Weekend Herald

Politician­s must face up to our trillion-dollar debt to future generation­s

- Sir Roger Douglas

For too long now, a succession of Labour and National government­s have hidden behind our pay-as-you-go system of providing welfare benefits. Leaders like Helen Clark, John Key, Bill English and Jacinda Ardern have used it to avoid making the hard decisions demanded by New Zealand’s looming welfare crisis.

Instead, they have merely tinkered with welfare policy at its edges, their focus not on New Zealand’s long-term future but rather on the short-term imperative (for them) of re-election. In the meantime, huge future costs are being incurred that will have to be carried by New Zealanders yet to be born.

Significan­tly, we have begun to enter a 30- to 40-year welfare maturity period, where the costs of delivering pensions and healthcare for the retired is going to rise dramatical­ly, year on year. For the next 40 years, the number of beneficiar­ies will grow rapidly, while the number of workers, in relative terms, will decline (from around three workers to every beneficiar­y now, to around 1.66 workers to every beneficiar­y by 2060).

Inevitably, this change will leave an enormous gap between government revenue and expenditur­e, so much so that the economy will at some stage reach a point of collapse, our unfunded liabilitie­s for government healthcare and pensions placing such unsustaina­ble pressure on today’s young (our future workforce) that they will be unable to bear their costs.

A great deal of attention in New Zealand has recently been focused on the huge increase in government debt as a result of Covid-19, and whether the Government has handled or mishandled this situation. While this increase in debt is massive by New Zealand standards, it is in fact small (around 20 per cent) when compared to the accumulate­d mountain of unfunded welfare liabilitie­s we have, which amount to some $1,100 billion.

That is the size of the promises successive government­s have made to New Zealanders and on which many are relying as they head into retirement. Offsetting that mountain of debt, or unfunded liabilitie­s, we have about 5 per cent put aside in the New Zealand Super Fund.

If a public or private business were to mislead the public about the size of its financial obligation­s, as government­s have done for years, the officers of those businesses would end up in prison for fraud.

Unfortunat­ely, we operate under a system that not only allows our Government to deliberate­ly exempt itself from sound accounting practices, but also abrogate its responsibi­lities to future generation­s, systematic­ally misleading the public about the nature of our debt and shifting today’s costs and obligation­s onto future taxpayers.

But there has to be an accounting. As much as short-term policies might appeal to politician­s who place reelection above their democratic duty (the basis of our democracy is government that works for the benefit of the people, not government that operates for the benefit of itself ), you can’t hold back the future forever.

Indeed, somewhat inconvenie­ntly for our current crop of politician­s, the future has already arrived.

Every year for the next 30 to 40 years, an extra 30,000 people will be added to New Zealand’s retired population, meaning the Government’s costs for providing healthcare, pensions and housing for the retired will increase by $1b, every single year. This will cost taxpayers earning $50,000 or more an extra $12 a week (or $600 a year), year on year, for at least the next three decades.

Clearly, this is an untenable situation. Without owning up to our looming welfare crisis, and without taking action, our already parlous position will soon become unmanageab­le.

All is not doom and gloom however. It is possible to institute policies — based upon dedicated savings schemes for retirement and health — that will help us work out from under our mountain of debt, and put extra money in the hands of all New Zealanders. Although the scope and detail of those policies is for another paper, if we started now, our youngest generation­s could look forward to retiring with $1m in their hands (in today’s terms) and all their health costs met.

As an added bonus, such policies would also help place responsibi­lity for our future back into the hands of individual­s and serve to empower disadvanta­ged groups like Ma¯ori and Pasifika, who have suffered too long at the hands of misguided, and mismanaged, state paternalis­m.

Of course, such policies will require a fundamenta­l realignmen­t of the way our democratic system operates. Government­s will need to remove the blinkers of self-interest, own up to our debt crisis, acknowledg­e their responsibi­lity to future generation­s, and look to implement imaginativ­e policies that are focused on the medium to longterm, rather than the toxic desire to hold onto power for three more years.

Sir Roger Douglas is a former

Labour MP, and Minister of Finance from 1984 to 1988

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