Kiwi notes

2 March 2019

9:00 AM

What ScoMo should have said to Jacinda

‘Thank you Prime Minister Ardern for those blunt comments just now in which you publicly indicated that deporting Kiwis from Australia is to your way of thinking ‘corrosive’ to the trans-Tasman relationship. I hadn’t realised this joint press conference was going to be used to make public criticisms of each country’s government’s policies. So let me reply in kind, bluntly and in public, and then perhaps I can air a few matters of New Zealand government policy that I think might also be ‘corrosive’ to our countries’ relationship.

‘On the deportation issue, people on visas who break any serious law will be deported, full stop. If they have under-age children then they will be sent back with their parents. That is our policy. We make no apology for it. Nor should we. You obviously disagree on that point, Ms Ardern, but my government thinks you are wrong.  Who knows? If Mr Shorten wins our upcoming election you may get your wish granted.

‘And as you have thought it proper to indulge in the game of publicly denouncing the other country’s government policies, here are a few of New Zealand’s that I think are ‘corrosive’.  You Kiwis are complete and total free-riders as far as defence is concerned.  You take advantage of Australia and the US because you know that we will come to your aid even though you spend vanishingly little on defence.  Worse, your country’s long-standing virtue-signalling on US naval ships – banning nuclear-armed US ships, which means all of them because it’s US military policy not to say whether they are nuclear or not – led to New Zealand being thrown out of the security obligations under the Anzus treaty. You first did this during the Cold War in the mid-1980s, undermining the Americans and with a seeming belief that unilateral disarmament is anything other than stupid. I disagree with that Kiwi move. In fact it was precisely that clear American intent to defend the democratic world, by spending heavily on defence, that led to the fall of the Soviet Union. In my government’s view that was a wholly good thing for the world.  I realise that you, as a one-time socialist activist, might have a warmer view of Soviet communism. But you’re wrong.  And when you first became Prime Minister back at the end of 2017 and called capitalism a ‘blatant failure’, let me just say that I think you were an idiot. Comments like that are very – how did you put it? – ah yes, they’re ‘corrosive’ to the relations between New Zealand and Australia because in Australia we recognise that capitalism has lifted hundreds of millions out of poverty in the last few decades alone. Just look at China and India. Socialism, by contrast, has taken the once-wealthy Venezuela and turned it into an impoverished basket case. Frankly, on matters economic you are clueless, Ms Ardern.

‘I might also take this opportunity, given that you have decided that these diplomatic meetings are in fact an opportunity for you to show off for your home audience back in New Zealand, to make it clear that your public intervention into how we police our borders – I refer to your government’s offer to take a few hundred of those claiming to be refugees from Australia’s offshore detention centres – is making it harder for us to keep our borders secure. If you want to bumper-sticker moralise, do it about something else. Incentives matter and you are weakening the ones that we have put in place to stop the boats. This has resulted in the boats stopping completely, along with the hundreds and hundreds who died coming on those boats.

‘Perhaps a blunter way to make this point is to say that you and your government across the Tasman are not morally superior to me and mine. Indeed, you are classic free-riders whose geography has allowed you to avoid hard decisions.  Fine. Lucky you. But have the good graces to shut up about it, at least in public, because Australia is differently situated.  If we want your advice we’ll ask for it.

‘Which brings me to how it is that you are even in the position of being New Zealand’s Prime Minister and hence able to stand up here today and sanctimoniously posture and virtue-signal. Of course normally I wouldn’t comment on another country’s domestic affairs, certainly not a democratic one with which we have shared a long and friendly history. But as you have changed the rules of the game, I will play by the new ones. Because let’s be honest: in any sane voting system you wouldn’t be prime minister would you? Your main opponents the National party at the last election in 2017 garnered 44.5 per cent of the vote and your Labour party won 37 per cent. Even with the Green party votes thrown in you did worse. You’re only PM because an embittered former National party politician who set up the New Zealand First party – my fellow Australians can think in terms of Clive Palmer at this point – well, he opted to put you and the Left in power despite it being clear most of his party’s voters were much more conservatively inclined. I suppose we’ll see how that pans out for New Zealand First, or whatever it’s called, at the next election. But basically it required one of the world’s most virulently proportional voting systems to make you PM, a voting system the Americans imposed on Germany after World War II and one in which about half of MPs get into the New Zealand parliament simply because their own party has put them high up on some list drawn up by party insiders. You can even lose at the constituency level and still get a seat because you are good buddies with the insider class of your own party.  Frankly, I think that’s ‘corrosive’ of democracy. But of course that’s something for Kiwis to decide and not for me to raise – well, that was what I took the conventions to be before you opted to use this joint press conference to air your views on what you think is and isn’t ‘corrosive’. Now you’ve heard what I think, maybe we can turn to questions from the press?’

Things you might have missed because the Government wanted you to

Stacey Kirk05:00, Mar 02 2019
Jacinda Ardern announces $120m of PGF funding
ALDEN WILLIAMS/STUFF
Jacinda Ardern kicked off her Waitangi trip to Northland announcing $120m of provincial growth fund cash

OPINION: What’s laden, but never full. Pure, but never clear. Given, but never received?

Why, the Government’s answers to most questions of general accountability, of course.

Expanded, it may read: What’s laden with hyperbole but never full of any substance, pure of intention but never clear with solutions, and given but never in a way where any real information is received.

It leaves the public trying to decipher the head-scratching riddles that have been coming from the mouths of ministers, wondering what any of it actually means.

Regional Economic Development Minister Shane Jones hasn't really answered questions over how a debt-laden private milk company was given a $10m loan of public funds, when Treasury raised red flags that it couldn't get a loan from a bank.
KEVIN STENT
Regional Economic Development Minister Shane Jones hasn’t really answered questions over how a debt-laden private milk company was given a $10m loan of public funds, when Treasury raised red flags that it couldn’t get a loan from a bank.

This is the so-called “year of delivery”. And with that, surely, comes the expectation that the Government has developed a position or plan to deliver on its promises.

But a flurry of announcements, some made when they shouldn’t have been and some buried when they should probably have been declaimed in bold to the sound of ringing sirens, has done little to deliver the sense that there’s a plan.

There’s been a string of issues that have flown mostly under the radar in the past couple of weeks – relatively minor in isolation, but together they paint a picture of artful dodging.

Here are some of the issues where the Government communications plan may threaten to create more questions than it answers.

The Provincial Growth Fund: And this isn’t just about the flowery speech patterns of self-styled regional saviour Shane Jones (though it’s always a little bit about that).

It emerged on Thursday that the Treasury advised Jones against giving a $10 million loan to private firm Westland Milk, on the basis the company couldn’t get a bank loan and thus the Government ran the risk of looking like a “lender of last resort”.

The debt-laden West Coast company is hoping to build a new plant with the money, to make higher-value products.

It was announced to both huge fanfare and raised eyebrows, in November last year. So much fanfare that Jones had to share the regionally hallowed ground he walks on with Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern.

There were enough unanswered questions then – namely why the loan had passed the Government’s threshold for a good spend.

They were only added to, this week, when Jones was asked to justify the Government’s reasons for pressing ahead with a loan that the Treasury had effectively branded a shonky deal. (Unsurprisingly, there was no Government fanfare to accompany this announcement.)

A spokesman for Jones said: “The PGF, when granting a loan, is able to consider wider benefits than a commercial bank would, such as wider regional development and employment outcome.”

The number of jobs bandied about at the time was 10 and, although there’s an escape clause if the company’s ownership structure was to change, it emerged a little more than a month later that Westland Milk had entered discussions to be sold in part, or wholly, to a Canadian company.

What of due diligence, when there are regions to save and the chance to look good while doing it.

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern visits Westland Milk Products, which will receive a $9.9 million loan as part of a $140 Provincial Growth Fund package announcement for the West Coast.
JOANNE CARROLL/STUFF
Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern visits Westland Milk Products, which will receive a $9.9 million loan as part of a $140 Provincial Growth Fund package announcement for the West Coast.

The Wellbeing Budget: The Government has hyped its “living standards framework” for which the full capability is expected to be revealed in the May Budget.

We know from Ardern touting it on the international stage that every cent will somehow be run through a filter to show how it contributes to “intergenerational wellbeing”.

What we don’t know is how that applies to things like intelligence and security spending, or the important but completely unvirtuous funding of an unaccountable slush fund that doles money out to struggling private businesses.

Even if the Government manages to tell an effective story to explain how it works, it’ll have a job on its hands explaining how it all adds up to help any single struggling family.

Don’t forget, it took at least two years for most people to realise the last Government’s social investment approach was a tangible thing.

The Government also faces a rather substantial vulnerability over an accompanying tool, which applies monetary values to pretty much anything, to help it weigh up funding decisions.

The fact that befriending a neighbour appears to hold more value than curing diabetes appears ripe for mischievous exploitation from the Opposition.

The argument that it’s merely an “accounting function” didn’t count for much when Labour was feigning outrage over the last government’s use of the term “liability” to describe the total welfare bill on the state.

​DHBs in the red: About the time the Tax Working Group was dropping its CGT-shaped bomb on the completely suspecting country was the time Health Minister David Clark chose to reveal that every single district health board had finally made it into the red – a $200m national deficit.

This, after months of ministry blocking and refusal to release the numbers that used to be made public on a quarterly basis.

With his release was the assurance that the proactive minister had put them all “on notice” and an attached letter he’d sent, to DHB chief executives, expecting them to prioritise saving a non-specified amount, in non-specified areas.

Oh, and he was most displeased that services were also slipping for specialist waiting times, elective surgical waiting times, and those for radiology or cancer services. Most displeased indeed.

This is your periodic reminder that he abolished the reporting of those targets.

What of Whanau Ora: It gained little fanfare, despite the fact it’s an apparent success story. And at first blush, that’s perhaps the biggest cause for confusion – why was this not being sung from the rooftops?

Journalists expecting the report had expected a press conference and possibly even the release of embargoed copies – a common practice that allows detailed stories to be done justice in their first iteration. But no such forward planning was allowed.

Puzzling, until it’s considered that Whanau Ora doing well goes against NZ First’s principles of “one law for all”, and even against some elements of the Labour Party’s own views of universality.

So when the Government ordered a review into the flagship Māori development funding model under the last government, everyone held their breath that it was the beginning of the end.

It may well still be. Except that the review which came back called for nothing really, except more resourcing of a policy programme it said was making a real difference to individual families.

It’s yet to make a decision on how it approaches the review’s recommendations, so we’ll just add it to the pile of reviews so far returned on which the country is waiting for answers. That also includes mental health, welfare and tax.

Let’s see the coalition spin these.

* Comments are now closed on this article.

DHBs are having real trouble managing the books, and the health minister seems to be doing his best to downplay it.
VALERIYA POTAPOVA
DHBs are having real trouble managing the books, and the health minister seems to be doing his best to downplay it

Taxpayers suffer most in the CGT debacle

by Christie on February 28, 2019 at 8:00am

Don’t listen to Jacinda’s rhetoric about how only the top 20% of taxpayers will pay CGT. That 20% will include a lot of people who are far from wealthy. It will include people with small businesses, with lifestyle blocks and with KiwiSaver. As everyone who has a KiwiSaver account will be affected on an annual basis, her claim that only the top 20% will be affected is incorrect anyway. quote.

In his first big economic speech of the year, at least Finance Minister Grant Robertson acknowledged there is an issue for this country at the moment. Like all good relationships, he said, there will be issues arising from time to time that have to be dealt with and we can’t shy away from those.

Exporters were encountering issues around softening demand and there were regulatory issues with China, which is shorthand for trouble at the border.
And the elephant trumpet in the room full of suits of course couldn’t be ignored.
Robertson unwittingly confirmed the reaction to the Taxation Working Group’s report is causing some consternation on the upper floors of the Beehive. end quote.

 

Honestly, I just don’t get these guys. They have had plenty of warning that CGT is political suicide, but they are so governed by their socialist ideology, they seem to think that we will all come to our senses and realise that they know best. It won’t happen.quote.

When one politician repeats verbatim what another one has said, the orchestration of the response is obvious. Think of the National Party parrots at the height of the bullying allegations. Both Simon Bridges and his sidekick Paula Bennett were word-perfect, emphasising the “strong culture” in the party and that “people liked coming to work”.

They’d been schooled – just like Labour’s been over the working group’s recommendations.

Robertson’s buddy boss Jacinda Ardern told us after Cabinet that “by and large the New Zealand tax system works well”, a line repeated word for word by the Finance Minister to the business boffins. end quote.

It does work well. Compared to many tax systems around the world, it is relatively simple… something that will change dramatically with the introduction of CGT. quote.

And they were both at pains to point out the Government wasn’t bound to take up all of the working group’s recommendations, which in real speak means the end result won’t resemble the beginning. In fact it’ll be vastly different once the coalition cobbers, in particular Labour and New Zealand First, have a roll on the grass. end quote.

The end result will probably be very different now, but only because the reaction to CGT has been so negative. Remember how the TWG said they couldn’t make CGT work, and Grant Robertson told them to go back and try harder? quote.

The view of James Shaw of the Greens – that the Government doesn’t deserve to be re-elected if it doesn’t adopt a capital gains tax – won’t be that difficult to resolve. As Winston Peters has repeatedly said, we already have a capital gains tax, it’s called the brightline test.

A Newspaper end quote.

That is where I think this whole debacle will end up. All businesses will be exempt, and possibly shares because we have long been told to invest in productive assets. The ridiculous attempts to tax the family home by any means possible will be thrown out, meaning lifestyle blocks and homes that have had rooms rented or used as an office will be exempted. Retirement savings, including KiwiSaver, will be exempted on the grounds that people must be encouraged to save for retirement. Farms will be left alone. That only leaves investment property, which has been the focus of this whole exercise from Day 1 anyway. We will end up with a perpetual Bright Line Test.

This will finish off the private rental market, and will leave hundreds of thousands of people with nowhere to live. Yes, those rental houses that are sold will go to first time buyers, but there will always be a pool of people who need to rent. Some people will never own their own house, and some will need temporary rental accommodation. Either way, it is more bad news for tenants, as landlords sell up in droves and take their nice, juicy capital gains with them before the tax is introduced. This is what socialist ideology does to our society.

10,000 is the new 100,000

by WH on March 1, 2019 at 9:30am
Phil Twyford Photoshopped image Credit: Pixy

Figures released to Newshub show that the KiwiBuild targets have turned out, like every other target from the current inept bunch of bunglers in the Beehive, to be ‘aspirational’.

The KiwiBuild programme was launched in July 2018 and we were assured by Twyford that it would deliver 100,000 homes for first home buyers over the next decade.

That seems rather like 10,000 per year for 10 years, in simple average terms. quote.

Since the annual targets were dropped, the Government has been using “over 10,000” as the number of KiwiBuild homes that it’s got contracted or committed.

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern celebrated the figure in her official start of the year statement.

But figures released to Newshub show that just 341 of those 10,000 will be built this year, and nearly a fifth won’t be built until the final two years of the programme.

end quote.

The number of houses expected to be built

  • 2019: 341
  • 2020: 1121
  • 2021: 1515
  • 2022: 1205
  • 2023: 1329
  • 2024: 1022
  • 2025: 917
  • 2026: 1045
  • 2027: 1010
  • 2028: 850

A total of 10,355 houses in 10 years. Has anyone seen the lost 89,645 houses? Lurking in Te Kauwhata perhaps? quote.

[…] on November 8, a new manager began at the Ministry. Around that time, [former head of the Ministry of Housing and Urban Development’s KiwiBuild unit Stephen Barclay] left the office, never to return. And by November 26, the number of homes that were highly likely to be built plummeted.

The Ministry would not do an interview with Newshub, but sent a statement saying it became aware of potential issues with the numbers, and looked into it further.

After an audit of KiwiBuild, the Ministry found the numbers were way off.

Its official statement says: “The number of dwellings reported in the October status report included a very broad definition.”

That meant houses that were in very early stages of negotiations were being sold to the Housing Minister as a done deal.

In a statement, Mr Barclay told Newshub his numbers were accurate, and that it appeared something changed after he left.

Phil Twyford is in Australia so was unavailable for an interview, but sent Newshub a statement.

“This matter is related to an ongoing employment dispute so it would be inappropriate for me to comment,” he said.

“There is new leadership in place in the KiwiBuild Unit which is working hard to get much-needed affordable homes built.” end quote.

Yadda, yadda, yadda Phil. Its dead, Phil – give it a decent burial.

CGT on Kiwisaver

by Christie on March 1, 2019 at 8:00am

I disagree most emphatically with extra taxation on retirement savings in any shape or form. Remember that KiwiSaver contributions are made from tax paid money. I bitterly disagreed when the National government taxed the employer contributions towards KiwiSaver, on the grounds that we are trying to encourage people to save for their own retirement, and as such, it is just a tax grab.

However, it seems that Michael Cullen, the architect of the original Kiwisaver scheme, thinks it is perfectly fine to tax the capital gains made on Kiwisaver funds… even though, without them, even if you have a Kiwisaver fund, you will probably have a miserable retirement. quote.

Proposed changes to KiwiSaver by the Tax Working Group would redistribute wealth by boosting savings for low and middle income earners while reducing that of higher earners.

But it would do so in an overly-complicated way which could have unintended consequences, experts say.
Sir Michael Cullen’s Tax Working Group revealed a proposal to apply a capital gains tax to shares which would mean investments in New Zealand and Australian shares by KiwiSaver would be taxed on an accrual basis.
But to balance that out it has recommended that savers be compensated by one or more of four options; a refund of the tax on the employer’s KiwiSaver contribution for those earning under $48k and a claw-back for those earning up to $70k, an increase in the member tax credit and a reduction of the investment tax paid by those on the lowest rates. end quote.

And if you earn over $70,000… fabulously wealthy though you are… you will be considerably worse off. quote.

Taking both into account KiwiSaver provider Simplicity has worked out those earning $40k and investing in a growth fund would stand to gain about $109k extra in their pot at retirement over a life-time of saving while those earning $70k would be down under $1k and those on $100k would be down $13,536.

end quote.

Sir Michael really does love to tax ‘rich pricks’, doesn’t he?

Photoshopped image credit: SadButTrue

If you earn $100,000 a year, you already pay 33% tax on 30% of your income, so the government has absolutely no right to take away chunks of your retirement savings as well, especially as this does not happen to savers on low incomes. quote.

The same calculations for investment in a balanced fund would mean all three income groups benefitted from the changes.
Sam Stubbs, Simplicity managing director, said the proposals were clearly aimed at redistributing wealth – giving more to the poor and taking away from the rich.

end quote.

If you didn’t realise how much of an envy tax CGT is, look no further than this. This policy may also drive people away from KiwiSaver and into other retirement funds, as the disadvantages of Kiwisaver for higher earners are now becoming disparate… probably exactly as Michael Cullen always intended. quote.

Martin Hawes, a financial adviser who chairs the Summer KiwiSaver investment committee, said a low income couple who saved in KiwiSaver and were expecting a baby potentially had the most to gain from the proposals.

“The overall thrust of what they are proposing is that wealthy people will pay a bit more tax. But what they are doing is going to be quite complicated.”
But he doubted the changes would be enough to encourage a low income earner to join KiwiSaver – something the Labour party has been keen on doing.
“We are a low wage economy. It will shift the dial a little bit – those who are in and contributing will be saving more. But I don’t see it as enough of an increase to get people to lift contributions from 3 per cent to 8 per cent or sign up.” end of quote

A Newspaper. end quote.

Since its inception, a lot of people have joined Kiwisaver, and many now have retirement savings that they would never have had otherwise. This is true of both low wage earners and those who are better paid. These retirement savings should not, however, form a source of tax grab for a greedy government. If the government wants us all to save for retirement, then they have to provide an incentive. Taxing retirement savings even further is not going to encourage people to save for retirement. It will encourage people to spend the lot and depend on the government in their twilight years.

Revealed: How Housing Minister Phil Twyford’s KiwiBuild targets unravelled

Newshub has obtained documents that paint a picture of exactly how the KiwiBuild targets unravelled.

In October, everything seemed peachy. Housing Minister Phil Twyford was told there was a high certainty of 627 homes being complete by July this year, and a further 430 were in the works.

That would have pushed KiwiBuild across the line to meet the first-year target of 1000 homes.

But by the end of November, everything came crashing down. Suddenly, just 347 homes were highly likely to be built by July.

How did it all go wrong?

Communications released to Newshub under the Official Information Act show concerns about the number of houses being contracted were first raised way back in August.

On August 5, former head of the Ministry of Housing and Urban Development’s KiwiBuild unit Stephen Barclay text-messaged Mr Twyford, saying: “To be frank, I’m disappointed a number of leads I talked to you about haven’t closed.”

A week later, in an email to Mr Twyford’s staff, Mr Barclay said he needed to give the Housing Minister an update on the numbers, saying: “He and I both agree it is the most pressing issue.”

The official figures showed that by October, things seemed good.

But on November 8, a new manager began at the Ministry. Around that time, Mr Barclay left the office, never to return. And by November 26, the number of homes that were highly likely to be built plummeted.

The Ministry would not do an interview with Newshub, but sent a statement saying it became aware of potential issues with the numbers, and looked into it further.

Confusion over October status report

After an audit of KiwiBuild, the Ministry found the numbers were way off.

Its official statement says: “The number of dwellings reported in the October status report included a very broad definition.”

That meant houses that were in very early stages of negotiations were being sold to the Housing Minister as a done deal.

In a statement, Mr Barclay told Newshub his numbers were accurate, and that it appeared something changed after he left.

Phil Twyford is in Australia so was unavailable for an interview, but sent Newshub a statement.

“This matter is related to an ongoing employment dispute so it would be inappropriate for me to comment,” he said.

“There is new leadership in place in the KiwiBuild Unit which is working hard to get much-needed affordable homes built.”

The National Party’s housing spokesperson Judith Collins has been scathing about KiwiBuild’s management, saying: “As a Minister you’ve got to ask the right questions and you’ve got to have a culture whereby people will tell you the truth.”

Barclay’s resignation a surprise to Twyford

Newshub can also reveal that Mr Twyford only found out about Mr Barclay’s resignation in January when Mr Barclay himself sent out a press release announcing it – an hour after he sent his formal resignation letter.

ACT Party leader David Seymour says the Minister should’ve been across it.

“Failing Phil has failed at every hurdle,” he said. “Knowing who’s in charge of your flagship policy is Minister 101, but Phil Twyford has failed at that too.”

Since the annual targets were dropped, the Government has been using “over 10,000” as the number of KiwiBuild homes that it’s got contracted or committed.

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern celebrated the figure in her official start of the year statement.

But figures released to Newshub show that just 341 of those 10,000 will be built this year, and nearly a fifth won’t be built until the final two years of the programme.

The number of houses expected to be built

  • 2019: 341
  • 2020: 1121
  • 2021: 1515
  • 2022: 1205
  • 2023: 1329
  • 2024: 1022
  • 2025: 917
  • 2026: 1045
  • 2027: 1010
  • 2028: 850

It seems KiwiBuild is still not hitting any targets.

Newshub.

The family home is exempt from CGT: Yeah, right

by Christie on February 24, 2019 at 8:00am
Photoshopped image credit: Pixy

As we drill more and more into the details of the TWG report, it is becoming clear how far reaching their proposed capital gains tax (CGT) has become. Essentially, you will not ever be affected by CGT so long as you never own any assets, have no retirement savings, including Kiwisaver, and never inherit anything. You can have a fantastic art collection, but you will have to have it displayed under a bridge. Otherwise, even if you don’t think you will be affected, you will be… at some point.

First, there is the question of lifestyle blocks. Even if you have lived your whole life on a lifestyle block, it does not qualify as a family home. Not the TWG’s definition of it anyway. quote.

Lifestyle block owners may be in for a shock if the Capital Gains Tax goes ahead in 2021.
Under the recommendations of the Tax Working Group, land that is larger than 4,500 square metres will be subject to the tax.
There’s no mention lifestyle blocks will be exempt like family homes, or treated like farms, which allow for the house and surrounds to be left tax-free.
Real Estate Institute chief executive Bindi Norwell said the median size of lifestyle properties sold in New Zealand in the last 12 months is 20,000sqm.

On the basis of that data, she believes 92 per cent of lifestyle blocks sold across the country last year would be taxable.

  Kiwiblog end quote.

92% of lifestyle blocks, most of which are primary residences, will be liable for CGT when sold. So, a million dollar apartment in Auckland’s CBD is exempt, but a piece of land with a house on it in Shannon worth $350,000 is caught by the tax.

Seems fair, doesn’t it?

Do you have a home office? You go home after work and do your paperwork until 10.00 at night? IRD allows you to claim some of your house expenses if you use your home for work. However, if you do have a home office, then your house does not qualify as a ‘family home’ and will be liable for CGT on sale. So business owners are hit twice, with both the business itself and the family home being liable for CGT, for no other reason than because they work hard.

Seems fair, doesn’t it?

What about if you take in flatmates? Young people, particularly single people, trying to get on the home ownership ladder by bringing in flatmates to help pay the mortgage will also find that they will have to pay CGT on the sale of the property, because it was not just a ‘family home’. I assume this applies to people who house foreign students as well. In fact, it gets even worse. If you have a boarder – even a family member, such as an adult child, who pays rent in any form, you are caught by the CGT rules.

Does that seem fair to you?

Have you ever rented out rooms in your house on Air BnB? Lots of people rent out their spare rooms to foreign travellers to earn a bit of spare cash. Even if you don’t do this often, too bad. When you sell your home, it will be liable for CGT.

Does any of this seem fair to you?

So, the claim that the family home is exempt from CGT is wildly inaccurate. Your family home will be exempt from CGT so long as you never rent it out in any way, shape or form, or do any type of work in it. All this means that a very significant number of family homes will actually be caught in the CGT net – far more than anyone seems to realise at the moment.

When you understand that Michael Cullen thinks that anyone who earns over $70,000 per year is a ‘rich prick’ (he proves this because there are proposed provisions for relief on Kiwisaver accounts for the effects of CGT, but only if you earn less than $48,000), you will understand why all of this falls under their definition of ‘fairness’.

There is nothing fair about any of this. This is a tax grab of monumental proportions. This tax must not go ahead in any shape or form.

The door yawns wide for a comprehensive envy tax grab, time for another look at Val’s poem, how close was she in 2017?

Image may contain: 1 person
Burnside Says

Dear Jacinda,

I’ve seen you on the telly, dear,
There’s quite a hullabaloo,
But taxing this and taxing that
Means my two ticks stay BLUE

You’ll tax us on our assets
There’s nothing you won’t snatch
You’ll tax us on our holidays
You’ll tax the boat or bach

You’ve said you’ll slap a tax on fuel
So when I need the car
I can’t afford to fill it up
I won’t get very far!

You’ll tax water by the litre
And our farms will hit the wall
Have you forgotten it’s the farmers
Who grow food to feed us all?

You’ve said you’ll tax emissions,
Does that mean mine as well?
If I can’t afford to fart, my dear,
Your tax can go to hell!

You’ll tax us on the things we own
Is nothing off the table?
I dread to think what else you’ll tax
As soon as you are able

I’m told you want a ‘gift’ tax
So the bit I’ve got put by
I can’t give to my grand-kids?
They can kiss my gift good-bye?

You’ll take the joy from giving
And even when I’m dead
You’ll slap me with Inheritance tax
Or take my house instead

Taxing the shit out of all of us
Is just not very nice
And I’m hoping at the polls, my dear,
The Left will pay the price

Truth to tell, Taxinda,
I think you’ve lost the plot
You’ll not get my vote, sweetheart,
My ‘comrade’ you are not!

So thank you for reading my letter,
I’ve got things off my chest
Just leave it up to National, dear…
They really do know best.

So I’ll vote for Mr English
And his team – they’ll get it right!
A pretty smile is not enough
Goodnight, Ms Ardern…….Goodnight

Val Davis

Working Group has recommended one of the most aggressive capital gains taxes in the world.

New Zealand Taxpayers' Union Inc.
 

In the last few minutes I was released from the Tax Working Group’s lock-up at Treasury where I received the Group’s final report and a media briefing from Working Group Chair (and former Labour Party Minister of Finance) Sir Michael Cullen.

As we feared, the majority on the Working Group has recommended one of the most aggressive capital gains taxes in the world.

Sir Michael’s group was supposed to deliver ‘fairness’. Instead, he’s given something Kiwi taxpayers should fear.

In our recent report, we outlined Five Rules for a Fair Capital Gains Tax, but any notion of fairness has been flagrantly disregarded by the Working Group. It fails most of our tests.

As expected, the Group is proposing a full-scale capital gains tax, among other measures such as environmental taxes.

The only assets excluded from the proposed capital gains tax are small family homes and art – commercial property, businesses, publicly listed shares, and every other type of enterprise will be slammed by this tax:

  • Capital gains will be charged at 33% for the majority of taxpayers – one of the most punitive capital gains tax regimes in the world, and more than twice the rate proposed by the Labour Party at the 2011 and 2014 elections.
  • There will be no inflation adjustment – even paper gains will be hoovered up by IRD.
  • Revenue neutrality only applies for the first five years: while the group proposes changes to income tax thresholds (see below) most of the revenue from a capital gains tax is forecast to be collected after five years — after ‘revenue neutrality’ has expired.
  • ‘Valuation Day’ is imminent: taxpayers will be forced to value their assets within five years, or must rely on rough and ready evaluations (such as rateable value for land).

Even though the Government explicitly ruled out taxing the family home, properties larger than 4500m2will in fact be taxed. The message to regional New Zealand is that their lifestyle blocks, farms, and semi-rural properties don’t deserve the protection given to Wellington and Auckland penthouses and townhouses.

Iwi-owned businesses will pay a discounted rate (17.5 percent, compared to 33 percent for other businesses).

In short, the proposal is as bad as we could have feared.

It is a costly, bureaucratic, and seemingly envy-driven tax grab. It threatens New Zealand’s prosperity, drives up housing costs, and punishes responsible investors.

You can read the Tax Working Group’s final report here.

Proposed sweetener with changes to income tax appear to be spin rather than substantive

While the Working Group supports adjusting the bottom tax threshold, they propose coupling this with an increase in the second tax rate from 17.5% to 20.5% to increase ‘progressivity’.

From an economic incentive perspective, this is a terrible move. Even though many taxpayers will receive a small tax cut, middle-income earners would face a higher marginal tax rate on additional earnings, which reduces the incentive to take on more hours, skill-up, or take-on extra responsibility at work.

45.6 percent of earners fall within the second tax bracket, hundreds of thousands of earners could be affected by this distortion in incentives – the cumulative economic effect would be massive.

A fight now inevitable

While my job is to advise on the technical details and economic impact, from what I’ve read this morning it is almost certain the Taxpayers’ Union will be fighting this with everything we’ve got.  A campaign to Axe This Tax will almost certainly be put into effect: to force the Government to reject the extreme proposals.

In the meantime, feel free to forward this email to friends and colleagues — those interested in following our campaign can sign-up here to receive updates.

Similarly, if you have suggestions of how we can work together to Axe This Tax, reply to this email, or contact us using the website.

Thank you for your support,

Joe Joe signature
Joe Ascroft
Economist
New Zealand Taxpayers’ Union

HOW ANDREW LITTLE FAILED THE PIKE RIVER MINERS

https://nzagainstthecurrent.blogspot.com/2014/12/how-andrew-little-failed-pike-river.html

 

We look back at the role of Andrew Little and the Engineering, Printing and Manufacturing Union in the Pike River mining disaster.

 I don’t usually repost my own posts and, in fact, this is the first repost I’ve ever done. But I think it is  worth giving this story another airing given the rise in political prominence of Andrew Little. I considered rewriting the story but I think the original post speaks for itself. It outlines the role of the Engineering, Printing and Manufacturing Union (EPMU) in the Pike River mining disaster, which saw 29 men lose their lives.

Labour Party leader Andrew Little was national secretary of the EPMU at the time. This story was first published on 8 November, 2012.

Last month Andrew Little went to Pike River to attend the memorial to mark the fourth anniversary of the tragedy. He told the media that he attended the commemorations to stand alongside the families.

WHEN THE  Royal Commission of Inquiry into the Pike River mining disaster issued its report  this week, the response of the Engineering, Printing and Manufacturing Union (EPMU) was immediate. It issued a press statement welcoming  the  report and is encouraging the Government to implement the recommended  changes as soon as possible.

The statement quoted EPMU assistant national secretary Ged O’Connell who declared that  the report should mark a turning point for mine safety in New Zealand:

This report is a damning indictment of New Zealand’s deregulated health and safety regime. Pike River Coal Ltd should never have been allowed to operate in the way it did, and in other countries it wouldn’t have been allowed to.

The report makes clear that the tragic loss of life at Pike River could have been prevented with stronger regulations, an independent and well-resourced mine safety inspectorate and genuine worker involvement in health and safety.

We hope the failings exposed in this report spell the end of the deregulated health and safety regime of the last 20 years. This vindicates the union’s repeated calls for improvements in mine safety and for the reintroduction of check inspectors.

This statement represents a complete change of heart by the EPMU officialdom because it was never critical of  Pike River Coal (PRC) during the time that  the mine was open. The EPMU represented approximately half of the 140 miners on the site.

After the first explosion the EPMU strongly defended the management of PRC.

EPMU National secretary Andrew Little (now a Labour MP)  told the New Zealand Herald on November 22  2010 that  there was “nothing unusual about Pike River or this mine that we’ve been particularly concerned about”.

He then appeared on TVNZ’s  Close Up  to again defend PRC management.

He told Close Up that underground mining was inherently unsafe and the risk of gas explosions, particularly on the West Coast, was high.

While the industry was aware of the risks and took the necessary precautions, unfortunately these kinds of incidents still happened, he argued.

On November 26, 2010 the Dominion Post  ran an article that denounced ‘wild’ rumours that the mine was not safe. It declared  that  “Any suggestion of obvious or known safety lapses does not find traction with unionised staff or union leader Andrew Little.”

Andrew Little’s conciliatory views toward  PRC management were echoed by Labour MP Damien O’Connor. He suggested that no one was responsible for the accident and that the  disaster was “just one of these things that the West Coast unfortunately has had to get used to over the years”.

Little and O’Connor’s views would of found  favour with the Minister for Energy and Resources, Gerry Brownlee. He insisted that PRC had “an absolute focus on health and safety”.

So here  we had the Government, the Labour Party and the EPMU all lining up to defend the management of PRC.

At the  time this writer commented: “All workers at the mining site should be seriously concerned that the EPMU has such a benevolent view of its safety standards.”

The views of Andrew Little and the EPMU flew in the face of expert opinion.

While Andrew Little  was defending PRC an Australian gas drainage engineer, who wished to remain anonymous because he feared ‘recriminations’, said he visited Pike River in 2009  and observed that its  operating standards were “extremely poor”.

He said  that he had been told by miners  that the mine was flooded with methane gas about three weeks before the first explosion.

He said  miners had bored through ‘high flow methane holes’ without any risk assessment conducted or procedure on how to manage gas flow from the hole in place. He was critical  that PRC has not yet implemented a gas drainage drilling regime that could relieve the pressure when there was  a  build up of gas by drilling a hole in the coal seam.

The New Zealand Herald, also in November 2010,  quoted Gerry Morris of Greymouth, a former writer for Coal magazine, who said he had heard regularly from contractors at the mine “over the last two or three years that this mine is unsafe, there’s far too much gas, there’s going to be a disaster here one day”.

But despite the overwhelming evidence that there was  something seriously and dangerously wrong at the Pike Rive mine, the officials of the  EPMU did nothing.

The mine opened in November 2008  and on not one occasion did the EPMU  initiate industrial action or even criticise PRC’S  safety standards, even after a group of workers  walked off the job to protest the lack of basic emergency equipment.

The walk out by miners was revealed by miner  Brent Forrester. He told TVNZ’s Sunday on December 5 2010 that  he once helped organise a walkout of about 10 miners to protest the lack of basic emergency equipment, including stretchers and an emergency transport vehicle. They received no support from the EPMU. Andrew Little  even insisted that  PRC “had a good health and safety committee that’s been very active.”

It was exactly this benevolent attitude  by the EPMU that allowed PRC – and the Department of Labour – to continue as if it was just ‘business a usual’. It appears that no-one was  protecting the interests and concerns of the workers on the mining site. The EMPU failed to organise industrial action  to address safety concerns  at the  mine in favour of  ‘cooperating’ with management, what it and the CTU sometimes  refer to as ‘modern unionism’.

There won’t be any resignations from within the EPMU for dereliction of duty and, of course, Andrew Little  has escaped to Parliament.