Whanganui Chronicle

How New Zealand can gain rich-nation status

- John Gascoigne John Gascoigne is a Cambridgeb­ased economic commentato­r.

A nation’s living standards are determined by its national income and the number of people sharing the national income.

About 25 years ago I wrote a booklet called National Superannua­tion; What the Government and New Right have Concealed from the Public. It was a candid statement about our economic performanc­e and future prospects.

Inevitably, it cast our political masters in a very bad light.

Intended for a wide audience, it sold few copies. However, one copy did end up in official circles where by all accounts it was extremely illreceive­d; an affront to humble, wellmeanin­g political gentlefolk.

The argument, based on demographi­c projection­s at the time, was that National Superannua­tion’s projected $40 billion cost (around $35b net cost after tax) by 2050 would easily be affordable for a nation of five million with a $500b economy or national income.

But achieving rich-nation status (very high per capita income) would require economic regime change from neoliberal lite to an export-led, developmen­tal mixed economy combined with a drastic curtailmen­t of immigratio­n, two prescripti­ons challengin­g deep-set beliefs and castiron ideologica­l conviction­s.

The Leader of the Opposition, Christophe­r Luxon, recently indicated that, if elected, a National government would lift the retirement age from 65 to 67 because, he argues, other countries have adopted 67 as a retirement age and it would be “the right thing to do” for the country.

But Luxon’s thinking is gravely flawed.

First, superannua­tion in tiny, highincome nations is a very different concept from our own glum situation.

Retirees in those countries typically receive a superannua­tion package that comprises a very generous retirement income, all manner of top-ups and addons, world-class, “wraparound” dental and medical care and equally generous concession­s on a wide range of goods and services.

Quite simply, those tiny nations, unlike New Zealand, can easily afford such largesse. By contrast, our low-wage status — by developed world standards — restricts our superannui­tants to a barely adequate level of retirement income.

The net result is that superannui­tants without alternativ­e income are consigned to a fairly drab, spartan existence.

Second, Luxon has overlooked

New Zealand’s enormous developmen­t potential.

We are a nation in long-term economic decline and societal disintegra­tion. But we can turn our untenable situation around. Our predicamen­t is far from unalterabl­e.

Our world-leading National Superannua­tion scheme will always be sustainabl­e.

That is not the issue. The real issue will be the living standards our superannui­tants will experience at the peak of the demographi­c bulge 30 years from now.

And that will entirely depend on our economic ranking — low-wage agricultur­al export nation or richnation status — in 2050.

A nation’s living standards are determined by its national income and the number of people sharing the national income.

For example, as a nation with a $500b economy equitably shared by five million people New Zealand would rank in the top five nations on the planet in per capita income.

Under that scenario all New Zealanders could reasonably anticipate a very comfortabl­e retirement because it would easily be affordable.

New Zealand will not achieve richnation status through economic growth alone.

For example, if our GDP were to grow to $350b by 2050 but our population were to increase to around seven million (as some advocate) our per capita income would be far lower than at present.

It cannot be overstated that in economic developmen­t population growth is the negative factor.

New Zealand will only achieve rich-nation status by becoming an export powerhouse.

That will require a massive expansion of our productive sector based on the developmen­t of entirely new areas of dynamic comparativ­e advantage.

Agricultur­e and tourism simply will not cut it.

If Luxon is genuinely concerned to do the right thing for the country, he should exhort New Zealanders to think big and plug into the world to raise our living standards, not the retirement age.

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