• Interesting commentary from Hooten

    From Crash@21:1/5 to All on Sat Apr 6 11:18:07 2024
    The article is behind a paywall so copied here.

    -----
    Why NZ is doomed to a downhill spiral from 2030 unless we get on top
    of debt - Matthew Hooton.
    OPINION

    Labour is chipper about re-election in 2026, entirely without
    justification.

    Strategists celebrated the first post-election Ipsos survey suggesting
    voters rate the new Government�s performance no better than the last.

    Roy Morgan likewise reports confidence plunging in the new Government
    through March.

    National�s pollsters, Curia, report Christopher Luxon�s net
    favourability back below zero, at -5 per cent.

    Business and consumer confidence are both sharply down.

    Nevertheless, Luxon would easily be re-elected were an election held
    today.

    National is rated more competent than Labour on all top five issues
    worrying voters. It beats Labour even on health, education and
    employment, where the red team is usually stronger.

    Voters haven�t warmed to Luxon but most clearly blame Labour for the
    unfolding fiscal catastrophe.

    Ignoring that Sir John Key and Bill English ran eight consecutive cash deficits, Luxon and Finance Minister Nicola Willis blame Labour�s six
    years for the mess.

    NZ First leader Winston Peters says it took just three. In fact, Grant Robertson wrecked the Government�s books in just two years, in 2022
    and 2023, after Covid was behind us.

    No one can explain why Labour kept borrowing even after Covid,
    spending over $30 billion more in 2023 than during the lockdowns.

    Labour attacks Luxon for allegedly running the country like a company,
    which he denies. National counters that Labour ran the country like a
    students� association. If that�s the choice, median voters prefer the
    former.

    Despite reconsidering wealth taxes, Chris Hipkins remains convinced
    his best bet is sitting back and letting National fail.

    Utterly trapped in its Wellington bubble, Labour ludicrously describes
    making a few thousand policy analysts redundant �austerity�, claiming
    it will cause economic contraction and undermine government services.

    Yet it also says Luxon and Willis� tax cuts will fuel inflation, keep
    interest rates high, delay a return to growth and see unemployment
    continuing to rise.

    Labour can�t have it both ways. More reputable centre-right economists
    warn the second scenario is more likely.

    But if the recession lingers through 2024, voters will experience the inevitable reversion to the mean in 2025 and 2026 more strongly.

    Luxon and Willis won�t have done much to deserve credit for the
    election-year boom, but that won�t stop them claiming it.

    Lo and behold, that school smartphone ban has delivered an economic
    miracle!

    Meanwhile, median voters will have enjoyed their extra $20 a week tax
    cut, the minimum pollsters suggest meets Willis� new �meaningful� test
    which has replaced National�s innumerate pre-election promises.

    If this sounds bleak, that�s because it is.

    Already, we have run 13 cash deficits over the last 15 years.

    To hide it, successive governments have increasingly labelled new
    spending capex rather than opex, gaming the fiscal-responsibility
    rules to make the operating balance before gains and losses (OBEGAL)
    look better.

    Treasury pushes back against the practice, but usually in vain.

    When Willis ever achieves surplus, now not expected until 2028/9, New
    Zealand will have run a cash deficit for 18 of the previous 20 years.
    Even under the OBEGAL measure, there will have been just five
    surpluses in 20 years, two under Labour.

    Luxon and Willis promised to address Robertson�s wreckage seriously.

    Instead, despite some trimming in Wellington, Willis will most likely
    spend more in 2024/25 than Robertson budgeted for 2023/24.

    Forgetting that when English took office, debt and debt servicing
    costs had reached zero, Willis promises to mimic English�s �slow and
    steady� approach to addressing the unfolding catastrophe.

    At best, she seems set to repeat his record of a surplus or two before
    voters give Labour another crack.

    By then, annual debt servicing costs will have passed $15 billion.
    Worse, Labour would take office just as the permanent fiscal deficits
    forecast by Treasury lock in from 2030, fuelled by the costs of an
    ageing population and ever-improving health technology.

    Without greater urgency, NZ is doomed to a downhill spiral from 2030,
    similar to Argentina�s collapse from one of the richest countries in
    the world to basket case in the 20th century.

    As recently as the 1930s, the average Argentinian was better off than
    most people in Europe, North America or Australasia. Sophisticated
    Parisians aimed to be �aussi riche qu�un Argentin� � as rich as an
    Argentinian.

    Confident that once a rich country always a rich country, Argentina
    failed in the following decades to respond to changing trading
    conditions and improve productivity. After World War II, like NZ in
    2008, Argentina had almost no debt, so began borrowing to hide its
    declining competitiveness.

    Initially modest, its debt tripled from 20 per cent of GDP to over 60
    per cent from 1975 to 1985, prompting a major debt crisis after
    lenders lost confidence.

    Argentina never properly recovered, with governments from left and
    right unwilling to accept that Argentina was no longer first world.

    Argentina�s fiscal deficit nearly came under control in the 1990s and
    there were some surpluses in the 2000s, but it never escaped the debt
    it had built up.

    With no room to respond to new shocks like Covid, it has already
    defaulted on its debts three times this century.

    With no way out, it has no choice to impose brutal austerity.
    Inflation has soared with households� purchasing power collapsing by
    up to 14 per cent a month. Sufficient daily calories are out of the
    reach of increasing numbers, with nearly half the population living in
    poverty.

    Most New Zealanders, like Argentinians in the 1960s, will reject the
    risk of a similar fate in the 2030s as hyperbole.

    But Key and English could be sanguine about borrowing through the
    2010s off a zero base. Even Jacinda Ardern and Robertson had fiscal
    space in 2020.

    With annual debt servicing costs already three times the police budget
    and soon to exceed that spent on the entire school and early childhood
    systems, Luxon and Willis have no more room to be sanguine than their Argentinian counterparts in the 1960s.

    If they insist on following Key and English�s �slow and steady�
    approach, their legacy will be an economic crisis in the 2030s similar
    to Argentina�s in the 1980s, with no prospect of returning to
    first-world living standards.

    In the 1930s and 1980s, after centre-right parties wouldn�t deal with
    changing circumstances, Labour stepped up to do what the times
    demanded.

    This time, though, if Luxon and Willis won�t step up, then Labour has
    no Michael Joseph Savage or David Lange and certainly no Walter Nash
    or Roger Douglas.

    Luxon and Willis are our last chance. Hopefully, after the Budget on
    May 30, I owe them an apology.

    Disclosure: Matthew Hooton has over 30 years� experience in political
    and corporate communications and strategy for clients in Australasia,
    Asia, Europe and North America, including the National and Act
    parties, and the Mayor of Auckland.

    -----

    Hooten is critical of past Governments of both stripes but clearly
    favours National over Labour and for good reason. I like this quote:
    "Labour attacks Luxon for allegedly running the country like a
    company, which he denies. National counters that Labour ran the
    country like a students� association. If that�s the choice, median
    voters prefer the former."

    This is the best justification I have seen for delaying income tax
    bracket indexation (aka tax cuts) that I have seen for a while.


    --
    Crash McBash

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Gordon@21:1/5 to Crash on Fri Apr 5 23:12:52 2024
    On 2024-04-05, Crash <[email protected]d> wrote:
    The article is behind a paywall so copied here.

    -----
    Why NZ is doomed to a downhill spiral from 2030 unless we get on top
    of debt - Matthew Hooton.
    OPINION

    Labour is chipper about re-election in 2026, entirely without
    justification.

    Strategists celebrated the first post-election Ipsos survey suggesting
    voters rate the new Government’s performance no better than the last.

    Roy Morgan likewise reports confidence plunging in the new Government
    through March.

    National’s pollsters, Curia, report Christopher Luxon’s net
    favourability back below zero, at -5 per cent.

    Business and consumer confidence are both sharply down.

    Nevertheless, Luxon would easily be re-elected were an election held
    today.

    National is rated more competent than Labour on all top five issues
    worrying voters. It beats Labour even on health, education and
    employment, where the red team is usually stronger.

    Voters haven’t warmed to Luxon but most clearly blame Labour for the unfolding fiscal catastrophe.

    Ignoring that Sir John Key and Bill English ran eight consecutive cash deficits, Luxon and Finance Minister Nicola Willis blame Labour’s six
    years for the mess.

    NZ First leader Winston Peters says it took just three. In fact, Grant Robertson wrecked the Government’s books in just two years, in 2022
    and 2023, after Covid was behind us.

    No one can explain why Labour kept borrowing even after Covid,
    spending over $30 billion more in 2023 than during the lockdowns.

    Labour attacks Luxon for allegedly running the country like a company,
    which he denies. National counters that Labour ran the country like a students’ association. If that’s the choice, median voters prefer the former.

    Despite reconsidering wealth taxes, Chris Hipkins remains convinced
    his best bet is sitting back and letting National fail.

    Utterly trapped in its Wellington bubble, Labour ludicrously describes
    making a few thousand policy analysts redundant “austerity”, claiming
    it will cause economic contraction and undermine government services.

    Yet it also says Luxon and Willis’ tax cuts will fuel inflation, keep interest rates high, delay a return to growth and see unemployment
    continuing to rise.

    Labour can’t have it both ways. More reputable centre-right economists
    warn the second scenario is more likely.

    But if the recession lingers through 2024, voters will experience the inevitable reversion to the mean in 2025 and 2026 more strongly.

    Luxon and Willis won’t have done much to deserve credit for the election-year boom, but that won’t stop them claiming it.

    Lo and behold, that school smartphone ban has delivered an economic
    miracle!

    Meanwhile, median voters will have enjoyed their extra $20 a week tax
    cut, the minimum pollsters suggest meets Willis’ new “meaningful” test which has replaced National’s innumerate pre-election promises.

    If this sounds bleak, that’s because it is.

    Already, we have run 13 cash deficits over the last 15 years.

    To hide it, successive governments have increasingly labelled new
    spending capex rather than opex, gaming the fiscal-responsibility
    rules to make the operating balance before gains and losses (OBEGAL)
    look better.

    Treasury pushes back against the practice, but usually in vain.

    When Willis ever achieves surplus, now not expected until 2028/9, New
    Zealand will have run a cash deficit for 18 of the previous 20 years.
    Even under the OBEGAL measure, there will have been just five
    surpluses in 20 years, two under Labour.

    Luxon and Willis promised to address Robertson’s wreckage seriously.

    Instead, despite some trimming in Wellington, Willis will most likely
    spend more in 2024/25 than Robertson budgeted for 2023/24.

    Forgetting that when English took office, debt and debt servicing
    costs had reached zero, Willis promises to mimic English’s “slow and steady” approach to addressing the unfolding catastrophe.

    At best, she seems set to repeat his record of a surplus or two before
    voters give Labour another crack.

    By then, annual debt servicing costs will have passed $15 billion.
    Worse, Labour would take office just as the permanent fiscal deficits forecast by Treasury lock in from 2030, fuelled by the costs of an
    ageing population and ever-improving health technology.

    Without greater urgency, NZ is doomed to a downhill spiral from 2030,
    similar to Argentina’s collapse from one of the richest countries in
    the world to basket case in the 20th century.

    As recently as the 1930s, the average Argentinian was better off than
    most people in Europe, North America or Australasia. Sophisticated
    Parisians aimed to be “aussi riche qu’un Argentin” – as rich as an Argentinian.

    Confident that once a rich country always a rich country, Argentina
    failed in the following decades to respond to changing trading
    conditions and improve productivity. After World War II, like NZ in
    2008, Argentina had almost no debt, so began borrowing to hide its
    declining competitiveness.

    Initially modest, its debt tripled from 20 per cent of GDP to over 60
    per cent from 1975 to 1985, prompting a major debt crisis after
    lenders lost confidence.

    Argentina never properly recovered, with governments from left and
    right unwilling to accept that Argentina was no longer first world.

    Argentina’s fiscal deficit nearly came under control in the 1990s and
    there were some surpluses in the 2000s, but it never escaped the debt
    it had built up.

    With no room to respond to new shocks like Covid, it has already
    defaulted on its debts three times this century.

    With no way out, it has no choice to impose brutal austerity.
    Inflation has soared with households’ purchasing power collapsing by
    up to 14 per cent a month. Sufficient daily calories are out of the
    reach of increasing numbers, with nearly half the population living in poverty.

    Most New Zealanders, like Argentinians in the 1960s, will reject the
    risk of a similar fate in the 2030s as hyperbole.

    But Key and English could be sanguine about borrowing through the
    2010s off a zero base. Even Jacinda Ardern and Robertson had fiscal
    space in 2020.

    With annual debt servicing costs already three times the police budget
    and soon to exceed that spent on the entire school and early childhood systems, Luxon and Willis have no more room to be sanguine than their Argentinian counterparts in the 1960s.

    If they insist on following Key and English’s “slow and steady”
    approach, their legacy will be an economic crisis in the 2030s similar
    to Argentina’s in the 1980s, with no prospect of returning to
    first-world living standards.

    In the 1930s and 1980s, after centre-right parties wouldn’t deal with changing circumstances, Labour stepped up to do what the times
    demanded.

    This time, though, if Luxon and Willis won’t step up, then Labour has
    no Michael Joseph Savage or David Lange and certainly no Walter Nash
    or Roger Douglas.

    Luxon and Willis are our last chance. Hopefully, after the Budget on
    May 30, I owe them an apology.

    Disclosure: Matthew Hooton has over 30 years’ experience in political
    and corporate communications and strategy for clients in Australasia,
    Asia, Europe and North America, including the National and Act
    parties, and the Mayor of Auckland.

    -----

    Hooten is critical of past Governments of both stripes but clearly
    favours National over Labour and for good reason. I like this quote:
    "Labour attacks Luxon for allegedly running the country like a
    company, which he denies. National counters that Labour ran the
    country like a students’ association. If that’s the choice, median
    voters prefer the former."

    This is the best justification I have seen for delaying income tax
    bracket indexation (aka tax cuts) that I have seen for a while.


    Indeed very interesting. It does explain the ongoing finanical "hole"
    forecasts which seem to be larger and longer lived than is usually the case.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)