supported by the nation’s leading
visionaries, business leaders and political thinkers, we are
committed to making New Zealand a better country for all its
citizens with a world-class education system, affordable
housing, a healthy environment, sound public finances and a
stable
currency.