Whanganui Chronicle

Time to formulate a fairer fiscal system for all kiwis

Economic theories and assumption­s underpinni­ng them are man-made

- Chlo¨ e Swarbrick

The Reserve Bank Governor admitted last week that our central bank was “deliberate­ly engineerin­g” a recession. After two years of fiscal and monetary policy that has, exactly as predicted, worsened inequality, we’re now seeing immense CPI inflation, which is disproport­ionately hurting the poorest who spend more of their income on essentials.

The Reserve Bank has only blunt, supposedly de-politicise­d tools to tackle inflation. It is government that deals with the “political”, real-world part: who pays the price of economic upheaval?

The question we have as a country is whether we’re comfortabl­e with the same lower-income, lower-wealth New Zealanders — say, the two-anda-half million people who own just 2 per cent of this nation’s wealth — shoulderin­g the disproport­ionate cost of recovery, as they did the cost of getting us through Covid-19.

Announcing the largest Official Cash Rate rise since it was establishe­d in 1999, our central bank once again told us the country was above “maximum sustainabl­e employment”. In real terms, they believe tens of thousands of New Zealanders need to lose their jobs for sake of “the economy” as we know it.

The next day, a friend sent me a tweet suggesting replacing the word “economy” with “vibes” whenever you see it. It’s a decent reminder that economic theories and the assumption­s underpinni­ng them are man-made, prone to change and have ingrained shortcomin­gs.

Millennial­s whose lives have been scarred by house price inflation and recession, boom and bust cycles that concentrat­e then entrench wealth, are prone to laugh (or cry) about the “vibes” we’ve inherited.

But the critique has well-founded academic credibilit­y. Local economists (vibe-inspectors) Bernard Hickey, Shamubeel Eaqub, Max Rashbrooke and others all point out that the economic rules we have in place benefit some to the expense of others. Those vibes aren’t accidental; they’re consequenc­es of deliberate choices.

Those choices all sit within our fiscal and monetary policy. Fiscal policy is the taxing and spending that government­s undertake to varying degrees. Monetary policy is the Reserve Bank’s job, managing the money supply and interest rate through a bunch of blunt instrument­s under their statutory obligation to target inflation between 1-3 per cent and, as of last term, “support” maximum sustainabl­e employment.

By law, it is not the Reserve Bank’s job to target or concern themselves with inequality. Even when it comes to their opaque conclusion that a lot of people have got to lose their jobs to smooth out the vibes, as the Governor pointed out at last week’s hearings, they’re not “targeting” it. In fact, they admitted nothing would have changed in their approach to monetary policy these past two years even if the maximum sustainabl­e employment mandate wasn’t there. Fundamenta­l vibe thinking, since the 1980s, has been focused on inflation. Inequality and social cohesion is for the government to think about. This isn’t the natural order; it flows from agreed vibe theory.

As essentials get more expensive, the Government’s financial statements show taxable corporate profits increased this year by $4.1 billion. That’s of course a different measuremen­t than corporate revenue, which could be reinvested into higher wages for workers, or increasing productivi­ty, or decarbonis­ation; it’s a 26.2 per cent increase in profit, paid out to shareholde­rs, at a moment in time when low and middle income New Zealanders are being told to steel themselves through the apparently necessary pain. This occurs in the context of an estimated one trilliondo­llar wealth transfer to the richest over the past two years of vibe policy.

Reporting record-breaking profits in the order of billions year on year, the banks also moved to increase their mortgage rates following the OCR announceme­nt. As the Governor pointed out, that’s despite already increasing rates to account for that exact anticipate­d OCR increase. Two bites of the very profitable cherry.

In 2008, off the back of mass discontent about vibe theory and management, a global recession tipped people across the world to unify under the banner of the 99 per cent.

Occupy Wall Street has since been criticised for a lack of clear, unifying demands to transform the vibe system which posits some as too big to fail and the rest of us as expendable. So the same vibes, largely, continued.

Fifteen years later, we are faced with similar circumstan­ces and the opportunit­y to respond differentl­y. The facts show that inflation is not hitting all of us equally.

This is not an inevitabil­ity, but a political choice. Back in the 1930s and 40s, off the back of World Wars, the Great Depression and Spanish Flu, our Parliament decided to build the welfare state and pay for it with more progressiv­e taxation, including on land. The Greens have long fought for a Guaranteed Minimum Income and Wealth Tax. Record inequality and infrastruc­tural deficit aren’t natural laws, but the consequenc­es of commitment to trickle-down vibes. The 1980s kool-aid is congealing — it’s time for a party all New Zealanders are invited to.

As essentials get more expensive, the Government’s financial statements show taxable corporate profits increased this year by $4.1 billion.

 ?? Photo / Mark Mitchell ?? Finance Minister Grant Robertson and Reserve Bank Governor Adrian Orr sign the Policy Targets Agreement, but is it time to re-write the rules of fiscal policy?
Photo / Mark Mitchell Finance Minister Grant Robertson and Reserve Bank Governor Adrian Orr sign the Policy Targets Agreement, but is it time to re-write the rules of fiscal policy?

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand