The New Zealand Herald

We are all interlinke­d

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No doubt many CEOs were cheering on the opening of Auckland’s Waterview tunnel in June, but they say there is more to be done: Auckland’s congestion woes were ranked as the most impactful domestic factor for business confidence in New Zealand.

The adequacy of transport infrastruc­ture was also chief among the concerns of business leaders.

Over half of Mood of the Boardroom survey respondent­s rated the issue an eight or above on a 10-point scale, ranging from no concern to extreme concern. An overall average concern rating of 7.4 tells the story.

The third and fourth ranked factors were “growth pressures in Auckland” and “housing unaffordab­ility” respective­ly — both coming in at above 7 on the scale — speaking to concerns about a city that many consider to be bulging at its seams.

For Anthony Healy, CEO of BNZ, housing affordabil­ity was the top issue facing the nation. Healy had a wide variety of policy prescripti­ons for the issue: “Increase supply, RMA reform, more thoughtful immigratio­n policy, overhaul local government funding model, incentivis­e regional migration and developmen­t, and increase infrastruc­ture investment.”

As one leader sitting on the boards of a number of organisati­ons headquarte­red outside Auckland explained, “Although Auckland issues are not so concerning, we are all interlinke­d and there are impacts and consequenc­es direct or indirect.”

Craig Stobo, chair of the Local Government Funding Agency, said “the shortage of labour skills and pressures on growth city infrastruc­ture” were constraint­s to further growth.

“Central government needs to rethink immigratio­n policy and to share revenues with local government to incentivis­e them to invest in infrastruc­ture,” he suggested.

The latter of those suggestion­s, in the form of a policy sharing GST on constructi­on costs, has been proposed by Act this election, and rated highly among CEOs — 3.47/5, on average.

“ACT is right on the button,” said Stobo. “Sharing central government tax revenues with local government will incentivis­e local infrastruc­ture investment currently constraine­d by Council’s debt to revenue ceilings.”

Stephen Selwood, chief executive of Infrastruc­ture New Zealand, wants even broader reform: “We need to rethink how local government is structured and funded, in parallel with RMA and planning law reform.”

“This requires some powers being aggregated at a regional level — economic developmen­t and infrastruc­ture planning and delivery — and others powers devolved to communitie­s — social issues and local amenities in particular.”

Ross Buckley, Executive Chairman at KPMG, says much of the work is finally being done, but it’s the timing that matters: “Recent investment in Auckland infrastruc­ture (such as Waterveiw) is making a positive difference and paying dividends — it just always arrives 10 years late.”

Other leaders point out the funds for these investment­s requires economic growth, and New Zealand’s productivi­ty has been flagging.

This reality was reflected in a rating of 6.3 on the concern scale for the labour productivi­ty factor.

Indeed, after housing affordabil­ity Healy’s next top issue facing the nation was productivi­ty. “Incentivis­e investment in R&D, develop and grow ICT sector, encourage more VC and start up capital funds,” suggested Healy.

— James Penn

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