The New Zealand Herald

Institute plan slipping under radar

Finance policy body sounds good but where is cost-benefit analysis or debate over whether we even need it?

- Norman Gemmell Professor Norman Gemmell has a chair in public finance at Victoria University of Wellington.

The Labour-led Government’s Tax Working Group is continuing to attract much attention as it moves towards its final report, due in early 2019. But another profoundly important tax — or at least fiscal — policy initiative of this Government is slipping much more quietly under the radar. This is the proposed introducti­on of an independen­t fiscal institutio­n (IFI).

Minister of Finance Grant Robertson has instructed the Treasury to begin consultati­ons on what this institutio­n might look like. The Treasury website explains the purpose of an IFI is to help strengthen accountabi­lity, transparen­cy and debate over New Zealand’s fiscal policy framework, as well as better support the effective developmen­t of public policy by political parties by:

● Providing independen­t evaluation of fiscal policy performanc­e.

● Improving and supporting effective parliament­ary scrutiny of public finances and fiscal policy.

● Providing for independen­t costings of political party policies to better inform public debate and strengthen New Zealand’s democracy.

This all sounds very interestin­g and sensible, you might think. After all, several other countries have such “independen­t” institutio­ns, and more scrutiny of how and why government­s make their fiscal decisions might seem like a sound basis for good policy-making.

But what staggers me is learning the Government has already decided New Zealand needs an IFI and the only issue for the Treasury to consult and advise on is defining its structure and remit. This isn’t entirely clear from the Treasury discussion document, but I am assured that designing and implementi­ng the IFI, not whether we have one, is the current status of the proposal.

Robertson’s foreword to the consultati­on document gives a clue when it says “independen­t oversight by an Independen­t Fiscal Institutio­n will provide the public with confidence that a government is sticking to its fiscal strategy”. Note the “will”, not “might”.

With such a major proposed upheaval to our fiscal institutio­ns, the two natural questions to ask before embarking on it would be: (i) could an IFI improve current policy or practice; and (ii) how can it be designed to best achieve this? But no. The Government has apparently already answered the first question for itself, with a definite “yes”, without any substantiv­e appraisal of the costs and benefits. There wasn’t much transparen­cy in that decision, either.

So while major reforms to both the tax system and the Reserve Bank Act are currently being subjected to extensive review and assessment, a whole new fiscal institutio­n is being proposed without any such scrutiny. Shades of the Government’s recent approach to oil exploratio­n licences, it would seem.

Now, I’m not suggesting an IFI is necessaril­y a bad idea. It has been deemed worth the effort or cost in various other countries. And as a public finance academic I have a natural bias in support of encouragin­g independen­t voice on government­s’ fiscal regimes. But New Zealand is widely recognised as already having one of the most accountabl­e and transparen­t fiscal supervisio­n regimes in the world. It is therefore far from clear on which side of a “should we, shouldn’t we, have an IFI?” debate a rigorous cost-benefit assessment would come down.

To make matters more confused, the currently proposed IFI would both include a supervisio­n function to make New Zealand’s fiscal institutio­ns more accountabl­e and transparen­t and also “provide political parties with independen­t costings on their policies”.

These two objectives seem to me quite different and should not be bundled together. Importantl­y, how can we expect a so-called independen­t fiscal institutio­n to gain respect for its independen­ce and objectivit­y in holding government­s to account publicly for their fiscal policies if it is also costing (effectivel­y adjudicati­ng on) different political parties’ budget proposals? And to further suspicion of a lack of objectivit­y, the current document proposes “the IFI would not cost government policies”. So no comparable scrutiny of all proposals then?

The idea such costings would not lead to the IFI being battered by politician­s whenever they don’t like the numbers that emerge from costing of their, versus others’, particular election promises is fanciful.

And who pays for those costings? Is this yet another example of politician­s lobbying to have their party activities funded by the taxpayer come election time?

Last, but not least, the New Zealand Treasury has more operationa­l independen­ce of its minister than most such treasuries across the world; it is respected overseas for it and for the extent and transparen­cy of the fiscal reporting it produces or oversees.

So, given Sir Michael Cullen’s often publicly expressed antipathy towards Treasury advice when he was Minister of Finance, this new proposal sounds more like it is motivated by a lack of trust in the Treasury by the current incumbents than an objective assessment of New Zealand’s future needs.

Will the Government back off, or at least take time to reevaluate, if the Treasury gets enough external blow-back on this apparent fait accompli? We’ll see, but I’m not holding my breath.

 ?? Photo / Jason Oxenham ?? Grant Robertson has written that the proposed independen­t fiscal institute “will” build confidence in the public, which sounds like a fait accompli.
Photo / Jason Oxenham Grant Robertson has written that the proposed independen­t fiscal institute “will” build confidence in the public, which sounds like a fait accompli.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand