Gulf News

Showdown in New Zealand over salaries

MORE THAN 30,000 NURSES WILL STRIKE AFTER WEEKS OF FAILED NEGOTIATIO­NS

-

New Zealand nurses are planning to strike tomorrow for the first time in 30 years after rejecting a pay rise offer, creating a political and fiscal test for the new government.

More than 30,000 nurses will strike for 24 hours after weeks of failed negotiatio­ns, their union said, after rejecting a government offer of a NZ$520-million ($356-million) package to lift wages roughly 3 per cent and add staff. The strike will disrupt health services nationwide and force all non-urgent treatment to be postponed, Winston Peters, the acting prime minister of the Labourled government, said yesterday.

“This government is committed to working with nurses to address their concerns but we can’t fix everything in one pay round,” he added. “Their frustratio­n and anger has built up over many years.” The stand-off with its traditiona­l union support base comes nine months after Labour formed a coalition government, promising to pour money into social services and rein in inequality, rising despite years of strong growth.

But it found money stretched in its first budget in May, as it balanced investing in much needed infrastruc­ture with a self-imposed rule to pay down debt and insulate economy from the risk of a shock.

Business confidence has slumped to its lowest in seven years, and there are fears that Labour’s policies, such as a raise in the minimum wage, are leading employers to hold off on investment.

Balancing act

Labour groups and some economists say workers have benefited little from a recent economic boom, as wage growth has remained sluggish despite soaring housing costs.

Yet New Zealand’s fiscal accounts are healthy, even if there is pressure to lift public sector wages, said Nick Tuffley, chief economist at ASB Bank.

“There is more pressure on the government to meet various wage demands in the public sector,” Tuffley said. “So there is a risk of government expenses being a bit higher.” New Zealand’s fiscal balancing act of increasing expenditur­e and paying down debt relies, in part, on a lift in GDP growth to a peak of 3.8 per cent in mid-2019, from the 2.7 per cent pace in the first quarter of 2018.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates