The New Zealand Herald

Poverty in the Bay: province is feeling the pain

- David Schnauer comment David Schnauer is an economist, retired lawyer and the author of Covid, Catalyst for Change.

Ihave just returned to Auckland after visiting Gisborne to see the autumn colours at Eastwoodhi­ll, a 300-hectare tree plantation nearby. Unfortunat­ely, it was not only autumn colours that were on display.

Clear signs of poverty and economic distress were also regrettabl­y apparent. Less than prosperous-looking shops; many poorly maintained houses and a rundown motel.

Don’t get me wrong — Gisborne has wonderful geography, an attractive boat harbour and restaurant­s, and a wonderfull­y fertile hinterland. It is not all downbeat, and I would love to see it do better. But the visit left me with an overall impression of a town experienci­ng the downstream consequenc­es of poor economic policies pursued by New Zealand for the past 50 years.

It is the more disadvanta­ged parts of New Zealand society, particular­ly our more remote provincial towns, which are paying the price for these economic policy inadequaci­es.

Let’s start with the failure to add value to our exports. The Gisborne port was piled high with logs. Perhaps 2 per cent of these had been treated. The rest appeared to have been felled, de-barked and delivered for shipping offshore.

How many local jobs would be created, if these logs were further processed? They could in theory be more generally treated and dried; turned into sawn timber; into ply and laminated timber; into packing cases, pallets, or even into kitset buildings like Lockwood homes.

Developing these opportunit­ies would not be easy; but sending all our logs offshore unprocesse­d means shipping hundreds of jobs offshore, from a city which clearly needs every job possible.

Wooden buildings should be coming into vogue. Wooden buildings sequester carbon, and are climate-friendly. The Tuhoe building in Taneatua and the Scion Building in Rotorua, are wonderful examples of what can be done with timber buildings. But there is no evidence that such forward-thinking is reducing the number of unprocesse­d logs passing across the Gisborne wharves.

Then there has been New Zealand’s willingnes­s to sell its business assets into offshore ownership. Much of our forests are overseas-owned, as a result of policies over the last 50 years.

If New Zealand now wishes to embark on a drive to add value in the forestry sector, we face forestry owners seeking to maximise returns from their logs, irrespecti­ve of consequenc­es for the domestic economy. While logs are piled high on the Gisborne wharves, the New Zealand building industry struggles to obtain timber to build houses.

Extensive overseas ownership of many sectors of the economy follows significan­tly from a lack of domestic capital because we have had inadequate institutio­nal saving over the past 50 years.

It also follows from New Zealand’s open-door policy towards foreign ownership of our business sector. Yes, some foreign ownership is very valuable and should be encouraged, But, arguably, New Zealand has gone far past the point of optimal foreign ownership.

We went up Kaiti Hill — a Gisborne landmark. There was no signpostin­g of the road to the summit and a neglected display at the top. A poorly presented lookout, notwithsta­nding the magnificen­t view. Like many other parts of NZ, it suffers an inadequate investment in tourism. New Zealand has still not provided local bodies with a revenue stream to build tourism infrastruc­ture in their areas — public toilets, car parks, lookouts, signboards, picnic areas.

Our motel was run down, showing the effects of Covid’s impact on tourism. New Zealand’s vitally important tourism sector needs a fundamenta­l restructur­e after Covid. New impetus was not apparent: at least not in Gisborne.

What makes Gisborne struggle more? Matamata, Cambridge, and similar provincial towns have had people moving there to escape overly high Auckland house prices.

Our Reserve Bank zero interest policies have, unfortunat­ely, driven up house prices, thereby masking structural economic policy failings. But Gisborne is too remote for Aucklander­s to move there — meaning its fundamenta­l economic pain is more obvious to see.

Will provincial distress be changed by the recently announced Budget? Will National’s tax cuts or a revived Provincial Growth Fund help? Highly unlikely.

Concentrat­ed focus on long-term structural economic growth is required, not short-term economic boosts aimed at the electorate. Until that occurs, the economic pain in the provinces will likely only intensify.

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