Speech To The 87th National Party Conference: ‘Fixing Our Economy’
24 June
2023 Welcome to wonderful Wellington. Party
President Sylvia Wood, National Party Leader Chris Luxon,
parliamentary colleagues, fellow candidates, National Party
members, it’s great to be together. When I look at
this room I see friends, colleagues and supporters from so
many different regions and walks of life. I see people
who’ve been working overtime to stop our health system
falling over. Farmers who’ve been slogging it out to pay
the bills and keep us fed. Entrepreneurs who started a
business from scratch and now employ dozens of
people. Shift workers who wake up early each morning
and get home when it’s dark, saving for a home or a
business of your own. Young Nats investing in your
education and your future. Superblues whose energy to keep
working, keep volunteering, and keep looking after grandkids
holds families and communities together. I see new New
Zealanders who left your country of birth to follow your
dreams here and I see those whose ancestors bravely set out
in waka from across the Pacific Ocean to discover this place
we all call home. You are people of aspiration, of
grit and determination. We are all here because we
want to help forge a good future for our children, our
grandchildren, and our fellow New Zealanders. We
won’t accept a future where being aspirational means
moving to Australia. We want a future where aspiration
is rewarded here at home. Together we share a powerful
commitment to our Party values and a mission to deliver on
New Zealand’s great promise. Thank you, members, for
everything you do for National and for New Zealand. To
our Party President Sylvia Wood: thank you for your tireless
efforts to renew our Party and lay the foundations for a
winning campaign. To our Party Leader and my friend
Chris Luxon: You are the Leader our country needs right now.
You have the intelligence, the integrity, the practical
real-world experience needed to pick New Zealand up from its
funk and turn it around. To take our broken economy and
struggling communities and lead them back to growth, safety,
and progress. You’ll do it in your practical,
methodical, disciplined way. You won’t stand for fluff,
you’ll set high standards, you’ll demand high
performance, and you’ll deliver results. You’ll do it
with heart and with your inexhaustible smile. Bring on Prime
Minister Luxon. Let me say one last thank you to the
five people who are most special to me and who’ve come
along to hear Mum speak today. To my husband Duncan
and to our four children; James, Harriet, Reuben and Gloria.
Thanks for everything. You give up so much for me. You are
my greatest supporters. When the going gets tough it’s you
that keeps me going. You are my heart and my reason. I love
you. This election comes at a critical time for our
country. Kiwis are struggling because the economy has
been damaged. The price of food, rents and mortgages
have skyrocketed, while wages have struggled to keep up,
creating a cost-of-living crisis. Across the country
families, superannuitants and workers are feeling hardship
in a way they’ve never experienced before. I thank
everyone who has been brave enough to share their situation
with me. Your cost-of-living stories have humbled me
and made me so very determined to win this
election. If you feel anxious while you wait for the
total at the supermarket checkout, if you dread the two days
before pay day because there’s so little money left in
your account, if you’ve had to give up on your plan to buy
a home, then know this: you are not alone. Even Kiwis
who are doing everything right, who are working hard and
being incredibly careful are struggling. You are struggling
because the economy is failing you. The cost-of-living
crisis is dragging into its third year. Economic
mismanagement has driven New Zealand into recession, even
while Australia, the US, and our Asian neighbours are
growing. New Zealand’s current account - the
difference between what we spend in the world and what we
earn in the world - has hit a record-breaking
deficit. Interest rates have risen so fast that a
ticking time bomb lies in front of us. In the months ahead,
hundreds of thousands of mortgage holders will have to move
off a home loan with a 2 or 3 per cent interest rate to a
loan with 6 or 7 per cent interest. Many homeowners will be
left scrambling for the hundreds of extra dollars they will
need to make their mortgage payments each
fortnight. When that mortgage bomb goes off, the whole
economy will shudder. The Government books are
loaded-up with debt, with net debt up from under $6 billion
pre pandemic to around $71 billion today. Last time I
shared these figures at a public meeting someone politely
told me I must have my figures wrong. Sadly, that’s not
the case. So let me say it again, New Zealand’s net debt
is around $71 billion today, more than ten times what it was
just four years ago, having risen around $37,000 more for
every household in New Zealand. The great shame is
that there’s so little to show for this increased debt –
instead we have potholes all over the roads, declining
school attendance and achievement, growing health waiting
lists and escalating violent crime. Billions of
dollars have been wasted on consultants, centralisation and
ideological projects instead of bolstering the frontline
services we need like more nurses, doctors and midwives and
ensuring out kids are taught the basics. It’s time
for the excuses to stop. New Zealand needs solutions to fix
our broken economy and help you get ahead once more. Most of
all, what our country needs right now is hope. That’s what
National will deliver. Other Parties might like to
tell you they can fix New Zealand’s problems by robbing
Peter to pay Paul. That they will drag the bottom up by
tearing the top down. Or that we’ll all feel better if
they punish the wealthy hard enough. The truth is
those reckless tactics would only further weaken our fragile
economy, scare our best and brightest away and divide us one
against the other. As my Mum says, you won’t make
your own candle burn brighter by blowing out
another. National has a better way. We know that
only a strong economy can fix the cost-of-living crisis,
lift incomes and fund the world class public services Kiwis
deserve. Our plan is about making the most of the huge
advantages New Zealand has with practical, common-sense
policies that will help businesses grow and help people get
ahead. Our country has so many of the raw ingredients
we need for a growing, wealthy economy. We have trade
ties to the fastest-growing parts of the world, abundant
natural resources and the best food producers on earth, the
capacity for abundant renewable affordable electricity,
oodles of entrepreneurial spirit, innovation in our blood,
great employers and small businesses, smart hard-working
people with such very deep hearts. But right now, our
country is not converting those ingredients into the
opportunities New Zealanders deserve. We’re being
held back by wasteful government spending, high taxes and
red tape that has made it far too hard to build things,
invent things and grow things. National’s job is to
turn all this around. And we will. We will end
stagflation, solve the cost-of-living crisis and get New
Zealand growing again. We will stop the wasteful
spending and put the Government books back in
order. We will stop the despair and start the great
repair. Today I want to share with you the seven
specific steps National will take to fix New Zealand’s
economy: I give you this guarantee: In every
Budget National delivers we will invest more in essential
frontline public services including our schools, hospitals
and police. Our focus will be on driving money out of
bureaucracy and into the places it is needed most. We
know that simply spending more on public services will not
be enough - it’s delivering better results that really
counts. We will bring back accountability for
Government spending by setting transparent targets and
measuring the results we achieve for your money. The
targets we set will be for things that make a difference to
you and to our country’s future: like reducing waiting
times for health services, lifting achievement in schools,
and making our communities safer. We will report
against these targets every six months. We will demand
accountability from Ministers and public servants for
driving the improvements and progress you expect to
see. If they don’t deliver, they will be answerable
to Chris Luxon, and most importantly they will be answerable
to every New Zealander. We will take a social
investment approach to intervene earlier in people’s
lives, using innovative and community-based approaches that
are proven to work and that can change lives for the better.
The Right Honourable Sir Bill English spent decades
developing this new approach: we’ll use it to drive change
for people with the most complex needs and to make progress
on the most complex problems. National
will always be the Party of lower taxes. That’s because we
trust you to spend your own money wisely and in the ways
that make sense for you, your family and your own
values. We will deliver tax relief for lower- and
middle-income earners by adjusting tax brackets to help
compensate for inflation. We have already set out in
detail the minimum inflation adjustments we will make to tax
brackets. We will pay for these adjustments by
bringing more discipline to Government spending - stopping
wasteful programmes, reducing funding for some back-office
functions and improving the efficiency and productivity of
Government departments and agencies. At a minimum, our
tax changes will make an average wage earner $960 a year
better off. They will make someone on an income of $60,000
around $800 a year better off. If National can
responsibly offer more tax relief than that, without
compromising essential public services or damaging our
economy, then we will. We will also deliver the
FamilyBoost childcare tax rebate to lower the cost of
childcare for families with young children. This tax
reduction will be worth up to $75 a week. We will
remove unfair taxes. No more Ute tax. No more Auckland
Regional Fuel Tax. No agriculture in the Emissions Trading
Scheme. No more App tax on your Uber or your Deliver
Easy. We will stop the tax attack on landlords and
renters by restoring interest deductibility and taking the
brightline test back to two years. Here’s some
examples. We will stop compulsory and costly
centralised wage bargaining and the risk it poses to
thousands of small and medium sized employers and workers
across NZ. We will repeal the legislation that compels
it. We will fix the spaghetti of regulations created
through the Credit Contracts and Consumer Finance Act and
that have made it too difficult for people to borrow for
their small business or first home. We will fix
farming regulations that defy practicality and that,
according to a grower I met recently, are making it
impossible for him to expand his operation to grow the
affordable vegetables our country so badly needs. We will
never turn our back on farmers. We will fix the rules
holding back investment in renewable electricity: it can
take up to eight years for a business to get permission to
build a wind farm. That’s just crazy: we’ll set a one
year limit. We will fix the Reserve Bank Act to
restore the Reserve Bank’s focus on delivering price
stability by busting inflation - that means getting back
down to 2 per cent and keeping it between 1 and 3 per cent
over the medium term. We will equip young New Zealanders
better for their futures by doing the basics brilliantly in
our schools. An hour a day of reading, writing and maths for
every primary-aged child. We will say yes to the
migrants New Zealand needs to fill acute worker shortages on
our farms, in our hospitals and businesses. We’ll
train and retain more of the workers we are so short of,
including bonding graduate nurses and midwives by helping
pay off their student loans for the first five years of
their career – provided they stay here in New
Zealand. We will reverse the Te Pūkenga
disaster. Our Welfare that Works policy will help more
New Zealanders off welfare and into work by targeting better
support at young unemployed people, and sanctioning those
who repeatedly refuse to meet their work
obligations. Because we believe in a strong safety net
for those who fall on hard times. But we also know this:
those who can work, should. New Zealand faces major challenges in a
rapidly changing world. We must respond intelligently,
making the most of new technology from other countries and
coming up with breakthroughs of our own. Climate
change is here, bringing more extreme weather events and
making it obvious we must reduce the emissions that are
causing it. National will embrace the science and
innovation needed to do that. New Zealand has some of
the best farming science in the world: we should be the
country that comes up with world-changing solutions to
reduce the methane emitted by farm animals. National
will remove the ban on Gene Editing so we can get it
done. A growing country needs future-ready
infrastructure to keep us productive and to improve our
quality of life: more housing development, renewable power
schemes, better broadband, more resilient highways, reliable
public transport options and quality water services, all are
essential. National will deliver a complete revamp of
the way infrastructure is delivered in New Zealand. Not by
removing local democracy and centralising control: we will
repeal Three Waters. Not with pretty pictures of trams down
Dominion Road either. Instead, we will work with local
councils to plan and drive regional investment, by creating
a fast-track consent process for getting projects built
faster and using modern finance and funding tools to help
pay for the big nation-building projects New Zealand
needs. New Zealand’s future is global: we must
be open to the world, its people, ideas, and opportunities.
National will make it easier to attract the international
investment our local businesses need to grow. We will seek
out a new trade agreement with India and we will drive more
value from the powerful trade agreements we already
have. My fellow members, these are practical policies
that will fix our economy and get New Zealand back on track.
They are grounded in National Party values: encouraging
effort, achievement, entrepreneurship, investment and
innovation. National understands that a strong economy
is created through the efforts of every day New Zealanders
choosing to work here, to create new jobs here, to start a
new business, to take a product global or to create
something new. We will never take those choices for
granted. Nor will we resort to the lazy politics of envy
that seeks to blame our shared problems on the success of a
few. We know that success is good for the country,
it’s good for the Government and it’s good for every New
Zealander. This election the choice is
clear. New Zealanders can vote for Parties that use
tax as punishment and that seek to load more and more cost
on fewer and fewer shoulders or they can vote for a
National-led Government that will always strive to let you
keep more of what you earn, that will value work and
celebrate effort. You can vote for careful investment
that grows stronger families and communities or you can vote
for more growth of Government agencies and the red tape they
create. You can vote for policies that will push more
and more of our kids to become citizens in Australia or for
a National Party that will fight to ensure this is a country
our kids can live their dreams in. New Zealanders can
stick with what we have today: a damaged economy that is
failing its people, or you can vote National for a stronger
economy that delivers for you and your family. Faced
with these choices I have faith that New Zealanders will
choose a better way. They will vote to change the direction
of this country and elect a National Government that will
fix our economy and put New Zealand back on
track. National is ready, so let’s go out and make
it happen. Hope is on its
way!1. We will stop wasteful spending,
move resources to the front line and get the books in
order.
2. We will reduce the
income tax you pay on the wages you earn.
3. We will
cut red tape and complex regulations that are strangling our
economy and making it too hard for New Zealanders to get
things done.
4. We will grow skills and
attract talent
5. We will drive
technology and innovation to solve problems and create more
value.
6. We will build infrastructure for
growth
7. We will encourage trade and
investment