The Press

Coalition cracks as economic pain looms

- Thomas Coughlan and Luke Malpass

The first cracks in the Government’s ‘‘Unite against Covid-19’’ campaign started to appear yesterday with Deputy Prime Minister Winston Peters declaring that New Zealand should already be at alert level 1 and that economic fallout from Covid was now the enemy, not the virus itself.

On Monday, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said Cabinet would begin looking at the level 2 settings on June 8 and would make a decision on whether to move to level 1, no later than June 22. ‘‘We are keeping watch on how we are tracking in the meantime,’’ she said.

Peters’ interventi­on came on the same day as more dreary economic data piled up. A new survey found that nearly 80 per cent of households are on the edge of a financial crisis, and the Reserve Bank governor warned that economic conditions will likely get worse before they get better.

In an interview with Stuff, governor Adrian Orr said the range of possible outcomes for growth, jobs and pay packets in a post-Covid world was so broad that the RBNZ couldn’t even estimate an unemployme­nt rate.

‘‘We don’t have a current best guess because the guesses are just so broad at the moment we’d be foolish to put a prediction,’’ Orr said.

But Orr said that a number of the banks’ possible scenarios contained within its quarterly monetary policy statement – including a disastrous 18 per cent unemployme­nt rate – should serve as a cautionary warning, particular­ly to the banks

‘‘But let’s not get complacent, let’s really scare ourselves and let’s make sure the banks understand what those numbers really feel like.’’

While Orr was confident that New Zealand would pull through the upcoming crisis, the economy would get worse before it gets better. ‘‘I actually think it’s going to be, for the next few times that we meet ... it will be worse still. The harder stuff will be ahead if us in the economic sense, I really hope it’s not worse in the health sense,’’ Orr said

The governor’s comments came after Peters, whose NZ First party has been languishin­g below 3 per cent in the last two public opinion polls, put distance between himself and Coalition partner Labour, slamming Labour for dragging out the lockdown and continuing onerous Level 2 restrictio­ns.

‘‘We have been in compulsory lockdown for far too long,’’ Peters told Newstalk ZB yesterday, making the remarkable claim that NZ First had pushed the Prime Minister on the issue around the Cabinet table. Cabinet discussion­s are usually confidenti­al.

‘‘The prime minister has actually admitted that, at the Cabinet meeting she said it, there was serious concerns from New Zealand First that this was taking too long,’’

‘‘The enemy we’ve got now is not Covid-19, it’s the inability to turn this economy around as fast as possible,’’ Peters said. ‘‘We should have got out of this into a better place as soon as possible.’’

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Deputy Prime Minister Winston Peters and Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern are at odds over when to move alert levels.
GETTY IMAGES Deputy Prime Minister Winston Peters and Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern are at odds over when to move alert levels.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand