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Volume 651, Week 1 - Tuesday, 9 December 2008(continued on Wednesday, 10 December 2008)

[Volume:651;Page:109]

Tuesday, 9 December 2008

(continued on Wednesday, 10 December 2008)

Points of Order

Bills—Availability in Urgency

Hon Dr MICHAEL CULLEN (Labour) : I raise a point of order, Mr Speaker. I draw your attention to the fact that although the Government has taken urgency on a number of bills, only the Taxation (Urgent Measures and Annual Rates) Bill is on the Table at this stage. You may recall, Mr Deputy Speaker, that when urgency was taken under the previous Government, the bills for which any urgency had been taken were made available on the Table as soon as they had been printed. I listened this morning to an interview with the Minister of Labour, Kate Wilkinson, who made it clear that the details of the Employment Relations Amendment Bill had been finalised, so I presume that it has been printed. I believe it is good practice for the Government to get those bills on the Table as soon as they are possibly available, so that members of the House can actually be informed of those details before debate is entered into.

Mr DEPUTY SPEAKER: Thank you, Dr Cullen. We will look into that for you.

Taxation (Urgent Measures and Annual Rates) Bill

Second Reading

  • Debate resumed.

Hon BILL ENGLISH (Minister of Finance) : When I rose last night and spoke very briefly, I moved that this bill be read a second time, and I pointed out that the one thing that was obvious from the first reading debate was that Labour still does not realise it has lost the election. With the attitudes on display, I see that that is a realisation that will take some time to sink in, but I will come back to that.

I remind members of the context in which this legislation has come before the House. New Zealand has already been in recession for a year, and of course there are questions about how we managed to get into recession before other countries did. The 2008 calendar year will show virtually zero growth—the much-vaunted legacy of the previous Government, I presume. During this debate I expect that Labour members will be able to explain to us just why the economy was in such apparent great shape when it had zero growth. We have been in recession for longer than any comparable economy, and that was before the international events that are now concerning us. So we are introducing this legislation in the context of an economy that already had quite significant problems because of 9 years of complacency about what it takes to grow an economy and allow people to have all the benefits that go with a growing economy. That is the first point.

We are introducing this legislation in the context of a country that was already in recession well before the international events that have created so much uncertainty. Of course, we have seen those events occur in the last couple of months, and we are surprised that in its dying days the Labour Government did not make much of them. The reason is that Labour was doing all of its dirty tricks, and that is a very obvious and high-profile legacy of this Government in the public mind; at a time when it should have been going through our proposals in detail, which are embodied in this legislation, and outlining its own ones in detail, it was chasing dirt files in Australia on the current Prime Minister.

If those members do not understand the detail of the legislation that is laid out now, that is why. They were too busy being focused on continuing their legacy of personal denigration and continuous scandal, and on issues that did not matter to the people who trusted them. That is why those members are on that side of the Chamber. Instead of looking at the detail of our economic policy and debating it in the election campaign in a way that would reflect the interests of the people who trusted them, Labour members were too busy chasing their strategy of personal denigration. The dirty, complacent Labour Party let its own people down because it did not focus on the issues that mattered to its own people. We did, and that is one of the reasons why Labour lost the election.

Looking ahead, we see that the New Zealand economy faces very significant uncertainty, and that uncertainty is—at the moment, anyway—largely to do with the state of the economies of our trading partners. In the last couple of months the economies of our trading partners, with the exception of China as a significant partner, are almost all headed into recession. That has happened quite quickly, even in Australia, which as recently as 2 months ago was forecast to grow at 2 percent per annum, but is now looking at a couple of quarters of negative growth despite the Government over there saying that it would not happen. So this legislation is part of a fiscal stimulus of around $7 billion over the next 2 years. That is not all of it; this will add to the stimulus created by a fairly big-spending Budget in 2008—well, another big-spending Budget from a Government that has tried all sorts of tricks to hide some of the impacts of its worst decisions—then the tax cuts on 1 October 2008. Those tax cuts were made somewhat reluctantly by the previous Government. Having spent 9 years saying it would never do that, it did. Having spent 9 years saying it would never borrow for tax cuts, in its dying days it turned round and borrowed for tax cuts. That is another reason Labour lost the election: it ended up doing the opposite of what it said after 9 years, which was “We will never cut personal taxes.” Then because National won that argument the Government was forced to cut them, and it lost the election anyway.

There is nothing worse than giving way on one’s principle and then regretting that one did it; that is what those members are sitting there doing. Would they not love to be able to say “We stood firm; we never gave in; we never cut personal taxes.”? They cannot; at the last moment, along with the blowout in Treaty settlements, endless promises on rail, and the big hole in the Accident Compensation Corporation accounts, they caved in and made tax cuts. Well, we are happy to claim those tax cuts as part of our stimulus package because, in Dr Cullen’s immortal words, “He lost”—he lost the tax cut argument.

When we add those three things together—the big-spending Budget in 2008, the 1 October tax cuts, and this tax package—the economy over the next 2 years will benefit from $7 billion of stimulus. Why does that matter? Well, it matters because it will put cash in people’s pockets.

Hon Darren Hughes: Not all people.

Hon BILL ENGLISH: Well, actually, just about everybody. I want to pay attention to one particular issue that has been raised, and that is the issue around Working for Families. Over the last 3 or 4 years there have been substantial increases in the net incomes—the after-tax incomes—of people with children.

Hon Darren Hughes: Opposed by the member.

Hon BILL ENGLISH: Well, no, actually we support it. Many other New Zealanders who were not part of Labour’s political strategy got nothing, so in this package people who got nothing for 9 years—loyal Labour voters who were meant to be looked after by the previous Government, which spent all its time on a campaign of personal denigration and incompetent scandal—will get something. It is true that there are no increases in Working for Families here. That is simply for this reason: families with children have had big increases over the last 2 or 3 years; people without children have had nothing. This tax package will give them some cash in their pockets, which will help to keep this economy ticking over and will protect people from the sharpest edge of recession.

As it happens, this is a decision consistent with our long-term goals, which are to improve incentives in the economy to encourage people to get ahead, and to let them make their own decisions with their own money, instead of being told what to do by a Government that takes too much tax off them. So the decisions that will help the economy in the short term to cushion the effects of a recession will also help the economy in the long term to achieve our objectives of raising our long-term growth performance. Of course, who would know where Opposition members start from? They are against tax cuts; they are for them. They are against borrowing; they did it. They think the economy matters, but when it matters they never talk about it, such as in an election campaign. They talked about everything else. I suspect that it will take, probably, another 12 months for Opposition members to figure out that Labour is no longer the Government.

Hon DAVID CUNLIFFE (Labour—New Lynn) : That has to be one of the singularly worst speeches I have heard from a Minister of Finance in my entire time in Parliament—it is the worst, in fact. There is Bill English, saying we do not realise we have lost the election; I do not think he realises he has won. That was one of the bitterest, meanest, most angry speeches I have heard. We are in a better mood than he is, and we lost the election. I ask New Zealand what that was about. Was that the happy, friendly face of the modern National Party, or was that some warmed-over dipstick from Dipton? Look, I do not know about his mana-enhancing Treaty blowouts, and his carping and whining about the election campaign, but can members just imagine the situation if National had lost? How bad would Bill English’s mood have been then?

Hon Darren Hughes: Oh, he’d be happy then. He’d be leader.

Hon DAVID CUNLIFFE: Ha, ha! That is terrific—that is terrific. He would have been happy then, because he would be leader—“Et tu, Bill!” It is a wonderful thing to watch the body language on the front bench of the Government—absolutely wonderful. Every time the poll ratings go up, Bill English’s face goes down.

Three things are wrong with this bill: it is bad process, it is bad economics, and it is bad for working Kiwis. The bad process stuff is obvious, is it not? The Government did not even put the bill on the Table before the debate started. It is not sending it to a select committee. What has happened to the flowering of democracy, the “Key spring”, in New Zealand? We cannot see that today. All I can see is a bill the National members must be ashamed of, because they are rushing it through all stages, with no opportunity for affected New Zealanders to comment and no opportunity for the detail of the bill to be tested.

You know, this bill is so shoddy that even the commentary on it says it is rubbish. It does not meet the Government standards for a regulatory impact assessment, according to page 10. The Government has not quantified the effects of the bill. It does not know whether the removal of the research and development tax credit will push innovation up or down. It does not know the net effect of the KiwiSaver changes, but we established yesterday—thanks to Dr Cullen—that it is not allowing for any growth in enrolments. So that move to make it easier for New Zealanders to enrol—that minimum 2 percent—is something we know the truth about, ladies and gentlemen: it is a cap. It is a maximum, because that is the default level that people will enrol at. That is all an employer will be allowed to subsidise, and that is bad for workers. It is bad for Kiwis, who need to save.

You know, the macro effects of this legislation are rubbish. If there is a short-term recession problem and the pump needs to be primed, the last thing to do is to have a long-term tax cut. Why is that? Well, there are two things. Firstly, any economist knows that the multiplier on Government spending is bigger than the multiplier on a tax cut. Why is that? Because if investment is directed well, it flows through the economy. If there is a tax cut, people spend part of it on stupid consumption items, they spend some on investment goods, and they save some away. That does not ricochet through the economy, so the multiplier on a tax cut is lower than the multiplier on good investment. That is why this measure is bad economics.

The second thing is that this is a long-term measure to address a short-term problem. It is a bill that does not work. The idea is to match a short-term problem with a short-term measure. So one does a temporary stimulus package, and does not lock in a structural tax cut that will blow out the debt track. But, hey, if National is confident about that debt track, I say it should show it to us. Why does it not tell New Zealanders the truth about where gross sovereign debt will get to in 20 years’ time? National has not told New Zealand that, because it is deeply, deeply ashamed about it.

Even Treasury, in its briefing to incoming Ministers—I tell Bill English that it is on about page 10, if he has not got that far—tells us that this fiscal stimulus is not required. That is because there is $13 billion of pump priming, of which $9 billion came in October with Labour’s package. Two-thirds of it has already been done, and we spent—as Dr Cullen said—right up to the maximum of where we felt that we could go, based on the information that we had, up to the point where we were borrowing to fund a tax cut, which is bad policy and bad economics. Ignoring Treasury advice and, like Rip Van Winkle, ignoring the entire meltdown of the global financial market, Mr English has done the politically populist thing. He says we should have a tax cut.

A tax cut sounds wonderful, until one works out who gets what. I say to members and to those who are listening that the answer is that if a person earns less than the average wage, less than $44,000, that person will lose, because National will have taken off the KiwiSaver enrolment subsidy. National is to cut $3.5 billion from KiwiSaver funding. That has to come from somewhere, and it will come from the workers—from the poor, as usual. And who gets what? Well, someone on $750,000 a year, a nice income for a good National Party supporter, will get $200 a week in tax cuts, which that person does not need. A person on the average wage of $45,000 will get $1.92 a week. Whoopee! That will really help at Christmas, will it not, even if one has not lost one’s job because of the 90-day sacking bill. I thank Mr English very much for the kinder, gentler, National Party.

The smiley face of National is hopping from cloud to cloud, forgetting to tell people the truth about what was in its policy. What about that superannuation tax credit that National just forgot to mention—that it was cutting the net rate from 4 percent to 3.4 percent. That would not really have pleased the oldies if they had been told about it ahead of time, so National did not tell them. The reason that we do not get to test these things is that there is no select committee process. This bill is being rammed through. National knows this bill is not well-thought-out. It is bad economics; it is bad for people.

This bill will make a lot of our old structural problems worse. Those problems were that people were spending a bit too much because their house valuations were going up, and they figured that they could take afford to take on a bit more debt. People did spend beyond their means; there is good evidence of that. But this bill makes that problem worse. It says National will cushion the effects of a short-term recession with a tax cut. The money will not go into investments; it will not do anything for productivity. That was National’s theme in the Speech from the Throne, just yesterday, when it said it would go for growth and productivity. Nothing in this bill will go into growth; it will go into wasteful spending and into things that will not help our innovators. The bill will not help our exporters, will not help our dynamic companies, and will not help families who are in need.

I ask what the bill was supposed to be about. What was it supposed to do, and what was the point of this bill? Was it to deliver on an election promise? What did National campaign on? It campaigned on the promise of good, open Government, and a fresh start for New Zealand. Do members remember those words? Well, they lasted about a day into the business of the House. The fresh start for Government meant doing away with the select committee process. It meant doing away with giving the Opposition adequate notice, in order for it to prepare a defence. It meant doing away with the constitutional safeguards that New Zealanders hold dear. If the process around this bill is anything to go by, let alone the 90-day Employment Relations Act amendment bill outrage that is coming later this week, New Zealanders are in for a very, very tough time.

Hey, members should not feel sorry for us. We are professionals. We understand that we are here to serve the public. We know that when the public wants us to serve them, we will be ready. Members should not feel sorry for us because we are in Opposition; that is another form of service. Members should feel sorry for New Zealanders who are going to suffer from the excesses of a Tory Government that is reverting to type on day one of holding office. They should feel sorry for New Zealanders who will suffer from the abuse of process and get bad economics delivered to them, with proposals that are ill-defined and badly quantified, do not meet regulatory impact standards, have effects that have not been quantified, and have loose and shoddy details.

This bill is a nonsense. It is about who gets what—and those who get it are the rich, and those who lose it are everyone with kids and an income of $44,000 a year or less. That is the truth of it, and that is why we strenuously oppose this bill. This Government has started the slide to 2011 on day one. This will be a one-term Government, because New Zealanders hate people saying one thing and doing another. They do not mind hardship if they have voted for it, but they really resent being sold something and getting something different from that. This bill is bad economics, it is bad for New Zealand, and it represents bad process.

CRAIG FOSS (National—Tukituki) : In speaking to the second reading of the Taxation (Urgent Measures and Annual Rates) Bill, I want to say that given the speech of the previous speaker, the Hon David Cunliffe, he may well not last quite as long as the Hawke’s Bay District Health Board did. I think his colleagues were all murmuring as he spoke, and what happened last night was very indicative of the support they have for him. Earlier speakers—[Interruption]—and I think we are hearing them again—are still fighting the battles of yesterday. They are still fighting the battles of yesteryear. I half expect something about the Viet Nam War and the Springbok Tour to come out, and maybe it will in speeches to come.

The comments about process and select committees were interesting. I think almost every bill, amendment bill, and budgetary announcement on KiwiSaver was passed under urgency—all bar one, the first bill. They were all passed under urgency. They did not go to a select committee, etc. The difference between this bill not going to a select committee and the various changes, Supplementary Order Papers, and amendments that were rammed through under the previous administration without their going to a select committee is a thing called the general election. The thrust of this bill went to the select committee of New Zealand in the general election. Part of our 100-day plan, part of our core philosophy, and part of our ongoing plan for New Zealand is, quite simply, an ongoing programme of sustainable tax cuts leading to growth.

The previous speech was very revealing. The member spoke about people reverting to their true colours, or something along those lines. I could not believe my ears when he said that everybody knows that the multiplier on a tax gain is bigger than the multiplier on a tax cut. We now see the justification for Labour taking the top marginal rate from 33c to 39c. And I will concede that it was in its programme that it put before the public—fair enough. But if we take what the finance spokesman said to its logical extreme, we find that he is saying, basically, that we should hike taxes. He spent about 3 minutes talking about the multiplier on tax cuts versus the multiplier on tax hikes. I ask whether Labour is revealing its hidden agenda, now that the election is over. Is it revealing what would have been in the mini-Budget of the previous Minister of Finance? Presumably that would have been in December if Labour had got in. I ask whether Labour would have actually hiked taxes, because the logic of the previous speaker’s speech was about increasing taxes.

Hon Darren Hughes: Why are taxes going up for people in Flaxmere?

CRAIG FOSS: The gentleman who was the previous electorate member for Ōtaki asks why taxes are going up. He should turn to his left and ask that question of the gentleman who, over the last 9 years, was responsible for the greatest tax increase in New Zealand’s history. If he wants to make some further comment, he should take a call later on.

I still cannot understand the logic. If the previous member had actually said something along the lines that conditions are such-and-such and we need to maintain the status quo, perhaps I would have found it logical. But when that spokesperson talks about multipliers, I ask whether he is talking about hiking taxes. I ask what his policy is. Is his policy to hike taxes now? The logic of what that member just said totally contradicts what the previous Minister of Finance, who is sitting behind him, said in his Budget of May 2008 when he announced his first series of tax cuts. Dr Cullen himself is on record talking about ongoing personal tax cuts, and now you are contradicting him. The factions and splits within the defeated Labour Party are starting to come to the fore.

Hon Trevor Mallard: I raise a point of order, Mr Speaker. I am sure you did not contradict Dr Cullen, as this member has indicated. Mr Speaker, the Hon Dr Lockwood Smith, has indicated that he will be very strict on the incorrect use of “you”, and I hope it will apply to the Government as well as the Opposition.

CRAIG FOSS: I thank the member for bringing that to my attention. I apologise to you, Mr Deputy Speaker. I will continue.

We are starting to see some of the splits in the defeated Opposition come through. The Opposition members are contradicting each other on core policy, contradicting each other on their vision of what may be needed to take New Zealand forward. This proposal, the core policy in the Taxation (Urgent Measures and Annual Rates) Bill, went before the public of New Zealand, and 3 or 4 weeks ago over 1 million New Zealanders voted for it.

I will make a couple of other points about something someone spoke about yesterday, during the first reading. Opposition members talk about the debt to GDP ratio, and someone made fair play of that yesterday. I would like to note that in the 1990s, which the Opposition often talks about, the previous Prime Minister, Helen Clark, would often talk about a debt to GDP ratio of 40 percent, or even 45 percent at some stages, as being prudent. Yes, good global economic conditions took New Zealand’s debt to GDP ratio down to about 17 or 18 percent. In the Budget of 2008, it was around those levels. Of course, as the skeletons started to come out of the closet, and as the ticking time bomb started to tick louder, we saw in the Pre-election Fiscal and Economic Update that it was forecast to nudge 30 percent, I think, with a decade of deficits. Of course, those deficits have to be funded in some way. It is interesting that when I point that out, the Opposition goes very quiet.

I will raise two other points. Opposition members constantly talk about low-income earners. Well, I will make just a couple of points. There are many low-income earners in New Zealand—the Opposition is quite right—and that is because of the last 9 years of a Labour Government. Incomes have come down somewhat compared with those of comparable economies around the world. That is why there are a lot more lower-income people in New Zealand than in comparable economies, and that is why many of those people voted the National Party into Government, and threw the Labour Party out. I would like the member opposite, the Hon Darren Hughes, who is interjecting, to note that.

Everyone needs a doctor at some stage. We all want police, we all want chippies, we all want plumbers, and we all want good teachers. We want all those people, and, funnily enough, all those people are on the highest marginal tax rate in New Zealand, 39c. It is those people who have been leaving this country in droves for a brighter future elsewhere, after the last 9 years of a Labour Government. That is why they have been going across to Australia. We all have friends, family, and whānau over there who are getting a higher after-tax income than they could get here after 9 years of the previous administration. Low-income earners in New Zealand have to pay more for their plumber, chippie, truckdriver—you name it—because they have all gone to Australia. We are trying to build an economy that is attractive enough to bring them home.

I will make one other point. It has not been mentioned, but it needs to be mentioned, because there has been talk of debt funding, etc. Somebody was talking about debt projections, etc. Well, I ask what the total quantum of the Accident Compensation Corporation (ACC) mess is. The people over there in Opposition must have a fair bit of knowledge of it. I ask them for the total quantum. I ask them to give it to us to the nearest $50 million. The Government accounts are not narrowed down to the nearest cent; they are approximate, and there are contingent liabilities in there. You ask us for a debt projection; I ask you to put on the table all your knowledge about all the—

Hon Trevor Mallard: I raise a point of order, Mr Speaker.

Mr DEPUTY SPEAKER: I know what the Hon Trevor Mallard is going to say. Members cannot use the word “you”. It brings the Speaker into the debate, and that is not allowed.

CRAIG FOSS: I apologise again, Mr Deputy Speaker.

I ask members opposite who have any knowledge of any other black holes, of any other ticking time bombs, to put them on the table. They should put them on the table so that we have full knowledge of them. Then, and only then, will you see the forward projections that you are demanding right now. I suspect that the reason you want those projections so badly is that you know there are more ticking time bombs to come.

There are two questions left hanging. The ACC annual report did not have anything in it about this nonsense. Under the New Zealand International Financial Reporting Standards there is an obligation to put—

Hon Trevor Mallard: I raise a point of order, Mr Speaker. It is not your report.

CRAIG FOSS: I did not say that.

Hon Trevor Mallard: That’s exactly what you said.

Mr DEPUTY SPEAKER: The member cannot use the word “you” or “your”. Please confine your debate to the subject and do not use those terms.

CRAIG FOSS: Thank you, Mr Deputy Speaker. I did not mean to use that word, and if I did I apologise. I meant to say “the report”.

Under New Zealand International Financial Reporting Standards, which the ACC’s accounts and annual reports are prepared under, this mess should have been noted. The Government accounts are prepared under those standards, so the Pre-election Economic and Fiscal Update should have noted this mess—at least in the contingent liabilities. Where was any mention of the ACC mess? Where was anything about the Government Shared Network mess? What other messes have we got coming?

New Zealanders should be very, very fearful of the legacy of the previous administration. We are discovering more and more by the day, and it is not a pretty picture. Members opposite are fighting old battles, because they do not want to talk about the future, and they do not want to talk about the appalling state they left the books in.

Hon Dr MICHAEL CULLEN (Labour) : The reason we are fighting old battles all over again is that the National Party is fighting its old positions all over again. This is 1990 all over again. What was the key phrase in yesterday’s Speech from the Throne? It was “We’re going for growth.” Well, who made that slogan up? Ruth Richardson said in 1990 “We’re going for growth.”, and frightened the hell out of everybody as soon as she said it. What were the first two things that that Government did? It abolished employment equity and it started cutting the incomes of the poorest New Zealanders. What are this Government’s first two measures? It is introducing fire-at-will provisions and it is cutting the incomes of many of the lowest-paid New Zealanders. This is 1990 all over again from the National Government.

But the most extraordinary thing today was that Mr English, the Minister of Finance, gave a second reading speech in which he failed to answer a single question that was raised in the first reading debate, because he had no answers. All he did was say “Oh, somebody in the Labour Party had some dirty tricks in the election campaign.” Well, that is pretty rich, coming from the man who organised the leak of emails about Don Brash in 2005. That is pretty rich coming from that particular member.

But he put up the most extraordinary argument, and I want to go over it again. He said that the Labour Party lost the election because it failed to put the National Party’s policies under sufficient scrutiny. In other words, Mr English said that his policies were so weak in detail that if we had debated those policies in detail, National would have lost the election. That shows real confidence in what it went to the country on in 2008. That argument says “Our policies were rubbish, and why didn’t you rubbish them and save me, the Minister of Finance, from having to move this rubbish policy through Parliament under urgency?”. That, I think, is the most extraordinary argument I have ever heard from a Minister of Finance. Indeed, it went further. He said that because we did not do so, that was a justification for passing this rubbish policy. Goodness knows what else is going to be “justified” by us in being passed.

The attitude in Mr Foss’s argument was that if something were in the National Party manifesto, it need not go to a select committee. Well, that is going to leave select committees free from the rest of the work for the next year or two, since presumably most of the work coming through is somewhere within the National Party manifesto.

These questions were not answered by Mr English. Why is National increasing taxes on low-paid workers? Why is it increasing taxes on low and middle income families compared with what is now in the law—not some announced policy by the previous Government but in the law—to take place in 2010 and beyond? We have the ACT Party, which stands for cutting taxes no matter what, voting for increases in taxes in the House today. Why is the Government cutting research and development in the private sector? Why is it cutting savings? Why is it not costing its claim of an increased take-up with the lowering of 4 percent to 2 percent, and has it considered the issue of portability with Australia?

We are told that the whole point of National’s policy is to stop people going to Australia, yet what is one of the main attractions of Australia for workers? Workers in Australia get a 9 percent payment into superannuation funds paid by their employers. Under KiwiSaver, workers are still going to pay 4 percent, but they can expect 9 or 10 percent to go into their superannuation fund. This bill will cut that back to 4 percent or 5 percent, and the worker could end up paying the full 4 percent contribution thanks to other changes that will come through later this week or sometime on Saturday. That is the reality. That is a real disincentive.

But it is worse than that. If, as I believe is likely to be the case, the Australian Government says the superannuation portability is off the table because there is no longer a match between KiwiSaver and that Government’s compulsory scheme, then Kiwis in Australia now will be locked into Australia. They will not be able to come back to New Zealand because they will not be able to get portability from their Australian scheme into KiwiSaver. Under portability they were going to be able to transfer their Australian funds into KiwiSaver; they were going to have the option of moving back. High-quality Australian professionals and managers were going to be able to come to New Zealand and continue a scheme, and be able to move back to Australia if they wanted to later in life, and that option, that choice, was important to attract people over here from Australia. So what is the purpose of doing this?

It is clear that National has never thought through that issue. It is clear that National members have not talked to the Australian Government. It is clear from the stunned mullet looks on their faces that their caucus has never discussed this issue. It is clear they still do not know what it is they are doing in that particular respect. The member, Shane Ardern, can drive his own personal tractor up the stairs of Parliament as often as he likes; that is not going to bring anybody back from Australia. But having a proper superannuation scheme with portability will bring people back from Australia, despite a National Government within New Zealand.

Of course, the other thing we learnt from Mr English—and I tell Mr Flavell that I hope Māori Party members were listening—was that there has been a blow-out on Treaty settlements. Did Mr Flavell hear that? No, he did not hear that. He, as usual, whenever the National Party is talking, now puts his ear plugs in so he cannot hear what is being said, because he does not want to know. He has been parading around the marae, and at those huge hui with 10 or 12 people, with Māori activists, because the public was not supposed to know where the meetings were being held, saying: “We’re going to deliver everything to you. We’re going to deliver the ownership of the foreshore and seabed. We’re going to deliver mana-enhancing measures all over the place.”

Well, let us go through the mana-enhancing measures in this bill. There are increases in tax for those earning $14,000 to $24,000 a year. Does that sound like a group that might have a disproportionate Māori content within it? There are increases in taxes on families—all families with kids—earning under $44,000 a year. Does that sound disproportionately like Māori families? Has this member enhanced the mana of those families in voting for those increases in taxes? He voted for it yesterday. He will vote for it today, and he will vote again and again and again. I tell Mr Flavell that the cock will not crow just three times; it will crow many times during this day today. He will not be such a big man on the marae now when he goes back. He is going to have to explain, with Mita Ririnui present, why he voted to increase taxes on his constituents. Why will he be voting for a measure that enables lower-income workers with very little bargaining power to have the employer contribution to KiwiSaver transferred to the employee? Does that sound like a group of workers who are disproportionately Māori? It sounds like it to me.

The five Māori Party MPs have sold their souls for not even a mess of pottage—for not even a spoonful of pottage. They have sold their souls for an empty promise to enhance not the mana of Māori but their own mana. That is what that agreement was about, and they are launching down the same track as the New Zealand First Māori MPs from 1996 to 1999. They will be dog tucker at the 2011 election, because their mana is not going to be enhanced. Mrs Turia can drive up with the entire whānau in the VIP car to the 2011 election campaign, and Mr Sharples can drive up to his marae in the VIP car in 2011, but they will find silence on the marae, which is the bit that will tell them they are in the most trouble. That is what they will find in that particular regard.

This bill cuts private sector research and development investment. It is a dumber economy. It increases taxes on low-paid individuals. and it increases taxes on superannuitants and beneficiaries who are earning a bit more and working a bit more, trying to make their way in the world; it cuts taxes for the chief executive of Telecom. It produces a dumber society with slightly lower taxes, lower growth rates, lower productivity, and greater inequality, and more people will stay in Australia.

Dr RUSSEL NORMAN (Co-Leader—Green) : I rise to speak to the second reading of the Taxation (Urgent Measures and Annual Rates) Bill. The Green Party will be voting against this bill for a number of reasons. The first reason is that we think we can use the tax system to incentivise activities or to disincentivise, and in the first instance this bill decreases incentives to save. Green Party members in general have supported the KiwiSaver scheme. The scheme has always had some problems; it was a far from perfect scheme. We were dubious about whether it would increase the overall savings rates or whether it would simply transfer them. We were worried about the impact on Government savings, due to the cost of the scheme. We were also worried that we were using taxes to subsidise inequality in retirement income between those who could afford to save and those who could not. Nonetheless, it seemed to us that the KiwiSaver scheme was a sensible approach to try to increase savings. We think that the good part of this bill is that it introduces the 2 percent option, which the Green Party always supported, and there was a lot of support in the select committee for that. We also think that allowing low-income earners to get the full $20 a week is a positive thing. But overall the bill decreases incentives to save.

The Green Party supports tax shifting. We support taking taxes off incomes and putting it on resource use and pollution. However, this bill does a different kind of tax shifting. It takes tax incentives off savings to give income tax cuts. In terms of a long-term strategy for a nation with a chronic current account deficit, we think that it does not make any sense to reduce incentives to save. From our point of view, we think that we need to increase incentives to save. Having a bill—one of the first bills that the Government has brought into the House—that actually decreases incentives to save does not make any sense to us.

The second reason concerns the stimulus package. Is this the best way to deliver a stimulus package? When we pass on these income tax cuts, they are going to be either spent or saved, in one form or another. If they are spent, then a good proportion of that spending will be on imported goods—that is, the Government will borrow money from overseas in order to pass on income tax cuts so that people can then purchase goods from overseas. Effectively, we are borrowing money from overseas in order to stimulate someone else’s economy. A large part of the income tax cuts will simply be used to stimulate someone else’s economy, as people purchase goods and services from overseas. It seems to us that this is not the most sensible way to set up a stimulus package.

The other thing that will happen is that if people save, that will not have any stimulatory effect, at all. That is not necessarily a bad thing, in order to increase savings and to reduce household debt, but it is certainly not a good way to stimulate economic activity. It seems to us that if we were to put together a sensible economic stimulus package to save New Zealanders’ jobs, and to keep the economy ticking over at a time of recession, then it would be much better to invest in infrastructure than to have tax cuts.

We think that the infrastructure we should be focusing on should be infrastructure that does not produce demand for imported goods. One of the best ways to have that, of course, is to build houses, and to have home insulation. This country desperately needs affordable housing. There is a tremendous shortage of affordable housing. If people could have affordable housing, they would be far less in need of income tax cuts. What better way is there to build affordable housing than to build the kinds of houses that the Prime Minister grew up in? The Prime Minister got a hand up so that he could get ahead in the world, because he had access to State housing. But now the Government has decided to cap State housing so that other people cannot get a hand up. It seems to me that we should give a hand up to people so that they can have affordable housing. Building infrastructure is a much better way to have a stimulus package than simply giving out income tax cuts. It is a much better way to stimulate an economy, and it means we get something that is worthwhile, as well.

Building sustainable infrastructure not only is a much more sensible stimulus package but means we get long-term investment in our society and our economy. If we invest in public transport, for example, we can prepare ourselves for the future in which climate emissions will be constrained, because, unlike the ACT Party, the world has understood science. The world is getting its head around climate change, and we need to invest in public transport. In the long term, also, oil prices will continue to go up, and we need a world in which we have the capacity to get around. With public transport we would be producing fewer greenhouse emissions and using less oil, so actually having a stimulus package that invests in sustainable transport is a much better option.

A much better option, also, is to invest in sewerage schemes. It is a disgrace that right around this country we have very poor-quality sewerage schemes that are pouring sewage into our harbours, and people are unwilling or ashamed to eat the food from those harbours because it is contaminated. It is not very good for our tourism industry, either. If I were the Minister of Tourism, I would be very interested in a stimulus package that improved the sewerage schemes around our country, so that tourists would not come here and discover that the beaches make them sick. That seems to me a much better stimulus package than giving income tax cuts, which will simply result in a very short-term stimulus to someone else’s economy.

We should also be investing in trees. Planting trees on eroding land would be a much better stimulus package than these tax cuts. We have a major problem across this country of eroding land and land eroding into rivers, and the best thing to do about it is to plant trees, which is good for our greenhouse emissions. One of the problems we will have is that our greenhouse emissions will go through the roof, and that will be incredibly expensive for us as a nation and it will be a major problem for our taxpayers. Taxpayers will have to foot the bill, because this Government wants to weaken the emissions trading scheme so that taxpayers pick up more of the debt. If we plant trees on eroding lands, not only will we reduce erosion into our rivers and lakes but we will also sequester carbon, which will mean that we have fewer greenhouse emissions, less debt, and less of an impact on the taxpayer. It seems to me that a much more sensible stimulus package is to employ people to plant trees on eroding land. We should be focused on the long-term future of our economy. Making the investments in infrastructure that we will need for the long term is a much more sensible way to deliver a stimulus package than having a set of tax cuts.

Then we come to the process issue about this bill. It is with sadness, really, that I see that the explanatory note says “However, due to the time frames involved, the RIA consultation requirements have not been met.”

Hon Darren Hughes: Who’s the Minister in charge of that?

Dr RUSSEL NORMAN: I think the Minister in charge, the new regulatory responsibility Minister, or whatever he is called, is of course the ACT member, the Hon Rodney Hide.

It seems to me extraordinary that the very first bill that this new Government brings in does not have a proper regulatory impact assessment. There has not been sufficient time for the very first bill to have a regulatory impact assessment. So all that talk was bunkum—it does not mean anything. When it comes down to it, it is a case of just ramming the bill through. Who cares about a proper regulatory impact assessment? After all, the Government members will just ram the bill through so they can deliver tax cuts to their mates. So that is an incredible act of hypocrisy.

Then we come to the idea of a broad-based tax rate. This bill talks a lot about how we need low tax rates and a broad-based tax system. One of the ways to do that—and it says this in the notes on the bill—is to tax investment gains. I notice that even though there is support for a low-rate, broad-based tax bill, what we are really getting are just lower rates that are not broad-based. There is no move within this bill to actually broaden the tax base to cover capital gains, which is something that is missing in the New Zealand tax system—unlike the systems of pretty much every other OECD country. The Green Party supports a capital gains tax—excluding the primary family home—to broaden the tax base, which is, supposedly, one of the objectives of this bill. But the bill does not actually broaden the tax base. We also think it should broaden the tax base by taxing resources. We would like to see some of those elements in the bill, but unfortunately they are not there.

I will not touch on the issue of research and development, because I think that has been covered extensively in this discussion, but I will note the inequity of all this. I asked the Parliamentary Library to do some work about it. I asked how much less in tax someone earning $30,000 a year will pay after 1 April 2011. They say that under this bill that person will pay $160 less per year. Someone earning $250,000 will pay $5,160 less income tax per year. So that does not seem to me to be a very fair or progressive way to run the tax system, and it looks as if the Government is just passing a bill that will benefit rich people at the expense of poor people. Why would it support a system whereby someone on $30,000 gets only $160 less tax while someone earning a quarter of a million dollars pays $5,000 less tax? That does not seem to me to be a very fair system.

This bill has not been well thought out. It is being rammed through. It is not a good bill. It gives bad incentives. Why does the Government not go and have a think about it, and come up with a better bill?

  • Debate interrupted.

Points of Order

Bills—Availability in Urgency

Hon DARREN HUGHES (Senior Whip—Labour) : I raise a point of order, Mr Speaker. Over three-quarters of an hour ago the Opposition raised with you the point that subsequent bills in the urgency motion were not on the Table of the House and the Opposition was not being given the opportunity to read the bills before we were due to debate them. You undertook to get that situation resolved for us, Mr Deputy Speaker, but I see that the bills are still not present for us to look at. We have some substantial pieces of legislation coming before us that we have not had a chance to read before the debate on them. I would like to know what progress you have made since you undertook to do that for the House.

Mr DEPUTY SPEAKER: I have sought advice. Standing Order 263 sets out the general rule, but it does not deal specifically with bills introduced under urgency. There is no requirement to table a bill prior to its introduction, but bills must be tabled at their introduction.

Hon DARREN HUGHES (Senior Whip—Labour) : I raise a point of order, Mr Speaker. I know you said that under urgency the situation is a little less clear than what it would normally be. In the normal course of events a bill is introduced, and it sits on the Table for 3 days before it is available for a first reading, thereby giving everybody the chance to read it before the debate. Urgency does change those rules slightly, and you have informed the House of that. But I wonder whether the junior Government whip could give the House an indication as to when members of Parliament might have the chance to look over legislation that we are soon to be debating. We had an understanding from the Government that it will make that information available, but nothing seems to be happening. We need to get some sense of clarity on that, because we—

Hon Annette King: He’s on the phone.

Hon DARREN HUGHES: I see he is on the phone now. He may well be on the phone to the Leader of the House to get that information. But it has now been quite some time since the House took urgency, and in terms of decency and fairness we need the chance to be able to read bills that will be coming up for debate directly after this one. It is just not right to be doing things in this way.

Mr DEPUTY SPEAKER: I understand the point you raise. There is, however, no requirement for a bill to be tabled prior to its introduction, but it must be tabled at the time of its introduction.

Taxation (Urgent Measures and Annual Rates) Bill

Second Reading

  • Debate resumed.

Mr DEPUTY SPEAKER: The House is resumed.

John Boscawen: Mr Speaker—

Mr DEPUTY SPEAKER: Is the member seeking the call?

John Boscawen: Yes.

Mr DEPUTY SPEAKER: You have not given your maiden speech. If you were to speak now, it would be deemed to be your maiden speech.

John Boscawen: Yes, it is.

Mr DEPUTY SPEAKER: Yes, it is? I take it that the member is seeking the call. If the member speaks now, his speech will be regarded as his maiden speech. He will not get another chance to make a maiden speech if he speaks now.

John Boscawen: I pass the call, then.

CHRIS TREMAIN (National—Napier) : Kiwis are breathing a sign of relief at the speed with which this new Government is addressing the work order that we took to the electorate over the election period. We have put our new bill on the Table, and we are making progress already. You know, this is what New Zealanders have been wanting for the last 9 years—a Government that is focused on its agenda, focused on the issues that matter, and making progress. Even just in the last few weeks I have been out in my electorate of Napier, talking to my constituents. Do members know what they are saying? They are saying “Thank God we have a Government in there now that is focused on the issues and on taking this country forward.” That is what they have seen, have they not?

Our constituents have seen a Government put together within 7 or 8 days—quick-smart action. They then saw a Cabinet put together within a couple of weeks—action again. Then our Prime Minister—an aspirational Prime Minister—quickly went to APEC, then to London, to get a feel for the world financial crisis and an understanding of what global leaders were doing with that crisis. Then he came back here and made sure that the promises we took to the electorate were being delivered today. So here we are in the second reading of the Taxation (Urgent Measures and Annual Rates) Bill, which delivers on that agenda. That is why constituents out there are saying “Thank goodness we are seeing a Government that is focused on the issues and taking the game forward for us.”

The second reading of this bill includes changes to personal tax rates and thresholds, and I will talk to that in some detail as we go through it. It also includes the introduction of a new independent earner credit for middle-income New Zealanders. Those are the Kiwis out there, the battlers, who have continued to be pushed into higher tax brackets—the teachers, the policemen, and the wharfies. They have been the traditional constituency of the Labour Party, but they have been forgotten about by that party over there and they have been pushed into continually higher and higher brackets. That is why those members are sitting on that side of the House today and we are sitting on this side. We are focused on the issues and on addressing those tax thresholds. We are bringing those hard-working Kiwis back to a level of taxation that is affordable for them, and where they can ensure they can put bread on the table for their families. Those families do not have access to the support that has been delivered over the last 3 years. They have continued to be pushed into higher and higher tax brackets, and that has hurt them, so we are unashamedly focused on those taxpayers in this bill.

The third area I will focus on is the changes being made to KiwiSaver, making it more affordable and sustainable. I will also touch on the repeal of the research and development tax credit.

It is important that this bill be passed into law and passed into law quickly. We made that commitment to the New Zealand electorate. Today we have heard speeches from the other side of the House saying that there is no regulatory statement, or that the bill is not going to a select committee. But we made it clear to the electorate that we had a 100-day agenda. There is no confusion out there among the public about that. We told them on countless occasions, in every newspaper in the country—except for the Melbourne Age newspaper, which was where, as my leader pointed out the other day, many members of the Labour Party were flicking around in the underground and trying to dig up dirt on our leader. No, it was not in the headlines of that paper, so they probably missed it. But our 100-day agenda was in the Dominion Post and the New Zealand Herald, andinjust about every major daily, so Kiwis knew we had a big agenda, and they are proud to see a Government standing up there now and delivering on that agenda. I think it is absolutely fantastic; I am proud of that, and it is great to see us taking this forward.

I will also talk about the repeal of the research and development tax credit, which is a tough decision we had to make when we laid out our tax cut agenda. We knew that that would cost some money, and we had to make some hard calls going into the election. Again, we stood on the platform and said that these were the things we would address. When Labour rolled out their one or two policies that had any innovation at the election, there was no costing around those. There was no “Oh, we’ll actually change this and pull that back.”. There was absolutely no costing whatsoever above the pre-election fiscal update; it was an absolute joke.

Anyway, I will focus on the tax changes we are talking about and look at the provisions of the bill. As members have heard, there are reductions to personal tax rates, and particularly to thresholds. As I said earlier, the hard workers of our community—the social workers, the teachers, the wharfies—who have got into higher and higher tax brackets will actually have those thresholds brought backwards. That will not increase tax. I do not know what papers the Government is looking at, but if we look at tables for 1 April 2009 we see that that middle-income tax threshold is coming back to $48,000, so people will pay only 21c in the dollar on an income of under $48,000. By 1 April 2010 that threshold will increase to $50,000, so again we are focusing on those in that middle-income bracket, and they will still pay only 21c in the dollar. Then from 1 April 2011 the rate for that threshold will actually move down to 20 percent.

Moana Mackey: Why are you putting taxes up for poor people?

CHRIS TREMAIN: So I say to Moana Mackey that everybody benefits from that: if they are earning anything between $14,000 and $50,000 they will benefit from a reduction from 21 percent to 20 percent. I ask Moana Mackey to tell me how they would not benefit from that. How would they not benefit from that? That is a reduction from 21 percent to 20 percent. Those lower-income earners—we are not talking only about middle-income earners here; we are talking about lower-income earners—will benefit not only from the increase in the threshold level but also from the reduction of the rate from 21 percent to 20 percent. Hold on, I will say that again: we are taking the tax level from 21 percent to 20 percent.

Hon Phil Heatley: Is that up or down?

CHRIS TREMAIN: Hold on—that is down! That is for a threshold of between $14,000 and $50,000. I would have thought that that covered a fair chunk of middle-income New Zealand, and probably an even bigger chunk of lower-income New Zealand. I ask those members to tell me how people will not benefit from that. Oh, it has all gone quiet over there now! This tax bill will actually deliver the changes we need, and I think it is fantastic. The cuts will be delivered through the PAYE system, which will be good for employees, and if someone is an independent contractor, that person will be able to have that delivered through his or her tax return at the end of the year. There will be no immediate changes to the tax rate structure that applies to portfolio investments, but that will be addressed by 1 April 2010.

I just want to talk about the independent earner tax credit. This tax credit really hits those battlers out there who have had no benefit from the Working for Families tax credits. There are 600,000 people who qualify for this—600,000 of the hardest-working New Zealanders who go out there, day in, day out, paying tax and allowing our Government to make tough decisions about how we allocate that money. Let us understand that it is not our money; it is theirs, and 600,000 Kiwis have totally missed out on that. They have been part of threshold rises the whole way, and they have just been taxed and taxed, more and more. It is time we were dealing with that through the independent earner tax credit, which will ensure that we start to deliver—and I say “start” to deliver—some rebate back to those middle-income earners. So from next year the credit will be worth $10 a week, rising to $15 per week from 2010. It will be abated at 13c for every dollar of income earned over $44,000 and, as I have said, 630,000 people will qualify. Again, I ask how that is not addressing a big chunk of the electorate. That 630,000 is a huge proportion of our workforce being addressed. They have not had even one iota of tax reduction in 9 long years.

I think this bill is a massive step in the right direction. We have gone out to the electorate and told them that we will deliver tax cuts, and here we are, within 32 days, out there actually doing that—delivering on our promises, building trust, and delivering on what John Key said he would do. This is a good bill, and in the second reading I recommend it to the House. Thank you.

Hon RODNEY HIDE (Leader—ACT) : I raise a point of order, Mr Speaker. I have looked through the Standing Orders and the Speakers’ rulings, and I can find no rule that precludes a new MP from speaking under urgency because if he or she did so, then he or she would have to forgo his or her maiden speech. The ACT Party agreed to the Address in Reply debate being broken into to do this urgency on the basis that we would be able to contribute to the debate. Mr Deputy Speaker, what you have done, I think, is make a new ruling—which is your right as Deputy Speaker—which essentially precludes the ACT Party from contributing to this important debate. I have two MPs here who are willing and ready to contribute, and I would like you either to point out to me the Standing Order or Speaker’s ruling that says that if John Boscawen or David Garrett speaks under urgency, he therefore cannot give a maiden speech in the Address in Reply debate when Parliament resumes it, or to tell the House that you are making a new ruling.

Hon TREVOR MALLARD (Labour—Hutt South) : It might seem somewhat unusual for me to come to the aid of Mr Hide, but I think the position that he has outlined is correct. There is an expectation that maiden speeches are made as part of the Address in Reply debate. That does not necessarily have to be the case, but as far as the Standing Orders are concerned, and given the times available and the approach we are taking, there is certainly that expectation. I am going a long way back in my memory, but I have vague memories of members back in the 1980s speaking on Committee stages of bills, or in fact on estimates, before they made their maiden speeches. They certainly asked questions before they made their maiden speeches. So the idea that people cannot get on their feet before their maiden speech, or that by getting on their feet they lose their right to a maiden speech, I think is incorrect. Mr Deputy Speaker, if it would help you, I indicate that the Labour Opposition would not object to a leave-type arrangement in order to protect you, but I think your ruling was wrong.

Mr DEPUTY SPEAKER: Thank you, Mr Mallard. The Standing Orders allow maiden speeches to be made during the Address in Reply debate—that is Standing Order 350—and provide for additional time to be made available for members to make maiden statements. The Address in Reply debate takes precedence over other business, and therefore in normal circumstances new members would make their maiden speeches before speaking in any other debate. One of the consequences of our adjourning the Address in Reply debate is that the opportunity for maiden speeches has been delayed. I take on board the point that Mr Mallard just made, and I am prepared to allow the member John Boscawen to seek leave to speak, if that is the wish of the House.

Hon TREVOR MALLARD (Labour—Hutt South) : I raise a point of order, Mr Speaker. I think I would prefer you to go further than that, to start with, and to rule that the speech he shall give is not a maiden speech, because it is not part of the Address in Reply debate. I think we should not have to seek leave to deviate from a ruling that appears to be wrong.

Mr DEPUTY SPEAKER: Thank you. I will seek some advice from the Clerk. I am prepared to allow John Boscawen to take the call. I make it clear that his speech is not his maiden speech. He will speak for 10 minutes, with a warning bell at 8 minutes.

CHRIS TREMAIN (Junior Whip—National) : I raise a point of order, Mr Speaker. I have a question: if this speech is allowed to occur, what precedent does that set for the rest of the debate on the items in the urgency motion in terms of allowing new members to take calls in the Committee stage and other stages of debate? I need to have that question answered first.

Hon RODNEY HIDE (Leader—ACT) : The point is that it is not a precedent. The point that Mr Mallard and I are making is that it is perfectly within an MP’s right to stand up and take a call to speak in Parliament, and then, when we go back into the Address in Reply debate, to give his or her maiden speech. The Deputy Speaker is not making a precedent with this ruling; the precedent would be to say that new MPs cannot speak under urgency unless they forgo making their maiden speeches. This is not a precedent ruling; it is simply the Standing Orders.

Hon TREVOR MALLARD (Labour—Hutt South) : I would go one step further than Rodney Hide has gone. It is not a precedent, because it is not new, in my understanding. But to answer the question the junior Government whip asked, I say that it is clear that other new members will also be able to speak in the first readings of bills, the Committee stages, and the second and third readings and not lose their maiden status.

CHRIS TREMAIN (Junior Whip—National) : I want to indicate to ACT that if that is the case, then there is not a clear ruling, and that we would deny leave for that request.

Mr DEPUTY SPEAKER: We do not need to ask for leave. There is no precedent being set. I shall seek further advice, if members will wait for just one moment. Yes, I can confirm that allowing a new member to speak now does not curtail his or her opportunity to make a maiden speech of 15 minutes during the Address in Reply debate.

JOHN BOSCAWEN (ACT) : I thank the Deputy Speaker, and I thank Mr Mallard—

Hon Darren Hughes: The Labour Opposition is here to help.

JOHN BOSCAWEN: I thank the Labour Opposition, and I say long may it remain the Labour Opposition. I am proud to be part of the new National - ACT - Māori Party Government, and to speak in support—

Hon Members: Say it again!

JOHN BOSCAWEN: I will say it again. I am proud to be part of the new National - Māori Party - ACT Government, and to speak in support of the Taxation (Urgent Measures and Annual Rates) Bill.

I will start by referring back to yesterday’s Speech from the Throne. I quote: “The driving goal of the new Government will be to grow the New Zealand economy in order to deliver greater prosperity, security and opportunities to all New Zealanders.” The driving goal will be to grow the New Zealand economy in order to deliver greater prosperity, security, and opportunities for all New Zealanders, and nothing is more fundamental to driving prosperity than a taxation system that encourages thrift, enterprise, and hard work. How appropriate it is that one of the first moves by the new National - ACT - Māori Party Government is the introduction of this tax bill, which makes a number of significant changes to our taxation system.

First of all, the bill introduces a regime where, by 1 April 2011, 80 percent of taxpayers will be paying 20c or less in every dollar in tax. Secondly, it introduces a reduction in the top marginal tax rate—initially from 39 percent to 38 percent, and then to 37 percent. I say that that is the first step, because I believe that the top marginal tax rate should be a lot lower than 37 percent. I thought it was very appropriate that the Hon Michael Cullen asked a question of the House a few minutes ago, when he asked what the main attraction was of going to Australia. What is the main attraction of going to Australia? Let me tell Dr Cullen that the main attraction of going to Australia is the standard of living in Australia, where net wages after tax are a full 25 percent higher than in New Zealand.

What a contrast there has been between the first move of the National Government and the first move of the previous Labour Government. When the Labour Government first came to power in 1999, it moved to increase the top marginal tax rate from 33c in the dollar to 39c in the dollar. Since that time we have had the Labour Government’s 2001 McLeod Tax Review, which recommended that the top marginal tax rate should drop back from 39c in the dollar to 33c in the dollar. Did the previous Labour Government listen to the advice of its own advisers on the McLeod Tax Review? No, it did not. I say that this is the first move of the National Government in this area, because we in the ACT Party believe that the top marginal tax rate should be a lot lower than 37c in the dollar.

When Dr Cullen introduced the bill in 1999 to increase the top marginal tax rate, he said that 95 percent of people would not be asked to pay more tax; instead, only the top 5 percent of income earners would pay more. That has never been the case, and over the last 9 years more and more New Zealanders have moved into the top income threshold of $60,000. More and more New Zealanders have been penalised for working hard and making sacrifices in order to get on and improve their lives. They have been penalised for doing that with the “envy tax” of 39c in the dollar. That overtaxation has cost New Zealand families hundreds of millions of dollars. It has cost New Zealanders jobs, growth, and lost opportunities. Why is that the case? It is because the taxation system has sent a message to all New Zealanders that we do not recognise hard work. It tells them we do not recognise hard work, thrift, and enterprise. It says we want to have a regime in New Zealand that penalises people who want to study, go into higher paying jobs, work hard, and try to provide a higher standard of living for their families.

My colleague the Hon Sir Roger Douglas commented on Government expenditure in his speech to the House yesterday. He talked about how the rate of Government expenditure had increased over and above the rate of inflation by $18 billion over the term of the last Labour Government—by $1,000 a month, or $12,000 a year, per capita. In order to have lower taxes, one has to first get Government expenditure under control. By allowing Government expenditure to grow by more than the rate of inflation on a per capita basis, Labour has cost the average income earner in New Zealand over $12,000 a year.

I say to Mr Cullen—who asked what the main attraction was for people to go to Australia—that the main attraction is for people to enjoy a higher standard of living, with a top marginal tax rate that does not cut well into incomes in excess of $100,000. What has the regime been under Mr Cullen’s Government? It has been a top marginal tax rate of 39c in the dollar on income over $60,000 a year.

The ACT Party, as the party that encourages individual responsibility, enterprise, and thrift, has always opposed Labour’s tax hikes. ACT has been the only party in this House that has been consistent in its approach to tax. We have advocated tax cuts since the party’s inception in the mid-1990s.

Hon Darren Hughes: Why is the member voting for increases?

JOHN BOSCAWEN: I am voting for a reduction in the top marginal tax rate from 39c in the dollar to 37c in the dollar, and I am saying that it is far too high at 37c in the dollar. I say to the member that if his Government had managed to control Government expenditure and keep increases to the rate of inflation, the average New Zealander on the average income in this country would be $1,000 a month, or $12,000 a year, better off. I campaigned at the last election on a policy that would hold increases in Government expenditure, going forward from 2009, at no more than the rate of inflation. We are five MPs, and by 2011 we expect to be a lot more than five MPS. Our forecasts show that if we can maintain increases in Government expenditure at a rate of no more than the rate of inflation, by 2018 we can have a flat marginal tax rate of 20c in the dollar.

In 2005, the Labour Party had the opportunity to reduce the tax burden on hard-working New Zealanders. If the Labour Government had implemented the tax rates that the ACT Party suggested at that time, the previous Government could have added 1 to 1.5 percent growth in the economy, which would have put New Zealand in a much better position to cope with the recession that we are now in. We have now led the OECD countries into the recession.

This bill talks about tax rates, changes to KiwiSaver, and a number of other tax-related issues. Let us talk about KiwiSaver.

Hon Darren Hughes: Yeah, let’s—

JOHN BOSCAWEN: Let’s talk about KiwiSaver, and let us talk about the people that you purport to represent.

Mr DEPUTY SPEAKER: The member cannot use the word “you”. That word brings the Speaker into the debate.

JOHN BOSCAWEN: I am sorry, Mr Deputy Speaker. We have 800,000 people enrolled with KiwiSaver, and, without doubt, KiwiSaver has been a tremendous success—far in excess of what the Labour Government expected. But we have to look at who those 800,000 people are. Are they ordinary working men and women on the average ordinary wage? Can those people afford 4 percent, or are they people who have been attracted by the massive incentives, and particularly parents who have encouraged their children—and infant children in some instances—to take advantage of the very generous incentives? As the Hon Bill English said when introducing this bill, the recession is now upon us, and we have reached the stage where we can no longer afford those incentives.

If we are to improve the livelihoods and living standards of ordinary New Zealanders, we have to increase productivity in this country. There is more to it than reducing taxes. There is more to it than the changes to the KiwiSaver scheme. There is a need to reform the Resource Management Act. There is a need to build infrastructure. There is a need to improve the roading system, and to complete the roading system in Auckland.

Thank you for the opportunity to speak. I say the ACT Party will be supporting this bill.

Hon TREVOR MALLARD (Labour—Hutt South) : I congratulate the previous speaker, John Boscawen, on taking the opportunity to make a speech on this occasion, and I say that that is about all I agree with him on.

I repeat one of the comments I made to Sir Roger Douglas last night—that is, that I am very, very surprised that the ACT Party is supporting a bill that increases tax for quite a large group of people. More than that, it introduces a big area of inefficiency and bureaucracy, in the sense that the credits involved will require an army of bureaucrats to implement. It complicates the tax system much more than is necessary, and it increases the top marginal tax rate for a very large group of people.

The very thing that Sir Roger Douglas told us was most important as far as tax rates are concerned was the top marginal tax rate, and here we have ACT making the top marginal rate higher for a large group of New Zealanders. ACT members are removing or reducing the very incentives that they tell us are so important.

I will also make a comment or two to the Māori Party. I thank those members for not taking their call, and for giving the Labour Party an extra call again. I say to Mr Flavell that we remember. We remember seeing Māori Party MPs going around the country and saying that they wanted a tax-free area up to $25,000. That was their policy: nil tax to $25,000. You know, one would think that if that was their policy, then their minimum position would be that every tax change heads in that direction. But what do they do? They vote for a bill that puts tax up for low-income people. And who are those people? They are much, much more likely to be Māori, proportionately, than Pākehā.

The Māori Party members are putting tax up especially for people who have families, people who have a couple of low incomes and have kids, and people who are struggling on incomes in the $20,000s and the low $30,000s. They are the group of people whom the Māori Party was kind enough to support in terms of Working for Families, and now they are the ones who are being punished by the Māori Party because it is following blindly behind National.

What is Mr Flavell going to say to that family whose dad earns $33,000 and whose mum earns $22,000 in a bit more than a part-time job, who have a couple of kids, and who are in KiwiSaver? Does the member know how much their net income will go down? Between $60 and $70 a week. Those people will have $60 or $70 a week less under the National-Act-Māori Government, as it was described.

I say to Mr Flavell that I want to come on to the marae with him, as well. Not only does Mr Ririnui want to do that but I want to be there, as well. I want to hear him explain how it is mana-enhancing to take $60 or $70 a week off some of the poorest Māori families in New Zealand—$60 or $70 a week from some of the poorer families, compared with what the law says they would get now, in 2011. [Interruption] What is now clear is that the junior Government whip also does not understand the difference between what is in the law now and what is being worked through.

Chris Tremain: You detail it for me, then.

Hon TREVOR MALLARD: We will. We will work throughout today, we will work throughout tomorrow, and for the next 3 years we will work our way around the poorer communities of New Zealand. We will show them what will happen because of the rise in the thresholds between the package that has already been legislated for by the previous Labour Government and this Government’s legislation. Although some of the marginal rates are coming down, the lift in the threshold hits the poorest people in New Zealand. It hits the poorest workers in New Zealand, and it hits not only those who are working.

I give members the example of the older family—a couple on superannuation. They have done the right thing, they have saved up, and they have a small income that is coming in as a result of their savings. What happens to them? Their tax goes up. Their tax goes up under the National Government.

I know that National appealed heavily to superannuitants, but what will happen under this legislation is that the tax on people who have an income of $20,000 as a result of the amounts they have saved, over and above their superannuation, will go up. They might have that income coming from another superannuation plan, but as a result of this legislation their tax will go up. Notwithstanding the small increase those people will get in their national superannuation, their total income will go down. And the National members sound like they are proud of it.

I will tell members something—Paul Quinn did not go and tell people at the Grey Power meetings that if they had some savings, then their net income would go down. He did not tell them that. I am not sure whether he knew. He did know; he is putting up his hand to indicate that he did know. Well, in that case, it is very, very sad that he misled the Grey Power people at the meetings he went to in Lower Hutt and Wainuiōmata.

I will get back to the Māori Party, in particular, and to something that those members and John Key had in common during the election campaign. That was around the relative attractiveness of New Zealand and Australia. One of the very good things that the previous Government negotiated was an arrangement for portability of superannuation back and forth. One of the reasons for that, I say to Mr Flavell, was so that whānau could bring their superannuation from Australia back to New Zealand, and so that some of the higher-income earners who were living in Australia and wanted to come back to New Zealand would not lose their superannuation as a result of coming back. It was something to bring families together, to bring whānau back, to bring leadership back into communities in New Zealand, and to allow some of the older people to get a piece of the pie by keeping the superannuation that they had earned in Australia. What has Mr Flavell has done? He is voting for the gutting of the KiwiSaver arrangements, which will result in that portability being lost.

Were Government members polite enough to ring the Australian Government, to get on the phone to Mr Rudd—John to Kevin—and tell the Australian Government that they were walking away from the superannuation portability? Did they do that? No. They did not even think of it. So what do we have here? We have legislation that removes the incentives to do research and wrecks the portability of superannuation. We have legislation that increases the marginal tax rate for some poor and middle-income people and increases the taxes paid by a significant group of people who have kids and have joined KiwiSaver. It is just not fair, and we are going to fight it right through.

DAVID BENNETT (National—Hamilton East) : I congratulate you, Mr Deputy Speaker, on your election to your new role. It is great to see somebody from the Waikato in such an esteemed role, and I say well done. I am sure you will follow in the footsteps of other great people in that role, such as Margaret Wilson before you, who also had Waikato links. I say well done and congratulations.

When we look at what we are passing today, we see that the Taxation (Urgent Measures and Annual Rates) Bill is very important legislation. It is legislation that goes to the heart of many New Zealand individuals and families who are struggling, who know there is a world economy out there that is very tight, who know they need some help from their Government in their time of need, and who want to see a Government that listens and is aware of the issues that are involved in the way they have to live their lives at the moment. They want a country and a Government that will deliver something to help them through this tough time.

The National Party has listened to the people. The National Party went out to the people during the election campaign and said we understand the dilemma they are in, we understand they want a better future, and we understand they need a Government that will understand and work in their best interests.

This is what we are seeing here today. This bill is the first step in building a better future for New Zealanders, and building a stronger economy that will actually deliver that future for our people. Our people know it is going to be tough out there. They know there are going to be some major economic issues that we have to deal with as a country. They also know they want a Government that will make decisions; a Government that will go out there and not just look around the world and try to say we are leading on social and environmental issues but not actually do anything. They want a Government that will do things, and that is what they will get from the National Party.

The National Party will deliver constructive solutions, and we will deliver them now to the people of New Zealand. We have a 100-day plan, we have a plan of action, and we know what is needed for the New Zealand economy to turn it around. The New Zealand economy is in recession. I invite anyone who does not believe that to look at what is happening around the world. The US and the Australian economies are teetering on the edge of recession, and those countries are looking at ways of avoiding going into that situation. New Zealand has been in recession under the Labour Government that was in power before the election, and now it is time to turn that around. Now it is time for the Government to make some constructive changes that will deliver a stronger economy.

This bill is the first step. It is the first legislation the National Party has put through in Government, and it will deliver some relief for hard-working New Zealanders. Hard-working New Zealanders want to see a reduction in the taxes they pay to the Government. They need to see a reduction in taxes because they are struggling out there. They are struggling to pay their bills and meet their mortgage payments at the high interest rates that have been inflicted on them for many years under the previous Labour Government. They are struggling to pay the high expenses that have been inflicted upon them by the previous Government through the high inflation it controlled in this economy.

It is time now for a change of approach. It is time now for relief for hard-working New Zealanders. It is time now for these tax cut packages to come forward, and for New Zealanders to see a Government that cares, acts, and delivers something constructive to hard-working Kiwis. That is what they are going to get under the National Party. They will get a Government that delivers, that looks forward, and that promotes solutions. That is what this bill is about today.

Let us look at the personal tax cuts. They are significant tax cuts. They are the first step, but they are significant. When we look at those percentage and rate decreases, we see it is in the best interests of New Zealanders to give them that money so they can deliver to their families the future they want. Those cuts will deliver the right signals and incentives for New Zealanders to go out there and get a good education, take risks, and progress their lives and the lives of their families. That is the whole point of a tax regime. It is to provide those signals and incentives, at the same time as providing the Government with the revenue to deliver its social services.

This is a robust tax regime that takes into account the need for New Zealand families and individuals to have some tax relief at this point in time, and the National Party will deliver that tax relief over the next week or so. The independent earner tax credit is an initiative for many New Zealanders who have missed out, who want to get into the home ownership market, who are struggling through getting an education and into the workforce, and who want to build up a future for themselves so they can have a family and deliver what we need in New Zealand—strong and sustained growth for our economy. It is good to see the National Party coming out and delivering for those people and giving them the independent earner tax credit, an initiative that will deliver much-needed finances to individuals who are working hard, doing the right things, making the right decisions, and need to get that support from the Government as they make those investments in their future and the future of this country.

Let us look at other parts of this bill, which are very important for New Zealanders. The KiwiSaver changes enable a lot more New Zealanders to get into the KiwiSaver regime. At the moment it is a regime that is dominated by people who are putting their families into it and taking advantage of a system. We need to let more New Zealanders have the ability to get into KiwiSaver and into the savings regime. The Labour Party’s attitude is that it knows what is best for New Zealanders. That is not the case. New Zealanders can make their own decisions. They need to have the opportunity to make those decisions, and by lowering that percentage this bill gives more New Zealanders the chance to get into a regime where they can save for their future and deliver what they need to deliver for themselves and their families.

The research and development tax credit is another important part of this legislation. We have to look at what is important for the research and development industry, and that tax credit was not delivering what was needed. That was never going to be what was needed. Let us look at what was happening. The Labour Government members just sat there while AgResearch laid off staff. They were not interested in research and development. It was all about the mantra of what they thought sounded good, and the reality is we need to do constructive work in the research and development industry and deliver real solutions. The biggest solution we can deliver for research and development in New Zealand is to have a stronger economy. Without a stronger economy companies will not engage in research and development, and, if we are in a recession, like the Labour Party has delivered us, then it does not matter how many tax credits are given, people will not go into research and development. If they do, they will be using it only to project something that is different from what they are doing in their business.

The National Party understands what is good for the New Zealand economy. We understand what would benefit research and development. It is to give a strong, vibrant economy. That is what this tax cut package is part of. It is part of delivering that strong economy. We need the economy to function and grow, and in order to deliver that we must take some important steps. This is the first step in that process, and a very good step it is. We are looking at an approach that is constructive, well meaning, and in the best interests of New Zealand. We will not take the approach the Labour Party is taking this morning of coming to the House and trying to use fear and scare tactics and saying that this is not in the best interests of hard-working New Zealanders. No, we will actually go out there and deliver constructive solutions for New Zealand.

People in the street have come up to us and said that they are confident and very supportive of the National Government because they see a Government that is making decisions, a Government that is actually willing to go out there and build a better future for New Zealanders, a Government that is not trying to project fear, to put people down, and to say that it knows best, which is what the Labour Party does in this House time after time. It is time for a different direction in New Zealand. It is time for a direction that actually delivers solutions. It is time for a direction that looks at what economic fundamentals are required in the country to deliver the growth we need. That is what we will get under the National Government. We see the previous Minister over there laughing away. He does not care about growth; he never has. He never delivered it. He just waited for somebody, or for some other world economies, to deliver him economic growth. He was not taking the steps, but National, through this bill, has taken the first steps towards delivering that stronger growth economy.

Hon CLAYTON COSGROVE (Labour—Waimakariri) : I seek leave to table a report in the Waikato Times of 28 October, in which one Mr David Bennett stated: “I don’t think that our”—that is, the National Party’s—“(R & D) policy is as good as it could be, but we need to invest in our infrastructure to boost the economy.”

Mr DEPUTY SPEAKER: Leave has been sought to table that document. Is there any objection?

MOANA MACKEY (Labour) : The one thing clear from that speech from David Bennett is that he has not read the legislation before him, because it does none of the things he says it does. It does not deliver for all hard-working New Zealanders. In fact, it penalises some of the poorest families in this country, and it comes off the back of a campaign during which National members went around the electorates smiling at everyone, saying: “It’s OK. We’ve changed. We’re different. We know that people don’t want cuts. We know that people want support for their families. We know that people don’t want the same old tired policies and failed arguments of the 1990s all over again.” And what do we see? On this first day of business in this new Parliament, with this new National - ACT - Māori Party Government, what do we see? We see the putting up of taxes on the poorest New Zealand families, compared with the tax cuts they would have got—and were already legislated for—under the previous Labour-led Government’s tax policy. I say to the National Government “Shame!”.

If the Government thinks for a second that this Labour Opposition will roll over and let it destroy the economy and destroy the finances of some of our poorest families, then it has another think coming. Its members think that we do not know we have lost the election. We know it when we stand here and see legislation that once again attacks some of our most vulnerable families. The difference is that—unlike that party—it will not take us 6 years in Opposition to get stuck in. We are getting stuck in from day one. We will be here today, tomorrow, and—as Mr Mallard said—for the next 3 years holding this Government to account on every promise to the electorate that it breaks.

Hon Dr Wayne Mapp: This is actually delivering the promise.

MOANA MACKEY: Mr Mapp need not worry; I will get to him soon.

Let us remember the context in which this bill comes to the House. The outgoing Labour Government left the economy in a very good position for the incoming Government. We had halved debt from 35 percent to 17 percent of GDP. We left this National Government with a very good position in which to move. The previous National Party leader, Don Brash, agrees. He said New Zealand is in a very good position to weather this storm. We have seen international credit agencies agree. New Zealand is in a very good position to weather this storm, because of the fiscal prudence shown by the previous Minister of Finance, the Hon Dr Michael Cullen. And what is the first thing we see on day one of this Government? We see legislation—if those members opposite will ever show it to us—that puts us on a track back to the 35 percent debt we inherited when we became Government in 1999.

I refer to the Speech from the Throne in relation to this bill. There were lots of nice words in that speech. We heard that the Government is going to look after people, we heard about turbocharging, about protecting, about enforcing, about innovation, about aspiration, and about individual responsibility, but nothing in this bill will assist vulnerable New Zealand families through the recession, nothing in this bill will help our most innovative businesses bring us through the recession, and nothing in this bill will help bring liquidity into our capital markets through our savings in this country. In fact, not only does this bill not do those things; it destroys them. It undermines the gains we have made as a country over the last 9 years.

I want to talk a little about the research and development tax credit. I am very glad that the Minister of Research, Science and Technology, the Hon Dr Wayne Mapp, is in the House now, because he has made a big deal about how great he will be for research and development. I wonder whether Mr Mapp is aware that with this bill New Zealand will go straight to the bottom of the OECD when it comes to research and development. In one go this legislation puts New Zealand straight to the bottom of the OECD when it comes to research and development, and this is at a time when one would think it would be sensible, prudent, and common sense to provide incentives for our most innovative companies—those that are most likely to bring New Zealand through the recession faster, those that are most likely to be exporters, and those that are most likely to employ people on higher salaries and therefore provide higher take-home incomes for families. One would think that a Government would want to provide incentives for those companies to invest in more research and development. [Interruption]

Dr Mapp says it is a tax rort. The Australian Government thought that. A year later it had to bring the research and development tax credit back because it realised that getting rid of it did much more damage than these kinds of tax rorts that people talk about and never prove. Of course, Australia is meant to be the nirvana that we are following, so why, with one stroke of a pen in this legislation, are we putting ourselves at a competitive disadvantage to Australia?

I want a guarantee from Dr Wayne Mapp. He promised that a third of the money that would have gone towards this research and development tax credit would go to our Crown research institutes. He promised. Will that continue?

Hon Dr Wayne Mapp: It’s broader than that.

MOANA MACKEY: Oh, it is broader than that. No, Dr Mapp promised in the election campaign, as did Dr Hutchison, that a third of the money saved by scrapping the research and development tax credit would go straight to funding science directly. I think that is what he called it; he said it would be a third. Will they get that money? Will the Crown research institutes get that money?

Hon Dr Wayne Mapp: You haven’t read the policy.

MOANA MACKEY: Well, I say to Dr Mapp that we will be getting out the policy; he need not worry. The policy was very clearly that the Crown research institutes would be directly funded with a third of this money.

Hon Dr Wayne Mapp: I didn’t say that at all.

MOANA MACKEY: Oh no, what a great day for science! Not only are we scrapping the research and development tax credit, but we have just heard here on the floor of the House that the $330 million promised to the Crown research institutes by Dr Paul Hutchison and by the new Minister, Wayne Mapp, will not be given to them—they will not get it. What is it going towards? It is going towards paying for tax cuts that disadvantage some of our most vulnerable families and do nothing for our economy.

Research and development tax credits are a common tool around the world for lifting rates of private sector research and development investment. Just about every country has them. All the countries the National Party compares us with have them, yet we are getting rid of them at the one time in history when we need them more than anything else. Well, I am sure the scientists and the manufacturers around New Zealand are saying: “Thank you for a very merry Christmas, the National - ACT - Māori Party Government. Thank you for a very merry Christmas, Dr Wayne Mapp, our new Minister.”

We know that the research and development tax credit was supported by all of National’s mates. Business New Zealand’s Phil O’Reilly pointed out that many companies had made long-term investment plans based on that research and development tax credit, and they will be out of pocket now that the National - ACT - Māori Party Government is getting rid of it. They are going to be out of pocket. We know that when National announced its tax policy, different groups, such as manufacturers’ organisations, flew all over the country to meet with Bill English to try to convince him to back down on the research and development tax credit abolition, because they knew how important that single policy was for our economy, especially going into a recession.

So I say to Mr David Bennett, who said before that the National Party does not want to lead on anything in the world—he does not think it is important to be a world leader on anything—that his mission is accomplished. We are now, with one stroke of the pen on this legislation, last in the OECD on research and development. The member might not think that that is particularly important. He thought it was important during the election campaign, when he was in his own home area, because, of course, there are lots of manufacturers in the Waikato. There are Crown research institutes and lots of scientists. It is a fabulous area for science innovation—it is a hub. He got up during the election campaign and said that he did not agree with abolishing the research and development tax credit. He has obviously realised that that has got him seated somewhere further back in the Chamber than he was during the last term, so he has come down here with a mea culpa, road to Damascus speech. He has suddenly realised the error of his ways, and that getting rid of the tax credits is a really fabulous idea.

We have just heard from Wayne Mapp that the money he was promising the Crown research institutes was, kind of, so that they would not feel so bad about his getting rid of the research and development tax credit—which they may have got money from through contracts they have in the private sector—because he will give them $330 million to tide them over. Of course, they were very happy with that. Well, that has gone. That has gone out the window as well, and what for? To pay for cuts to KiwiSaver that will limit the level of liquidity we have in our venture capital markets, which is important for our research and development. National will cut KiwiSaver. It will cut taxes for the people who need it the least. It will raise taxes on some of our most vulnerable families.

I genuinely want the Māori Party to think very seriously about its support for that legislation, which raises taxes on some of our most vulnerable families. Thirty-five percent of families in the East Coast electorate earn under $40,000 and they will get nothing—they will get absolutely nothing. In fact, for some of them their taxes will go up. Well, I say merry, merry Christmas from a National Government, which from day one is showing its true colours—a National Government that campaigned on being softer, campaigned on being friendlier, and campaigned on being smiley—their smiley selves. Well, once again we are seeing the cold face of reality behind the friendly mask of John Key and this National - ACT - Māori Party Government.

Hon Dr WAYNE MAPP (Minister of Defence) : Congratulations, Mr Deputy Speaker, on your elevation. One of the disappointing things when listening to Opposition members is that apparently they cannot read. If they had read our policies they would know that the statements they are making are simply not correct. I could actually say something else but I will not, because it would be unparliamentary. But I remind members that if they are going to make assertions about another party’s policy, they at least should take the trouble to read it before doing so.

Extraordinary things we have been finding in Government are all the problems the previous Government left for us. For instance, one of the very first briefings I received related to the issues around AgResearch—all its redundancies. Did the previous Government tell the public that—did it tell the scientists that? No, it did not. It was actually a great relief—and I know that my colleague Mr Bennett knows this particularly well because he comes from the area—that that, in fact, has been ameliorated quite substantially. I know that that has been a substantial relief to the people in AgResearch. One would not hear that from Labour members, would one? One would not hear that Labour’s legacy was going to be redundancies rolling out for ever. That was Labour’s policy when it was in Government. That is what it was going to do about protecting New Zealand’s science, research, and technology bases. So it was a good result to see that the effects of that were being ameliorated substantially. I know that that was appreciated within AgResearch itself and within that community. So let us not hear from the other side about all the work it did for science, research, and technology. When one measures the facts against Labour’s rhetoric—actually, that was a feature of the previous Government: rhetoric on the one hand was always noble, grand, and highfalutin; reality on the other hand, well, that was a bit different, was it not?

Hon Darren Hughes: How about the whales, Wayne? How are the whales getting on?

Hon Dr WAYNE MAPP: Let me just remind the senior whip on the other side to look at the Defence Force.

Hon Darren Hughes: How’s the frigate?

Hon Dr WAYNE MAPP: That member should ask the former Minister of Defence about all the problems in defence that he has left with the current Minister of Defence. I tell that person that he had better be quiet on that particular issue.

I just want to bring the Opposition to a reality check. We explicitly campaigned on this bill. The public knew exactly the nature of the tax programme that National is offering not just in terms of personal income taxes but also in terms of KiwiSaver itself. The public made a judgment on Labour’s programme and made a judgment on National’s programme. That is why we are on this side of the House today and that is why we are moving this bill. We told the public that this was part of our 100-day programme, and that is why we are implementing it in this way.

Hon Clayton Cosgrove: You don’t want it to go to select committee?

Hon Dr WAYNE MAPP: The former Minister knows full well that tax rate issues never go to select committees. They are always dealt with by this House. I remind that member that that is what happened in December 1999. There is a good reason for that, in fact. It is because the public have actually made a judgment. They voted for specific tax rates. We have a specific promise and there is no point putting that specific promise to a select committee, because the issue has already been judged, and that is why we are implementing it in the way we are doing.

I just want to go through some aspects of the detail. Labour always goes on about its tax package being better than ours. Well, the first point of which I need to remind Labour is that the public has made that judgment already, and Labour was not on the winning side of that. But the second point I make to the Opposition is this: the major difference is that we put our priority into middle New Zealand families and their aspirations. So our focus was shifting the 21 percent rate up from $40,000 through, ultimately, to $50,000. That is where the vast majority of hard-working, aspirational New Zealand families actually fit. We are not talking, obviously, about people who have just entered the workforce, we are talking about people who have built experience and are going into careers and looking at opportunities for the future, and looking at opportunities in other countries.

This is the key point in the New Zealand tax system. One only has to look at the whole group of people that Labour often talks about—teachers, nurses, and so forth. This tax rate affects them more than any other tax rate. So we have aimed this package right at aspirational New Zealanders who are building skills and building careers. We are saying to them that our tax package will make it easier for them and their families. Our tax package will make it easier for them to decide that “Yes, perhaps I should stay in New Zealand.” I also remind the Opposition of this: at this point in time, with the economy in the situation that it is, right now stimulus is exactly what is needed on 1 April 2009. What would the public have got from the other side? Zero! Actually, zero was Labour’s tax package for 1 April 2009. That is one of the reasons Labour lost the election. The public understood that in this difficult financial situation, which not just New Zealand but much of the rest of the world is involved in as well, stimulus is what is required. Every country, in fact, is undergoing that process, and this bill is part of the National Government package to deliver stimulus to the economy.

Labour members might talk about savings and all of that. That is not the core issue right now in the New Zealand economy. The core issue is getting money into the economy by 1 April next year to keep demand up, keep aspirations up, keep jobs going, and keep hope going. That is the difference between us and them. Their package for 1 April next year was zero. Our package will stimulate the New Zealand economy at a time when it will count.

Dovetailed to that is that it is pitched at those New Zealanders who have been crying out for some relief in the tax system. In 9 years under Labour they got zero. National is delivering. That really sums it up. National in Government is delivering, we are honouring our promises, and we will deliver this in the next day or so when the bill comes into effect. That fundamentally pitches the difference between this side, a Government of action, and that side, an Opposition of failure.

Hon CLAYTON COSGROVE (Labour—Waimakariri) : As I reflect on the debate of the last 24 hours, a question comes to mind and it is simply this: in that speech, Mr Tremain’s speech, Mr Bennett’s speech, and all the speeches we have heard from the Government in defence of this bill, which increases taxes for the bottom end, why have we not heard any rebuttal of the allegations the Opposition has put on front of them?

When Phil Goff used the example of a family on $50,000, with one child, and investing in KiwiSaver, losing $70 a week—that is seven-zero, for Mr Bennett’s benefit—as a result of this package, did we hear one denial from Bill English, or Mr Tremain, or Mr Bennett, or that tax expert Mr Foss? Did they deny it? I remember that last night Mr English grinned as if he had been caught like a kid with his hand in the cookie jar. Did any of them get up, deny it, and say: “No, that is not true. The facts are other than what is being put forward by the Opposition.”? No, they did not deny it, because they cannot deny it.

Last night we saw the Māori Party members look as if they could have leapt into the desks in front of their seats as they stuck their hands up and gave their party vote in support of this bill. Every one of their constituents earning under $40,000 will be getting either zip from this or an increase in tax. A couple on $55,000 a year with three kids will have to pay $14 extra a week because, in effect, they get a tax increase. If Hone Harawira could have shrunk himself and dived into his desk or under it to get away from this debate, he would have. Mr Flavell is piling the computer and the boxes higher and higher on his desk because he knows he has to answer his constituents, probably in a couple of months when they rock into his office and say: “Mr Flavell, we voted for you. Why are we paying more? You never told us about this.”

Here comes the man himself, Bill English. He is the architect of this bill. Not once in any of his contributions in the last 24 hours did he say: “No, the Opposition is wrong. As the National Party promised in the campaign, everybody will do better out of our tax policy.” That is what National said. They talk about aspiration. I ask Mr Bennett, that learned gentleman on the other side of the House, how it is aspirational if a family that is on $50,000, is in KiwiSaver, and has one child, loses $70 a week.

The only National Party response last night was from that genius Nick Smith, who, when he decided to stop holding his breath, said that that is the politics of envy. That is what he said. I have the Hansard, and I am going to blow it up. I, along with Maryan Street and the troops on this side, will come to Nelson and find all the families on $50,000 a year who are in KiwiSaver, who have one child, and who lose $70 a week. We will line them up in front of that genius’ electorate office and let him say, on behalf of National: “Oh, you $50,000 parents with one child losing $70 a week—that is the politics of envy.”

As I said last night to Mr Bennett and Mr Tremain, that is the politics of betrayal, not envy. Where is the aspiration when dad is on $35,000 and mum is on $22,000, they have three kids, and they have to pay $14 a week extra in tax? Where is the aspiration in that? Or does aspiration and the so-called choosing a brighter future apply only if one is at the top end? We know that Mr Bennett and Mr Foss, wherever he is, and Mr Mapp—and I now know the anatomical impact of peroxide on the cranium—will get a big tax rebate of around $100 a week. Apparently, aspiration applies only to those who are pretty far north of $40,000.

I looked at the Dominion Post this morning. It said that those on $42,000 a year will get $4.62. Those members criticised us for the so-called block of cheese tax cuts. Well, that is one slice of Chesdale without the plastic wrapping. Apparently, aspiration and choosing a brighter future applies only to their mates at the top end. I do not think it is the politics of envy to stand up, as we are in this House, do our duty, and point out that this bill was not signalled in its entirety before the election campaign.

Dr Mapp got up and said: “You don’t need to send this bill to a select committee. You don’t send tax bills to a select committee.” I say to Dr Mapp: “Wake up!” I used to chair the Finance and Expenditure Committee, and we did tax bills—we did a lot of them. We can send this bill to a select committee, and why? Because it comes into effect in April. That is plenty of time to send it to a select committee for a week or a couple of weeks. But, oh no, Dr Mapp does not want to do that, because, then, the tax experts and the venerable social services agencies such as the Salvation Army and others would come in and point out the things that we are pointing out today.

Moana Mackey: And the manufacturers.

Hon CLAYTON COSGROVE: And the manufacturers, of course.

My colleague Moana Mackey talked about the research and development tax credit. She made reference to a meeting that happened with Mr English. I know for a fact that manufacturers flew from all around the country to have a meeting with that member in Auckland, and they worked him over. They got the blowtorch out and did the rotisserie on him. Do members know what he said to them? He said: “Ah look, do not worry, we will fix it some other way.” They did not believe him, and they do not believe him now.

The justification for doing away with the research and development tax credit was this, which appeared in the New Zealand Herald: “National leader John Key, in announcing the move to drop the scheme yesterday as part of the party’s tax policy, said…‘It’s clear that the tax credit has created a lot of business for tax accountants and tax advisers, but evidence of real increases in R and D is harder to find.’ ” Hang on; there is a problem with that. That sound business person and good guy, the chief executive officer of the Canterbury Manufacturers Association in my area, John Walley, said that Mr Key’s comment was “daft”. Another member of the House was called daft—the electorate chairman of the National Party for Gisborne called Anne Tolley daft, I think.

Hon Darren Hughes: No, Nick Smith.

Hon CLAYTON COSGROVE: Oh, Nick Smith.

So Mr Walley, of the Canterbury Manufacturers Association, said that Mr Key was daft because the research and development tax credit applied for the first time in the 2008 income tax year. Unless Mr Key is a clairvoyant—and he portrays that he has the powers of a miracle worker—or unless Mr English is a clairvoyant and can see into the future and into the mists of time, they cannot predict what will happen. Of course, the Aussies do not agree with Mr Key. He said it all has to be a rort, but it is a rort that has not happened. So National will get rid of it, although it actually has no evidence. That is the truth.

Then we had the great betrayal of Dr Mapp. As my colleague pointed out, $330 million was to be the compensatory factor to go to the Crown research institutes. That is up in the air. That is disappearing really quickly. One would think that members of a new Government would be so proud of their tax policy, the benchmark document that they say they campaigned on, that they would get up and say: “No, the Opposition is wrong. Dr Cullen is wrong, Mr Cosgrove is wrong, Ms Mackey is wrong. You and all the examples you have used are all wrong.” But that has not happened once. Even the great guru, Mr English, has not once got up and admitted it. Even the Dominion Post worked it out on the front page today. A large number of people in our community will get nothing from this or, worse still, they will be grossly disadvantaged.

I again say to the Māori Party members that there is still time for them to get themselves out of the pickle they have got themselves into. There is still time to come down to the House and oppose this bill, as there are a lot of votes to go and a lot of water to go under the bridge. I would love the Māori Party to do that. We know that National Party does not care what its constituents think when they rock up and ask why they are paying more when National said during the campaign that people would gain out of this measure. But there is still time before the Māori Party constituents rock up and ask: “Why are you supporting the National Party in this?”.

On every marae, and at every kōhanga reo when the parents come to pick up their kids, the explanations will have to be given. I do not think the Māori Party members will have their research people write them a word for word speech, as they do, and then come down to the House and read out an explanation and a justification for supporting the National Party in this. Even the research unit will not be able to come up with that one. The Māori Party members did not campaign on it. They were against it. They should be against it, because they represent some of the poorest people in the community, who will be hit hard by this.

I invite one of the geniuses over there to get up and negate what the Dominion Post has said, what Dr Cullen has said, and the examples that I, Phil Goff, and others have given. There are large groups in our community that are disadvantaged. [Interruption] Mr Bennett can shake his head, but why in that great oratory he gave us did he not say “That is wrong, and here is why.”, and give us the proof? It is because the member does not have the proof. Well, there could be another explanation—it was not in big print. But the member does not have the proof, nor does he have the evidence. It is now apparent to us that it is aspirational if one is at the top end. If one is the chief executive officer of Telecom, my word, that person is brimming with aspiration. It is just pouring out of every pore. But if someone is at the bottom end, that person is in trouble.

A party vote was called for on the question, That the Taxation (Urgent Measures and Annual Rates) Bill be now read a second time.

Ayes 68 New Zealand National 57; Māori Party 5; ACT New Zealand 5; United Future 1.
Noes 52 New Zealand Labour 43; Green Party 8; Progressive 1.
Bill read a second time.

In Committee

Part 1 Personal tax cuts

Hon DAVID CUNLIFFE (Labour—New Lynn) : It is good to have an opportunity to discuss some of the detail of this bill, after what has been a very rushed process to date. I hope that some of the political rhetoric may subside for a while, and that we and New Zealanders can get our heads around some of the measures that are embedded in the bill.

Let us start, if we can, by going through exactly what will change for average New Zealanders with regard to the KiwiSaver component of this bill. Firstly, they will not get the $40-odd down payment for their registration fee. Secondly, although National has tried to fill in part of the gap, if someone is a low-income earner—by which we mean anyone earning less than around the average income of about $44,000 a year—and that person has kids, he or she will be worse off, despite the fact that National has, late in the piece, restored some of the Government’s contribution.

Chris Tremain: I raise a point of order, Mr Chairperson. We are considering Part 1, which deals with personal tax rates. The speaker, who is a learned member of the House, is talking about KiwiSaver. I ask you to bring him closer to the part, please.

The CHAIRPERSON (Eric Roy): I think that is a fair call. Members can refer to something else, but they need to draw what is said back to the part, for comparative purposes or whatever other purpose.

Hon DAVID CUNLIFFE: Of course, the tax rates are funded largely by the changes to KiwiSaver, and I had thought it was appropriate to cover both the funding and the expenditure side of this bill.

However, let us go directly to the tax component. The principal difference here is twofold. The first difference concerns where the rates and thresholds are set, and the second is in the top rate. Let us turn first to the thresholds. Under Labour’s package some $8 billion has already been invested in the changes that came through on 1 October. They were designed to lift the thresholds, thereby providing all New Zealanders with approximately equal improvements in the tax actually paid. It was a very, very fair set of tax changes, and it would have carried on in that way. By 1 April 2011 people earning up to $20,000 a year would have been paying 12.5 percent, those earning $20,000 to $42,500 a year would have been paying 21 percent, those earning $42,000 to $80,000 a year would have been paying 33 percent, and those earning above $80,000 a year would have been paying 39 percent, in tax. What has happened, of course, under this bill from National is that people who are earning between $14,000 and $20,000 a year will now pay 21 percent, not 12.5 percent. That is a very, very significant difference. It means that many below average income earners, second earners, and families will face a higher tax threshold, a higher tax rate, at that level.

Why has that been done? This is a very artificially constructed tax cut. It appears to be built around the promise that National made during the election campaign to try to engineer a $50-a-week cut for the average income earner. So in fact the tax remission spikes around that part of the band, and then on either side of that it drops down. The real change occurs for those in the top bracket—over $70,000 a year. Why this Government thinks that people who earn over $70,000 a year deserve to be the biggest beneficiaries from this tax cut escapes me. Someone who is earning three-quarters of a million dollars gets $200 a week, and someone who is on the average wage gets $2 a week. Why is that? There is no economic justification for that. People who are very wealthy, of course, do not spend the tax cut that they get. They can afford to save it or invest it, and therefore it is taken out of circulation.

Chris Tremain: So you admit that some people actually save it. Some actually save their tax cuts. That’s good to hear from you.

Hon DAVID CUNLIFFE: I say to Mr Tremain that that can be useful, but one has to be very careful about why one is doing it. The Government has said that the principal reason for this tax cut is to restore demand in an economy that is facing recession. It simply will not do that if the money is saved away. We have to start with $3.5 billion more in savings, because that has just been sucked out of KiwiSaver. Then we have to offset the $1.5 billion of innovation that we are not going to get—or more; probably $3 billion or $4 billion—because the research and development tax credit has been axed. I think we need to be very clear about the arguments for this tax change.

To summarise, we know we have a threshold problem for people who are on lower and middle incomes. We know we have a skew of benefits to people who are at the upper end of the income range, and we know that we have some perverse effects in terms of whether this tax change will help to offset the recession, as a result. There is a lower multiplier on tax cuts than on Government spending if it is well directed, and a very low multiplier on high-income individuals who are squirrelling the money away because, frankly, they do not need the tax cuts. Those are some of the economic arguments.

The next questions that we come to, around the tax rates, are what the actual fiscal impacts be will be and what the outlying debt track will be. Most New Zealanders by now understand that under the previous Labour-led Government, under Dr Cullen’s leadership, the gross debt to GDP ratio, the amount of Government debt that we owe other countries, was cut in half, from 35 percent to 17 percent. With the recession it is up to about 18 percent, but it is still very low by world standards. Why does that matter? It matters hugely because it means the incoming Government has the wiggle room to spend and invest in infrastructure or take other measures to offset the recession. The Government has the fiscal headroom.

The question is what has happened to that headroom, as a result of this package. Treasury’s briefing to incoming Ministers made clear that in Treasury’s view it was unnecessary to pursue further tax cuts on top of the close to $9 billion of stimulus that came in on 1 October. The reason for that was that it considered that stimulus to be sufficient, and that there were real risks about driving us deeper into debt.

How deep into debt are we getting as a result of this tax cut? The answer is that we do not know. We do not know because the new Government is not telling us. It has taken the unprecedented step of ramming a major piece of tax legislation through the House under urgency, with no select committee process, with no ability to interrogate it on the detail, and with no reliable statement of the macroeconomic implications of what it has done. This bill is a balancing act. Of course, we would all like to give tax cuts—and we want to give fair tax cuts—but we have to be constrained by the ability of the Government’s books to support them. There is no information provided to the public, let alone to the Opposition, about the state of those books as a result of this bill.

Let us now turn to some of the anomalies that arise. Some of those are deliberate; others may be unwitting. As Dr Cullen has said, there is an anomaly around pension portability. Australia has a 9 percent robust employer-funded superannuation savings scheme. We had a roughly equivalent scheme under Labour’s KiwiSaver scheme, and the previous Government had sought and received the approval of the Australian Government to allow people to move backwards and forwards between the two countries—something that was especially important, one would have thought, from a National Party point of view, because National members spent most of the election campaign grousing about people who cross the Ditch. So what is the implication? The implication, now that our tax package has resulted in a change to the KiwiSaver benefits, is that that portability could be eroded.

Regarding superannuation savings, the employer contribution for those who were seeking part-time work or who were close to superannuation age was at 4 percent on a net basis after tax credits. Now, that comes down to, I believe, about 3.2 or 3.4 percent net under this bill, undermining further the ability of New Zealanders to save for their superannuation, especially if they are doing so from a secondary income.

So a number of technical anomalies, alongside the headline rate and threshold changes, are built into this bill, and they deserve very significant consideration.

On the question of process, we have already discussed the lack of a select committee hearing. We have not really gone into the fact that the commentary on the bill admits up front—and I have never seen this before—that due to the haste with which the bill has been prepared, the Government has not been able to do a regulatory impact statement.

Hon Member: Amazing.

Hon DAVID CUNLIFFE: That is amazing, given that the new Government campaigned on regulatory integrity and has a confidence and supply agreement with the ACT Party.

Hon Darren Hughes: They’ve got a new Minister for it.

Hon DAVID CUNLIFFE: Yes, the Government even has a Minister, and on its first bill—

Chris Tremain: I raise a point of order, Mr Chairperson. Once again, we are straying right off the subject. That is a matter for a speech on the title of the bill, and this debate is about Part 1. We are dealing with personal tax cuts and the thresholds.

Hon DAVID CUNLIFFE: I certainly respected the member’s earlier point of order, but I think, respectfully, Mr Chairman, that on this one he is mistaken. The regulatory impact statement applies to the whole bill, including the rate changes, which are the subject of this part.

The CHAIRPERSON (Eric Roy): I am not going to uphold the point of order.

Hon DAVID CUNLIFFE: Thank you very much. So we know that the proper processes for regulatory scrutiny have not been gone through on this bill.

The next problem is that the economic effects of this bill, as the commentary on the bill states, have not been fully analysed. We do not know those effects, not only because the Government has failed to publish the debt track but also because, according to the commentary on the bill, the analysis has not been done even by the Government’s officials. We do not know what the flow-on effects of the funding mechanisms of this tax change will be. We do not know the net impact on innovation. We do not know the net impact on savings. We do not even know the net impact of the spending multipliers from the tax change. I say to those who have not been in Government for a while that one normally does the work before one puts a bill on the Table. Otherwise there might be an unintended consequence.

One of the unintended consequences of this bill, from a Government point of view, is that a whole lot of New Zealanders are waking up and realising that this is not what they voted for. What they voted for, they thought, was a kinder, gentler kind of National Party that would leave in place the good things that Labour had done, and maybe offer a fresh face, such as it was. But that is not what they got on day one. Besides this bill, they have a very harsh piece of industrial relations law, which we will come to shortly, and they can see that some people have joined the flat earth society.

CRAIG FOSS (National—Tukituki) : I will take the liberties that the previous speaker took around a wide range of topics, although he did eventually come back to Part 1. In speaking to Part 1, which is clauses 3 to 17 inclusive, I draw the Committee’s attention to the title of Part 1, which is “Personal tax cuts”. Does that not sound great? Personal tax cuts—right here in this bill.

Hon Dr Michael Cullen: Oh God! Don’t slobber.

CRAIG FOSS: I will say it again for the member over there—personal tax cuts. I imagine that his first taxation bill said “personal tax hikes”. Is that what the member’s first tax bill said? Actually, all the way through the last 9 years the member’s bills have probably said various things about threshold and fiscal drag, etc.

There are a couple of points in this part. OK, the micro staff, which members on the other side of the Chamber keep talking about—$2 here and $3 there—is relevant, but what they keep missing and do not talk about, which says much about the head space they are still in, is the macro, the vision, the investment that this makes in New Zealand. The threshold changes in Part 1 actually are all about the biggest investment in the infrastructure of New Zealand—the people. It is saying to them: “We value your hard work. We value your staying, hopefully, in New Zealand, and we value your investment in your education, with your student loan, and these tax threshold changes will enable you to pay your student loan off earlier and will offer you a higher, more viable after-tax income.” I am yet to hear anything of that nature from members opposite rather the myopic vision they have of trying to justify things to each other, in spite of their somewhat diminished majorities.

Part 1 contains a pro-rata provision and explanations of it. As all members will acknowledge, there are many complicated issues around all things related to taxation, and this policy that the Government has introduced here was flagged very, very early on. So there is much certainty out there, and, in fact, members will see as they go through some of the detail in the bill, how, with the top marginal rate going down to 37 percent, the banks can start to use resident withholding tax at 38c from 1 April next year, because over the year the pro-rata will catch up. Most things will come out in the wash.

Previous speakers have mentioned that these changes will mean that 80 percent of New Zealand taxpayers will be at or under the 20 percent rate. That is not too bad, but why stop there? I was very interested in the speech made by the previous speaker, who this morning was basically arguing for higher taxes. He started to refrain a bit and tried to justify that a bit further, but his multiplier arguments were all over the show this morning. I guess he has gone out and googled the stuff in between speeches and realised what he was saying. What he was saying was that if this was his bill, the rates would all be going up, and the bill would be called the “Personal Tax Hikes Bill”—or at least this part of it would be. I look forward to debating and discussing further points in this bill. There will be some good and robust questions, I am sure, and the Minister in the chair is more than prepared to push further National’s vision and our ambition for personal tax cuts.

Hon Dr MICHAEL CULLEN (Labour) : The various parts of this bill are either unfair, incompetent, dishonest, or stupid. Part 1 is the unfair and incompetent and dishonest part. Part 1 is entitled “Personal tax cuts”.

Chris Tremain: Yes!

Hon Dr MICHAEL CULLEN: Well, the member may be able to afford a brand-new four-wheel drive to park out at Napier airport even further into the future, because he actually is not in the electorate; he needs the four-wheel drive at the airport to give the impression he is somewhere around. But in fact for many New Zealanders Part 1 is a personal tax rate increase. For many people it is a personal tax rate increase.

In the debate on Part 3 I will move an amendment—and I foreshadow this now because it relates to this part—that will provide an opportunity for the Māori Party in particular and the National Government. In the case of the Māori Party the amendment will give it the chance to put its mana where its mouth is, and, in the case of National, to put its money where its mouth is—that is, to move for a new tax credit that will apply where anybody under this legislation will be paying more tax than he or she would have done under the personal tax cuts legislation of 2008. Those taxpayers will be able to apply for a compensatory tax credit to make up the difference between what they would have received under the existing legislation and what they will get under this new legislation. It is very simple—they will be able to apply at the end of the tax year for that compensatory tax credit. That will show whether National believes that nobody is worse off under this bill. If nobody is worse off under this bill, that amendment will cost it nothing. If the Minister in the chair, the Hon Bill English, then issues a financial veto saying that it will have more than a significant impact on the fiscal balance, we will know that it will cost money. In other words, people will be worse off under this bill.

Who is worse off under these personal tax cuts? The answer is anybody earning $14,000 to $24,000 a year of taxable income. Why? Because the $14,000 threshold does not go up to $20,000 as it does under the existing legislation. The difference of $6,000 will be at a different marginal tax rate by 2011 of 7.5c in the dollar. That is $450 a year. That is nearly $9 a week. For a person on $20,000 a year, $9 a week is quite a lot of money. It is peanuts for the members of this Committee. It means nothing to Jackie Blue, who is looking bored over there. It means a lot to a person on $20,000 a year. Who is such a person? It is a second-income earner in the family. Maybe it is the wife going out on a part-time job. It is a cleaner—a beneficiary who is putting in some effort and earning some money himself or herself. And now these people will be paying a higher tax rate on that than they otherwise would have done. It is a superannuitant with a bit of investment income, or a superannuitant who has a small part-time job, maybe delivering pamphlets. Would it not be ironic if that superannuitant had been delivering National Party pamphlets at the last election, and ended up paying a higher tax on those deliveries than he or she otherwise would? So I invite members to consider this very simple amendment; let us just see what they will do with it. The amendment protects the low-income earners.

The second group who will lose under this bill are all families with kids who earn under $44,000 a year. There are quite a lot of those people—that is nearly the average wage. So by 2011 a single-income family on nearly the average wage will be worse off under this bill than they will be under the current Act. But even people earning a good deal more than that are worse off, because they lose their entitlement to the new independent tax credit if they are receiving Working for Families, and that is a cunning means of trying to stop them applying for Working for Families if they get only a little bit at the end of the day. They will all be worse off.

Surprisingly, Mr English has developed an antipathy towards modest-income families on small incomes. Why that is I do not know. Maybe he supports only large families on large incomes; he does not seem to support small families on small incomes. They will be penalised as a result of National’s taxation changes. So I say to Mr English that a family on 40,000 bucks a year, struggling to pay the rent and the mortgage—we have heard about them for the last 3 years from the National Party—will face a higher rate of tax and a lower net income as a consequence of this bill. How does that fit in with a Catholic social justice perspective? I remember asking Mr Bolger the same question in late 1990, when the National Government legislated to provide that a widow had to go to the Department of Social Welfare to apply for a widow’s benefit within a week or she would lose money. How did that fit in with those kinds of precepts? It does not fit in with those kinds of precepts, at all.

You see, we used to attack the National Party for the trickle-down theory—the notion that as long as the people at the top got more, eventually it would trickle down to those at the bottom. What was proposed for those at the bottom was not even a 6-litre shower but a half-a-litre shower, as the margin eventually trickled down to those people. Well, this is “trickle up”; it is a new theory from National whereby the taxes on low incomes are increased, and that trickles up to those at the top. And why? In one of his previous speeches Mr English gave away that it is more expensive to give tax cuts to people on low incomes, because, as he said, people on high incomes get that tax cut, as well—as if somehow that was wrong. That was a very interesting little slip there, as if to increase the bottom threshold or lower the bottom rate was somehow wrong, because everybody got it, because the rich also got it.

That was Mr English doing his usual strange reverse logic in trying to look equitable by saying that it is awful that rich people get the tax cut that poor people get. Of course, the point is that it is the other way around: poor people get the tax cut that rich people get, whereas if one does it the other way, and simply lowers the top rate, poor people do not get the tax cut that rich people get. But, of course, we were told that the important thing was the threshold. Under this bill the threshold that the top rate cuts in at is lower than under the existing legislation, because under the existing legislation it rises to $80,000 a year. Under this bill it goes up to only $70,000 a year. Do members remember when we were told that there was some kind of envy tax whereby the top tax rate would cut in at $60,000? That was in 1999 and 2000, which was 8 years ago. It is perfectly all right now to cut in at $70,000 a year some way down the track from here, and that is not some kind of envy tax! But, of course, the theory underlying this is that if marginal tax rates are lowered, people work harder. This is the capitalist version of the Stakhanovite worker—much beloved of the Soviet Union. This approach says that if we kept an extra 1c or 2c in the dollar, we would all work miles harder.

Well, Mr Bridges will not do so. He will get paid the same anyway; it does not matter how hard he works. Members should look at National members; most of them have not done a stroke of work for the last 3 years. That is becoming very obvious in the way they have carried on in the House in the last day or two. They have not done a stroke of work. They are pretty well paid. They received a personal tax cut on 1 October and did not even say thank you for that; it just was not big enough—they want more, please! In fact, the marginal tax rate goes up on those people who earn between $14,000 and $20,000 a year—the people we want to encourage into work who are on benefits, to earn a bit and to help themselves get started and move along. The superannuitants want to keep a little bit of work, to earn a bit, so their marginal tax rate goes up from $70,000 to $80,000 a year. That is a lot of senior teachers and nurses and other people, who will be paying a higher marginal tax rate than they would have done under the current legislation. It goes down to Mr Foss, who does not believe in work. He is the poor man’s John Key. He went overseas and did not make a fortune, then came back to New Zealand.

We have one area where there is a big cut in the marginal tax rate. Where is it? Between $42,500 and $44,000 a year, the marginal tax rate goes down 13c. So we will see an extraordinary country, a country where people earning low incomes will work less, because that must be the theory—the marginal tax rate goes up. People in the next range will work exactly the same amount, because their marginal tax rate has not changed. Then there will be this extraordinary group of heroes of the new sort of capitalist Soviet Union, earning from $42,500 to $44,000—the turbocharged people of New Zealand—who will be working incredibly hard until they get to $44,000 a year. Then, suddenly, they will stop working harder as there is no point, because their marginal tax rate would now be back to where it was going to be before, in any case. Of course, if the taxpayers are independent credit earners, then their marginal tax rate would not be 20c in the dollar but 32c in the dollar. So there is basically no change, at all. So from an economist’s perspective there are no real incentives in this at all that make any difference to people working harder. So the theory then became—because they have kept trying to invent new theories—that the whole purpose was a stimulus for an economy in recession, which many countries have been in for some time. But, in fact, if one wants to stimulate an economy in a recession, one does something temporary to increase demand in the short term, but one does not, in a country with a chronic current account deficit and a chronic savings problem, have a structural change.

DAVID BENNETT (National—Hamilton East) : I am following on from the man who lost about $5 billion or $6 billion in the last couple of months from the New Zealand economy, so those words were rich coming from Michael Cullen. The so-called promised tax cuts for New Zealand workers were in legislation that was never going to be delivered, because Michael Cullen would have delivered a post-election Budget that took away those tax cuts. That was Labour’s real plan. Michael Cullen should be honest and tell the Committee what he really wanted to do.

Today National is delivering on its promises. We are giving tax cuts to those hard-working New Zealanders who have been out there slaving away for 9 years, working hard, making all the right choices, and taking the right directions in their lives. They needed some support from the Government. They needed a Government that would stand up and deliver for them and give them the right signals and incentives to keep on that track—the signals and incentives that build a strong country—and that is what National is doing here today. National will give people tax cuts. We will make sure they have that reward for their hard work. We are giving them that reward for making the right decisions, and we are making them successful in the world economy. We will give them the money to help them actually go out there and survive in an economy that is difficult, an economy that is in recession as a result of the failed policies of the previous Labour Government, and we will actually give them an economy that will deliver a future for New Zealand.

This bill is the first part of delivering a growth economy. Through the personal tax cuts, this bill will give the impetus needed for the New Zealand economy to grow and be successful. With a growing economy, we can deliver in all the other areas of social spending, of research and development, and also of growth in our infrastructural investment, which New Zealand desperately needs and has not had in the last 9 years. The National Government, with its coalition partners, will deliver a tax cut programme. We will not just talk about it; we will not just put legislation out that is about some time in the future. We will actually deliver that tax cut programme, and that is what we as a Government are about.

We will deliver for the people of New Zealand. That is what the people on the street have been saying. They like what they see. They see a Government that says what it will do and then actually delivers it. That is what members are seeing here today. We will not muck around trying to tell people there is a better future sometime around the corner; we will deliver that better future now. We will give it to people in the first 100 days in Government; we will give them some constructive changes that deliver to hard-working New Zealanders. We will not lead them on a path and say we know best and they do not have choices in their lives; we will give them those choices. We will give them money in their hands so that they can make those choices; we will give them the personal tax cuts that are in this legislation. The tax cuts enable people, as individuals and as families, to make the right decisions about what they want to spend their money on, so that they can actually deliver for their families in these hard economic times.

These personal tax cuts are the first stage of delivering a brighter future for New Zealand. They are the first stage of delivering a situation where people can go out there and actually live the lifestyle that they expect to live in the First World. We need to give that impetus to the New Zealand economy, and we need to give that strength to our people who are experiencing hard-working days and reward them for their work. That is what National is about. We are here to deliver for New Zealanders—to deliver for the working people of this country. That is what this legislation is here for, and we will deliver to New Zealanders through personal tax cuts as part of that process.

If we look at the personal tax cut regime, we see that a big part of it is the independent earner tax credit, which is a great initiative. It is good for those young people who are making a start out there. They want to actually get some reward for their hard work. They do not want to be just looked down on; they want to be told they are doing the right things for themselves and for their country. Through the independent earner tax credit we are giving them that support. We are going out there and saying they are doing the right thing, and we are going to help them and make them more successful, and give them the opportunities that they desire in their lives.

That is what this legislation is about. It is about giving the right start for New Zealanders in a tough time, because it is tough out there and the world economy will get tougher. We need to give New Zealanders the ability to get through this tough time, and in order to get through it we have to give them some money in their hand, which is what this tax cut programme is about. It is about giving some stimulation to the economy.

Hon PHIL GOFF (Leader of the Opposition) : I want to know what David Bennett will say when he goes back to Hamilton East and talks to the folk who come into his constituency clinic—presumably he has one—who are earning between $14,000 and $24,000 a year. What will the member say when they say: “Mr Bennett, you promised us a tax cut, but under your tax changes we are paying more tax.”? What answer will Mr Bennett give to the people in Hamilton East? What about when the hard-working family that Mr Bennett has just told the Committee he is representing comes in? They are earning less than $44,000 and they will come in and say: “Mr Bennett, you said you were going to look after the hard-working battlers in your electorate, but under your tax changes—the National Government’s tax changes—we’re paying more tax.” What will Mr Bennett say to those people?

The title of this part of the bill—“Personal tax cuts”—is a lie. It is a lie for many New Zealanders because for lower-income people, the hard-working battlers of this country, these so-called tax cuts are not tax cuts, at all; they are tax increases for those people. The Labour Party will vote against this legislation because of the unfairness of it. We know that people at the bottom of the heap—the people who struggle to pay the bills, the people who struggle to get their kids to school and to meet the cost of living—get nothing from the National Government. But if we turn up at a decile 10 school where the children’s parents are earning big money, we see that they will be getting hundreds of dollars of tax cuts.

The ordinary New Zealander has a sense of fairness. The ordinary New Zealander believes that people need to be given a fair go. Sixty-six percent of Mr Bennett’s electorate is earning less than $44,000—

Hon Parekura Horomia: How many?

Hon PHIL GOFF: Sixty-six percent. I ask Mr Bennett what he will say to the battlers to explain why they are paying more tax, while those on a good income, such as Mr Bennett himself, will probably get $100-plus in tax cuts. I ask Mr Bennett where the fairness is there. There is no fairness, and that is why we are opposed to this bill.

The rhetoric that we heard in the Speech from the Throne was about how this National Government was not going to tolerate an underclass, and how it was going to stand up for the rights of the everyday New Zealander. What about the everyday New Zealander who was promised a tax cut by the National Party in Opposition, and now finds that in fact he or she will be worse off than if there had been a Labour Government and they were receiving the tax cuts that had already been legislated for? What about a couple where the man is earning $35,000 a year? Many people in Mr Bennett’s electorate are in that situation: the man is earning $35,000 a year, and probably is working in a factory; the wife may be earning somewhat less—say, $22,000 a year—because she is looking after the kids. They will actually be $14 a week worse off because of the so-called tax cuts that Mr Bennett has just got up in front of this Committee to defend. What will Mr Bennett say to those people? I would like to know the answer to that.

Hon David Parker: “Sorry.”

Hon PHIL GOFF: “Sorry.” That is what he will have to say. “Sorry. Oh, you didn’t read the fine print?”—as Mr English said—“It was all there. We didn’t say it—we put it in the fine print.” That couple did not read the fine print so I am sorry but, caveat emptor, they have ended up with a National Government cutting their living standards, not raising them as they had been promised.

The truth is the National Government does not give a damn about the Kiwi battler. Those members do not even pay lip-service to the decent society that Jim Bolger once talked about. What happened to the decent society? What happened to that sense of fairness? The truth is that the people who will be paying more tax are the same people who are most vulnerable to job loss. As we saw, again, from the Speech from the Throne, there is no plan and there is no vision from this National Government about how it will protect people’s jobs. It can talk about tax cuts till the cows come home, but if one does not have a job, then a tax cut is no use. There was a lack of planning by National. It wasted 9 years in Opposition. It had no plan to deal with a situation where jobs might be threatened.

The people whom we heard about yesterday are the same people who will be denied protection against unfair dismissal. In the first 3 months of their working life they can be sacked for being pregnant, sacked for their eyes being the wrong colour, and sacked for standing up for their rights, and there is no right for them to get redress for the unfairness of those actions.

I tell Mr Flavell that I have a question for the Māori Party. This legislation is the first test for the Māori Party in this House. This legislation, whose first reading was voted for by the Māori Party, will damage the economic interests of almost all of that member’s constituents. The Māori Party members are collaborating with the National-ACT Government in doing that. This legislation is the first test for the Māori Party members as to whether they would stand up for the interests of their electorates, and they have been found wanting. They have been found wanting, because they are supporting this legislation, which undermines the rights, the income, and the living standards of ordinary Māori working families, who will be punished by this legislation. Those families will say to you, Mr Flavell, that you will go the same way as other Māori electorate members who made promises, then joined with a National Government—Māori electorate members collaborated with the last National Government—and failed to deliver and to stand up for the rights of your people. You should hang your head in shame at what you are doing in the Chamber today.

Hon Bill English: I raise a point of order, Mr Chairperson. This member seems to be unaware of the Standing Order that we cannot address members of Parliament in that fashion—quite apart from the very distasteful language he is using. He was told yesterday by the Speaker not to use that terminology. He is doing it again today, and I suggest that the Chairperson advise him to become aware of the Standing Order and to practise applying it in the Committee.

Hon Darren Hughes: The Deputy Prime Minister has a habit of taking this point of order when Labour members are speaking. The speaker before Mr Goff, Mr Bennett, repeated exactly the same phrase all through his speech, but we did not pull him up on it. We let the debate flow. The Deputy Prime Minister has decided he will raise this point whenever a Labour member is speaking. I thought we had one standard of citizenship in New Zealand.

Hon Trevor Mallard: I think it is also important that when the Deputy Prime Minister opines on these matters, he is accurate. There are Speakers’ rulings on this matter; I think he will find that there is not a Standing Order. I think he should have a bit of a look at the Standing Orders, and, the next time he goes to break up a speech, at least get it right.

Chris Tremain: I will speak to the senior Opposition whip’s comment about our being the only ones today to bring up the point about incorrect use of “you”. The Hon Trevor Mallard over there has brought it up on numerous occasions. In fact, throughout the second reading debate he brought up that point.

The CHAIRPERSON (Eric Roy): Let me make a quick ruling. Firstly, members know that they must raise a point of order at the time—that is important. Members cannot say that because they did not raise a point, it should not be raised. It is a matter of whether the institutional understanding and rules of the House are being broken. That is the first point. With regard to the point of order, I think the Committee needs to bear in mind that when it moves away from a certain standard of decorum, that does bring a degree of unrest within the Committee, which is not helpful to the debate. I ask the member to continue, and to bear in mind the points I have made. Thank you.

Hon PHIL GOFF: Thank you very much, Mr Chairperson. The first reason we have opposed this legislation is its inherent unfairness. The second reason is just as legitimate. It concerns how these tax cuts will be paid for. The first way in which they will be paid for is through cutting $1.5 billion out of research and development. At the time when New Zealand needs to be smarter than its competitors, this National Government is paying for short-term tax cuts by undermining the ability of our economy to be smart, to be innovative, to be creative, and to be competitive. One award-winning exporting company, Endace Ltd, made the comment through its chief executive, Mike Riley, that this cut flies in the face of the knowledge economy. We know that New Zealand, as a small and geographically isolated country, needs to be smarter than its competitors. That cut to research and development undermines our ability to be smarter, and undermines the ability of our industry to create the jobs we need to move forward in the world.

The second thing that is cut, of course, is KiwiSaver. Every economist for decades has told New Zealand that New Zealanders need to be greater savers.

Chris Tremain: I raise a point of order, Mr Chairperson. We are on Part 1, which deals with tax cuts, but the member is talking about KiwiSaver and research and development tax credits, which have nothing to do with Part 1, at all.

The CHAIRPERSON (Eric Roy): There is a certain degree of flexibility. Members can raise issues for purposes of comparison. I do not think the Minister—no, the Hon Phil Goff—had strayed too far away from that. Thank you.

Hon PHIL GOFF: Your form of address is 2 years and 10 months premature, Mr Chairman!

The second way in which the tax cuts are being paid for is by gutting KiwiSaver—taking $3.5 billion out of the savings accounts of New Zealanders, who for the first time in our history have been given the opportunity and the motivation to save. This bill is a disaster from that point of view, as well.

JOHN HAYES (National—Wairarapa) : I rise to speak to Part 1, but first I congratulate you, Mr Chairperson, on your appointment as Assistant Speaker of this Parliament. Secondly, I want to address a couple of the comments made by the Leader of the Opposition, who will be ankle-tapped by Shane Jones before he gets to 2 years and 11 months from now.

The difficulty we face in this debate, as politicians, is that the community wants more police to be on the streets. It wants better health services, it wants lots of big roads, it wants excellent welfare benefits, and it wants to pay lower taxes. People want to pay lower taxes, and that is why they voted against the last Labour Government. They knew that too many taxes were being collected, which were being spent inefficiently. We on this side of the Chamber want to avoid inefficiency, because if we did not, we would pass up the opportunity to make somebody better off at no cost to anybody else. That is what we do by increasing efficiency.

But taxes, by their very nature, cause some inefficiency, and most of us think we need to pay less tax. Most of us think—and this is the essence of the Labour Party’s argument—that taxes are about only the redistribution of income, to a lesser or greater extent, from the rich to the poor.

Hon Trevor Mallard: This is redistribution from the poor to the rich.

JOHN HAYES: Well, we have two contradictory imperatives, I tell Mr Mallard. The first is to avoid needless waste—and he wasted plenty, particularly through Sport and Recreation New Zealand—and the second thing is that we want to decrease inefficiency and increase efficiency, while making sure that wealth is at least somewhat evenly distributed.

This legislation aims to make the New Zealand economy both efficient and fair—both efficient and fair. If we look at the actual cuts that are being made, we see there is no change for people at the bottom of the income levels. Those who earn less than $14,000 a year will pay 12.5 percent in tax. The next step, to increase efficiency and put more money in the pockets of individual taxpayers, applies to those who earn $14,000 to $48,000 a year, who will have a 21 percent tax rate. The maximum income for that group will be moved to $48,000 a year, so those earners will be significantly better off.

We want to put more money in people’s pockets. We want to stop them leaving, at a rate of 80,000 people a year, and going to Australia. People deserted Labour, but National is interested in keeping those people in this country.

I will address the comments made by the Leader of the Opposition, when he said we were cutting research and development payments. That is completely untrue. He was arguing that there will be a huge drop in research and development in this country. That is not the case at all. Labour’s policy involved borrowing $700 million, and in year 1—this next financial year—paying out $20 million for research and development, in year 2 paying out $30 million, and in year 3 paying out $40 million. That is not what we are doing. We are paying out $75 million a year, over each of the next 3 years. That is significantly more than what Labour was going to pay for research and development, but we are doing it in a different way from Labour. We did not have to borrow $700 million in order to kick off that fund, and that is why we are able to start from lower base borrowing than the Labour Government did.

This is not a 1-year programme; Mr English has been extremely ingenious in constructing this tax package. In the year from 1 April 2010, for the earners group of $14,001 to $48,000 a year, we will lift the limit to $50,000 a year and give those people a tax cut. We will increase the tax cut available to people earning from $50,000 to $70,000 a year. Again, in year 3—in 2011—people in the $14,000 to $50,000 a year earners group will get a significant reduction in tax. That will be the pattern in every year. Why will we do that? We need to put money into people’s pockets. When I go to Kurīpuni in Masterton in my electorate, I see people who are on an average wage of $12 to $15 per hour. We need to help those people, because they have children to bring up, holidays to take, and transport to pay for. Tax cuts will pay for that.

Hon TREVOR MALLARD (Labour—Hutt South) : I think that John Hayes, who I understand comes from Wairarapa, has an incredible cheek to speak on the Taxation (Urgent Measures and Annual Rates) Bill, because Wairarapa, other than the electorate of Dunedin North, which mainly consists of students, is the electorate in the country with the most people aged 15 years and over who earn $40,000 or less. This is the very group that has been most attacked by this legislation. I do not know whether John Hayes is thick, whether he has not read it, or whether he is being a hypocrite. I do not know which of those things he is doing, but I will leave one out and just say that he is silly. It is one or two of the other words.

Hon Member: Why don’t you just come across and punch him. That’s a good idea.

Hon TREVOR MALLARD: No, no. Next time he tries to throttle me, I will.

Getting back to the legislation, I say that John Hayes did not understand the way that thresholds interplay with rates. As a result of this, he did not understand what was in the legislation that is now being taken out. The tax changes previously legislated for the threshold rate currently at $14,000 going to $20,000. The effect of this change means a loss of almost $500 a year to some of the poorest income earners. That is without doing some other things as well that impact on them in the KiwiSaver, and other changes.

I ask John Hay whether, when he goes to Masterton East, to the poorer areas, and to some of those schools, he will explain to people that he is putting his hand into their pockets, taking their wallets, and taking out $9 or $10—not a year, but every week. I wonder whether John Hay is prepared to act as a personal tax collector for the chief executive of Telecom, whether he is prepared to wander around 50 Māori families, to take $10 a week from out of each of their pockets, and hand it over to the chief executive of Telecom, who gets the extra $500. Is John Hayes prepared to work his way around?

Craig Foss: His true colours are being shown right there.

Hon TREVOR MALLARD: No, no. I am making it very, very clear that the Māori Party is collaborating with this change, which will result in John Hay going around Māori families, and getting the tax collector to put his hand into the pocket of those Māori families—not all of them, only the poor ones—and taking out from their pockets $9 or $10 a week, and handing it over to the chief executive of Telecom, and his like. How many Māori families will John Hay have to go around in Masterton East? He will have to go around about 50 or 60 families to collect up the tax cut, which is being handed over to people on the highest incomes in New Zealand. As well as that, will he be prepared to tell the people in Masterton that the taxation bureaucracy in Wellington will climb enormously to handle the provisions of clause 12, which is within this part of the bill?

The CHAIRPERSON (Eric Roy): Speakers’ ruling 26/7 is quite specific about the use of the correct name. The member of Wairarapa whom you were referring to as Mr Hay is actually Mr Hayes. It is a small point, but if we do not use correct names, names can be used in a way that is inappropriate.

Hon TREVOR MALLARD: Which one is the correct one?

The CHAIRPERSON (Eric Roy): Hayes.

Hon TREVOR MALLARD: Thank you, Mr Chairman and I apologise to the member. He is one of a number of the back benchers who have not quite made an impression over the 6 years that they been in Parliament.

Hon Member: Only for 3 years!

Hon TREVOR MALLARD: No wonder I did not notice him in the first 3 years.

Returning to the bill, I ask the Minister in the chair, Bill English, who I understand will take a call, what the extra budget is for the Inland Revenue Department to implement schedule 1 in clause 12 of this bill. Clearly this will involve a lot of extra work for the Inland Revenue Department. It will require extra staff, and I want to know whether these extra staff have been provided, and what the costs of those extra staff are to implement the schedules of the bill. I want to know from the Minister of Finance whether these staff will be regarded as front-line staff, or not. Are the people who are working out these credits, and it might be a very cunning job creation scheme on the part of the National Party—

Chris Tremain: I raise a point of order, Mr Chairperson. We are wandering way off Part 1. Tax credits are in Part 3 of the bill. This is Part 1. Can you bring the member back to the part, please.

Hon TREVOR MALLARD: Speaking to the point of order, I point out that clause 12 is in Part 1, and it is the clause that puts in the schedule that implements the employers’ superannuation contribution tax.

The CHAIRPERSON (Eric Roy): I will not uphold the point of order.

Hon TREVOR MALLARD: The point I was getting to is that the bureaucracy that will be involved in this could well be a cunning job creation scheme to make sure that the unemployment in the electorate of Wellington Central—the electorate of Grant Robertson—does not fall. I want to know whether that is a deliberate policy. And I want to know from Sir Roger Douglas whether he regards clause 12 as something that is efficient, that is pure, and that works towards a fair tax system, or whether he regards it as something that pushes up the marginal tax rate—the effective tax rate—for a lot of lower and middle income earners. Because that is what it does. It pushes up the marginal tax rate, and at the same time it requires a bureaucracy of tax officials in order to check probably tens of thousands—and maybe hundreds of thousands—of returns, to make sure that people are eligible. In fact, it puts a whole new group of people into the group who have to file returns in order to get changes in tax rates.

We have had quite a good system over the past few years in New Zealand, where fewer and fewer people have had to file tax returns because it is all done as part of the wash-up, and if people consider they have been fairly treated, then they do not have to file a return. One of the effects of this bill will be that a whole new group of people, probably hundreds of thousands of people, will have to file a return, which then has to be processed. And we have to employ people to process it. Rather than moving towards being efficient, towards being proactive, and towards chasing some of the delinquents, in the way that has been done under the previous Minister of Finance—and that has had, I think it is fair to say, very good effects on the revenue—we will have, as a result of clause 12 in Part 1, a new army of people who look at the forms being sent in, load them into the computer, and then check them at the end of the year—

Hon Annette King: Is it definite it’s a wash-up yearly, or—

Hon TREVOR MALLARD: No, no; it can be in the wash-up yearly, or it can be the other way. It does not matter; whichever approach is taken, there needs to be either bureaucrats at the front end or bureaucrats at the back end, if it is to be done as a wash-up. As a member of the Labour Party, and somebody who has had a lot to do with the Public Service Association (PSA), I welcome the approach of the Minister of Finance in building PSA membership. Building up PSA numbers is, I think, a good thing to do.

Hon BILL ENGLISH (Minister of Finance) : It is interesting hearing from a Leader of the Opposition who cannot tell the difference between a decile 1 and a decile 10 school, and I expect that reflects the kinds of dilemmas that the Labour members will have to deal with over the next few years as they try to decide who they are. Let us just—[Interruption] Well the public is not listening either, to be quite frank. I think that is the difference.

Let me make a couple of points clear. This is a different tax package from the previous Labour Government’s tax package. There has been ample opportunity over the last 12 months for everyone to poke and prod and discuss the details of it, and the public did that. Then there was a general election. The only reason we have this bill, with the National Party’s tax package in it, is that the public of New Zealand voted in a different Government. If the public wanted the former Labour Government’s tax package, they had the opportunity to vote for it, and they did not.

One of the reasons they did not is the spin and crocodile tears that the nasty, dirty previous Labour Government had got into the habit of using. Let us just look at some of the stories Labour members are telling. The member from Hutt South—I do not know how he managed to win the seat, actually—talked about taking cash out of people’s pockets.

That is actually just wrong. No one is going to be worse off as a result of our passing this legislation.

Hon Darren Hughes: Oh yes, they are.

Hon BILL ENGLISH: No, they are not. The Labour Party keeps putting up some cases where if Labour had been re-elected and if it had kept its promises about taxes, which it never did before, then some people would have got more. That is bound to be the case when this is a different tax package. The thresholds and rates are different. But let us talk about some of the people—

Hon Darren Hughes: That’s intellectually dishonest and the member knows it.

Hon BILL ENGLISH: Well, it is just a different tax package. I know the Labour members find it very difficult to understand that if one gets elected into Government, it is to execute one’s policy, and that when one gets thrown out of Government, it is because people did not want one’s policy.

Hon Darren Hughes: Arrogant!

Hon BILL ENGLISH: Well, no; that is what the voters think. I just accept their verdict.

Let us take some of the people whom Labour members say they are crying about—the 630,000 low-income New Zealanders who will get the independent earner rebate. They got nothing under Labour, in 9 years of low incomes in the best economic period of a generation, and they know that. Every person without children who was earning under $44,000 got nothing—nothing. Full-time earners earning $24,000 to $44,000 got zero. The reason families do not get a big benefit out of this package is that in the last 2 or 3 years they have had big benefits. Their after-tax incomes have gone up very substantially. National has locked in the Working for Families package in its entirety, and now it is the turn of the 630,000 people for whom those members now cry crocodile tears, but for whom, for a decade, they did nothing to help. Now it is their turn, and National is delivering a tax package that will give 630,000 low and middle income earners—yes; members of unions who voted for us because they thought Labour would give them something—some benefits.

Those people waited loyally for a decade and they got nothing, and Labour is telling us today that we are making a mistake in giving it to them. Well, that is what we will say, when we go back to our electorates, to people earning $35,000 who got nothing from Labour in 10 years. We will say that we promised them something and here it is, and that Phil Goff is trying to stop it—630,000 people. The Labour caucus thinks that Mr “Phil-in” is the answer. Well, the reason he is not the answer is that he has not understood that fundamental political problem for Labour.

These personal tax cuts deliver substantial weekly gains to the 630,000 people who were ignored by Labour, despite the fact that in three elections in a row, a good proportion of them voted Labour. That is why those Labour members are out of touch and out of Government. Those people got tired of being told that it was the students, it was the people with families, or it was the bureaucrats who would get the next $300 million, but those hard-working, battling Kiwis who do not happen to have children would get nothing.

This is a balanced package, because we are locking in the gains families made, which were considerable, and we are keeping them in their entirety—

Hon Dr Michael Cullen: Oh, what a generous man.

Hon BILL ENGLISH: —we cannot have everything, I say to Dr Cullen, as he used to tell everybody—and we have added to that a mechanism that provides increasing weekly incomes for 630,000 people who earn under $44,000. These are not the higher-income high fliers. These are Mr Cosgrove’s heartland voters, which is why he lost the party vote in his electorate. I ask when Labour members are going to figure that out, and when they are going to figure out that some people hearing the crocodile tears today from Labour just will not believe it, because they know it is wrong.

What about other people who earn under $20,000? Well, 300,000 of them are beneficiaries. I ask what the Labour Government did for those people through a decade of the best economic times we will see in a generation. Mr Goff did not mention them, but I bet he will now he is in Opposition. He will go on and on about what National is doing to beneficiaries, when he did nothing for them. When Labour members go on about who is affected by the changes in these tax rates, I say that a big part of that group under $20,000 are beneficiaries. The other group are superannuitants. Superannuitants are the biggest single group who earn under $20,000, and they are considerably better off as a result of these tax cuts. In our constituent clinics, we are going to say to them: “We promised you more super through lower taxes, and we have delivered you more super through lower taxes. It’s that simple.” They’ll go: “Well, that’s a fair cop. I didn’t vote for you, but next time I will, because you kept your word.” That is the other big group under $20,000.

The Labour Party will cry crocodile tears. There will be some people where the rates and thresholds mean that compared with what Labour would have done if it had been elected—

Hon Dr Michael Cullen: No, it’s the current law.

Hon BILL ENGLISH: Well, the 2005 “chewing gum tax cuts” were the law, and we remember what happened to that. Broken promises on tax cuts meant half the people did not believe Labour would keep its promises on these tax cuts.

Hon Darren Hughes: That’s not true.

Hon BILL ENGLISH: Well, I ask why Labour members are in Opposition if they had such a magnificent tax package. It has to be because people did not believe them, and they were right not to believe them, because the last time Labour made promises about tax cuts, it broke those promises.

This bill is a step in a direction of a broad based - low rate tax system. It delivers benefits for many people who missed out on the benefits of economic growth in the last 10 years, and we are very pleased to support it.

Hon ANNETTE KING (Deputy Leader—Labour) : What a collection of blatherskite we have just heard from the Minister in the chair, the Minister of Finance!. He was trying to put the Tory spin on policy that is going to hurt the most vulnerable in our society. It does not matter how Mr English cuts up the Taxation (Urgent Measures and Annual Rates) Bill package here in this House: we know the truth about what is happening to vulnerable New Zealanders today.

He had the cheek to tell this House and New Zealanders listening that if we had wanted to discuss the National Party’s tax policy, we had had a whole year to do so. That is what he told us. Well, I have to say to Mr English that his nose grew an inch, because the National Party released its tax policy in October this year, and New Zealanders and this House had no opportunity to debate it. People on the hustings had to get what information they could from a website. They had to scrounge for information in order to be able to debate that policy. That is the truth of the matter. The National Party released its policy in October this year.

I ask why it would release it so late. It was because National did not want scrutiny of its tax policy. It did not want New Zealanders to know that it was going to pull the biggest Christmas hoax on New Zealanders that anyone has pulled since Ruth Richardson in 1991. That is what National was doing. Mr English backed up Ruth Richardson then, and he is doing it now. She was the mistress who taught him the tricks he is using now when he has the opportunity.

Mr English said this bill is going to help hard-working Kiwis who had got nothing under a Labour Government for 9 long years. He referred to people who did not have families. He said the Labour Government had looked after those with families. Of course, that was “communism by stealth” a few months ago, and National voted against it at the time; now it has adopted it. But he did say that we had looked after families. What National has bravely and courageously done is to look after people who have not got families—hard-working, poor New Zealanders. Mr Bennett is shaking his head. I hope he realises that hard-working, poor New Zealanders must have a net income of $24,000 before they can access National’s independent earner tax credit. So the lowest-paid New Zealanders who do not have children, the most vulnerable, who probably have a gross income of around, say, $30,000, do not get anything. I ask Mr English why they are not included. I ask why they do not get the tax credit, which he said was for the battlers, the hard-working Kiwis of New Zealand. They do not count. They do not count because they do not vote National. That is how cynical it is. This policy is not about giving something to those who have not got children; it was a smart little manoeuvre during an election campaign to try to garner a few more votes.

Perhaps Mr English will tell us what happens to the hard-working, battling Kiwi families who earn $23,500 net—the husband and wife both earning $23,500—and whether they get this tax credit. No, they do not qualify. They have a very low income, they are working hard, but they get diddly-squat. The words about caring about New Zealanders, the low paid, the vulnerable, and the underclass of New Zealand are nothing more than a hoax on the people of New Zealand. I ask why this tax credit does not cover all of those people, if caring about New Zealanders was the genuine intent of the National Party. We have seen through the tricks.

I just have been in a taxi. We all know that taxi drivers know everything. They are already starting to wonder what this is all about. National has been in this House for 3 days, and its first attacks are on the vulnerable New Zealanders. Its first attacks are on women, children, the low paid, and the people who do not have children—the very ones National said it was going to support. I can tell members that in my own constituency of Rongotai almost 30,000 people earn less than $40,000. In some way or other, they will be affected.

Dr PAUL HUTCHISON (National—Hunua) : Thank you, Mr Chair, for the opportunity to speak on the Taxation (Urgent Measures and Annual Rates) Bill, Part 1, “Personal tax cuts”. It is absolutely extraordinary that the Opposition—

Hon Dr Michael Cullen: Speak up for the common man.

Dr PAUL HUTCHISON: I missed that. Would Dr Cullen like to say it again?

Hon Dr Michael Cullen: Speak up for the common man.

Dr PAUL HUTCHISON: Absolutely, because that is what Dr Cullen did not do back in 1999, when he said he would raise New Zealand to the top half of the OECD. I ask members what happened. We went down two slots, and that affected the common man very, very deeply.

Mr Chairman, I personally congratulate you on your appointment as Assistant Speaker. I am sure you will do an absolutely superb job.

What I think is extraordinary is that this tawdry Opposition has not made any mention of the fact that we are in urgency over this bill. It is absolutely right and proper that this is going through under urgency because, after all, it has taken 9 long years of a very tawdry Labour Government before, finally, the New Zealand people are going to receive this well-deserved tax break. It is also quite extraordinary and ironical that when the Labour Government came into power back in 1999, the very first thing it did was to raise personal tax from 33c to 39c, and that was very ably pointed out by the new ACT member John Boscawen an hour or two ago this morning.

The very thing they did was to curb personal freedom and to curb incentives and signals for thrift, enterprise, and reward for effort. And it is no wonder that record numbers—tens of thousands—of New Zealanders have left this country for Australia. They left because the Labour Government had no understanding of the fact that New Zealanders wanted to have incentives to ensure they were indeed rewarded for effort. In the last year, 80,000 people left. New Zealanders left in huge numbers because they realised that the Labour Government was mediocre and had already caused New Zealand to go down two places on the OECD ladder. That, of course, very much affects the common person and affects his or her standard of living.

After all, it was Dr Cullen who mentioned Labour’s legacy of 1990. Dr Cullen should remember that in 1990 New Zealand was technically bankrupt. Unemployment was at its highest level, inflation was about 7 percent, and interest rates were 22 percent. But let us shift on to 2008 after 9 years of Dr Cullen’s regime. His Government came into office with a growth rate of 4.6 percent, and ever since it has gone down and down. His Government came in with a growth rate in the last quarter of 4.6 percent, and ever since then it has gone down.

Look at it now. Look at the dire predictions of Treasury and the Pre-election Economic and Fiscal Update of 10 years of deficits. [Interruption] Well, I say to Dr Cullen that he is part of the fault; there is no doubt about that. That is the legacy left by Labour, and that indeed is part of the reason that so many New Zealanders have been leaving for Australia over the last 9 years.

The other point, of course, is that these personal tax cuts outlined in Part 1 are absolutely central to the concept of personal freedom and to the concept of reward for effort. This is something espoused by the National Party since 1936 as fundamental to getting an enterprise economy, and resisted year after year, Government after Government, by the Labour Party. That, I say to Dr Cullen, is why he is over there.

Hon PAREKURA HOROMIA (Labour—Ikaroa-Rāwhiti) : I think Treasury was quite clear on the platform that has been left by the well-managed Labour Government of the last 9 years. It has been quite specific about the performance and the free way forward for the Minister of Finance. The last speaker talked about 1990. I remind him about 1999, when, in relation to Māori people, the unemployment rate was tracking at 28 to 32 percent. When our term in Government finished it was tracking at 5 percent. At the end of the 9 years—during the last 3 years—Māori were going into the workforce at the rate of 4 to 1. That represents the very, very important effort that went not only into Māori but into all people in this country.

It was really interesting to hear Mr Bennett talk about redistribution. He was quite right: it is redistribution of money from the poor and those who need it to the wealthy. He is revelling in those who are milking the till in his dairy-sodden area of Hamilton. And it is important to understand what Mr Hayes was trying to say. The National members opposite are making sure they are making hay over there, but this budget hints at what is to come in their period in office. One does not need to be a rocket scientist to understand that this is one of the worst starts—one of the most overrated starts—by a financial manager in relation to a parliamentary session. This measure is disgraceful. It punishes the people who need the money, and it is being done with an attitude of arrogance. Mr Hayes will remember that in the time of the last National Government all the State houses in the Wairarapa were sold. A whole lot of hinting is going on by this Government’s financial manager. There are hints that no more State houses will be built, and that landlords will have the right to manage housing issues in this country.

This measure is about redistributing money that is not National’s—$3.5 billion out of KiwiSaver. That is outrageous. My plea to the Māori Party is not to support this bill, because it will hurt Māori people. It will hurt them badly. In terms of incomes of up to $40,000 a year, 73 percent of Māori will not get anything in this budget—

David Bennett: Budget?

Hon PAREKURA HOROMIA: In this allocation. Last night Nick Smith said that this was the politics of envy. That was said in relation to the example we brought up of someone who was benefiting from Working for Families and KiwiSaver, and who has one child and earns $50,000 a year. He or she would lose $80 a week. What is the answer to that? It is outrageous. Bill English is pitching up the macro and making out that research and development funding is something this country does not need, when the unions, the Business Roundtable, and the Government agreed that would be the best injection to go forward on.

I ask the Māori Party what it is going to tell the 73 percent of our people who are working and who will get nothing in this budget. What are we going to do about that? Where is the improvement for our people that was promised by the National Party? Māori were hoodwinked going forward in relation to this financial statement. Mr English goes on about giving a fair go to earners who do not have children. It is fascinating when we line that up alongside the entry on KiwiSaver. He is going to take a fair bit out of research and development, but there is no mention of how much people will lose in relation to knocking KiwiSaver down.

This measure is a disgrace. This is one of the most hurting entries in a parliamentary session for our Māori people, and the Māori Party is going to vote for it. Hone Harawira knows it is wrong. The members of that party are going to vote for this measure. They are going to support something that undermines the rights of their people, and they want to talk about other issues. But in relation to income—[Interruption] What will they tell people in Flaxmere? What will Chris Tremain tell people when I see him wandering around there? What will he tell people in Camberley? He has nothing to tell them, and he knows that this issue is right on his doorstep. He knows that the people sitting in his electorate will be hard done by under this legislation. This bill is not fair, and the member knows that full well.

At the end of the day this measure is not an improvement. It is bad for Māori people, and the Māori Party should vote against it. It still has time to do that.

CHRIS TREMAIN (Junior Whip—National) : I move, That the question be now put.

Hon CLAYTON COSGROVE (Labour—Waimakariri) : I rise to speak to Part 1 in relation to the thresholds, and it is interesting that the Government moves so quickly to close the debate down. Again, I want to comment on a point made by Mr English. He made great play, when he got up to speak to Part 1, about the level these so-called tax cuts had dropped to. He alleged that the Labour Government had done nothing for low-income people. He talked about beneficiaries and said that the Labour Government had done nothing for these people. Of course the Labour Government did do a lot for beneficiaries. The primary thing it did was to give most of them a job. It created 350,000-plus jobs through its 9 years of Government.

But I just raise this point with Mr English, and I would be indebted if he would answer it. It is Mrs King’s point in relation to the thresholds abating at the lowest level and the independent earner tax credit. I think he quoted the fact that 600,000 low-income people were going to be helped by this tax package. But I again put this scenario to him, and I would be grateful to hear his answer. A person on $23,999—someone who does not breach the $24,000 threshold—gets nothing. So let us say that we have a person on one side of the fence who earns $23,999 and gets nothing, and has a neighbour on the other side of the fence who earns $24,000 and kicks in and gets the tax credit. Well, what is fair about that? The so-called low-income people that Mr English—late in life in his career in politics—says he has decided to actually think about, and maybe do something about, will get nothing from this package. I invite Mr English to deal with that point. We are debating the tax thresholds kicking in and abating, whereby if I am on $23,999, I get nothing, but my neighbour across the fence, once this kicks in at $24,000, will get something. I am addressing the Minister’s point in rebuttal, which is valid, because he got to his feet and raised that point.

I would like to know where that person will acquire the aspiration that National kept talking about during the election. How will that person choose a brighter future? Does a brighter future even exist for that person? Where would that person go hunting for it? That was the aspirational rhetoric used by Mr English during the campaign. One would think that everybody was sucking up aspiration through every pore. Well, a person on $23,000 who does not breach $24,000 ain’t getting a lot of aspiration, ain’t getting a lot of help, and ain’t getting any assistance at all. These single people with no kids, the quartile that Mr English says his Government will help, will get nothing.

National members did not campaign on this package, but Mr English says they went around the country, and line by line every person went through it with a microscope. He said they were all told exactly what they would get. Well, this huge group of people I referred to must have been told they would get nothing.

John Hayes: No.

Hon CLAYTON COSGROVE: In fact, they were not told. It was never announced. There is a word for that behaviour. If members look at page 2 of the New Zealand Herald they will see that people earning less than 40K will get zip. That fact was never canvassed with the electorate at all. I invite Mr Hayes to go and find 10 or 20 of his constituents on $23,999, singles, and say to them: “You knew that we, the National Party in Government, were going to give you nothing.” I invite him to find five people, or even two people.

Hon Annette King: Did he tell them that?

Hon CLAYTON COSGROVE: Did Mr Hayes tell that to his constituents? Oh, no. I bet he could not find one person. He should take out an advertisement in his local paper inviting all those people on $23,999, with no kids, who will get nothing from this package, to write to him and confirm that they knew all about this before they voted at the election. I doubt he would get one reply.

John Hayes: 12.5 percent is just brilliant.

Hon CLAYTON COSGROVE: I put a question, through the Chair, to Mr Hayes: “Can you name a person in your electorate who knew about this? Did people know about this?”. I bet they did not say that to the Sir Les Patterson of this Parliament. They did not know about this, at all.

DAVID BENNETT (National—Hamilton East) : It is with great consideration that I move that the question be now put.

The CHAIRPERSON (Eric Roy): No, the member is out of order.

Hon DAVID PARKER (Labour) : We have heard Government members extolling the affordability of these tax cuts, and then in the same breath saying that they have inherited a difficult set of financial cards from the Labour Government. I want to put on record the nonsense that has already been written into history by the previous National Government. It left the prior Labour Government with debt that was 35 percent of GDP.

Hon Parekura Horomia: How much?

Hon DAVID PARKER: It was 35 percent of GDP. Not as bad as the National Government before that, which left the Labour Government with debt at 60 percent of GDP, but still too high. We inherited debt equal to 35 percent of GDP. We reduced it during the 9 years of wise stewardship under the Labour Government to 17 percent of GDP. The fiscal position of the Government is very, very good. We are hearing exaggerated rhetoric from the National-led Government that is now complaining that there are all sorts of hidden expenses. It is overstating things in respect of accident compensation. National members are saying that they have all sorts of problems and a difficult set of cards to play from here on. But the reality is that they have had a very good set of fiscal settings left to them—debt at 17 percent of GDP, and low unemployment, amongst the lowest unemployment in the world—and they still complain that they have a difficult set of cards. Over the next 3 years we will hear National members say they cannot do this, they cannot do that, and that it was the Labour Government’s fault.

But the reality is different. National has inherited an almost unparalleled position compared with most developed countries in the world. We are in a position to help people in New Zealand get through this recession, but this bill does not do it. It does not help the people who need it most. Low-income people do not get help under this bill. In fact, money comes out of their pockets, not just out of the pockets of those in KiwiSaver, although all of those in KiwiSaver are worse off no matter what their income is. All those who are on lower incomes, even if they are not in KiwiSaver, are worse off under Part 1 of this legislation. It is disgraceful. National is saying that Labour did not do enough for low-income people who did not have children. Yet this bill ignores the lowest-income group without children and does not give them any help. The National Government is set to increase New Zealand’s debt in a way that is unnecessary by giving greater tax cuts to those who are already well off, nothing to those who are worst off, and not changing the position of those families with children who have rising costs to meet and increasing debt. We will see increasing unemployment.

At the same time the Government is gutting the research and development effort that we need to fund our growing economy. Research and development expenditure in New Zealand is quite good at the Government level and it is poor at a private sector level. The research and development tax credit, which this part of the bill abolishes through the schedule, matches New Zealand’s position to Australia and, indeed, in some ways betters it. But this bill tears out that research and development tax credit in order to fund tax cuts for those who need those tax cuts less than the lowest-income people, who do not get anything under this legislation.

The other anomaly here is that we have had 3 years, preceded by 3 years, and preceded by 3 years before that, of the National Government saying that the threshold at which the highest marginal tax rate cut in was too low. It complained that the $69,000-income level at which the highest tax rate cut in was too low a threshold. The Labour Party, in its tax package, increased the threshold for the highest marginal tax rate to cut in at $80,000. What does this bill do? It does exactly the opposite of what the National Party said should happen. It actually drags back the threshold so that the highest tax rate cuts in at $70,000. That is the exact opposite of what National said for 9 long years in Opposition should be done. Nine years in planning what National should do with tax and it dishes up this irrational piece of legislation.

CRAIG FOSS (National—Tukituki) : I move, That the question be now put.

Hon NANAIA MAHUTA (Labour—Hauraki-Waikato) : The Māori Party members must be hanging their heads in shame on this bill right now. They must be shaking their heads, because I am absolutely sure that when they walked into their mana-enhancing relationship they did not realise they were delivering hardship to vulnerable families—or maybe they did realise that. At no point during the election campaign, when they were championing the rights of vulnerable people, of Māori families, of young people, of poor people, and of people without work, did they think that they would be supporting a measure like this, which delivers tax cuts to those who really do not need them, at the expense of the poor, the vulnerable, and the children in many of our communities. They must be hanging their heads down in shame.

We know that 74 percent of the people in Te Ururoa Flavell’s electorate of Waiariki earn less than $40,000. Yes, 74 percent of families in Waiariki earn less than $40,000. So when we look at who will really benefit from this measure we see that not many families in Waiariki will benefit. Clayton Cosgrove raised the point that people earning around $23,999 will get absolutely nothing. The Māori Party members must be hanging their heads in shame. They must be thinking again about the implications of a mana-enhancing relationship that puts at the centre-front of the stage a measure benefiting those who do not need it, at the expense of the vulnerable, the poor, children, and families in many communities around Aotearoa New Zealand. Let us see that one being explained to the Māori electorates. It is no wonder that the people in those electorates voted to have the Labour Government continue its policies; they knew that at least we do what we say we are going to do. We do not say one thing so that people will support us, then deliver something totally different.

As I said, that mana-enhancing relationship had better be explained very carefully to the 74 percent of Māori in Waiariki who earn less than $40,000, because they will be very concerned about what they are hearing today in this Chamber. They will be very concerned that the things they thought they were voting for in supporting members of the Māori Party are not being delivered. They have not been told about it. We are putting this legislation through in urgency. We are addressing the very issues that people really want to hear about, in urgency.

People have to ask themselves why, at a time of economic hardship, when there is a financial crisis, when many families just before Christmas are wondering how they are going to pull it all together over the next 2 years, the Government is doing that. What is the National Government—supported by ACT and the Māori Party—doing? It is delivering tax cuts at the expense of poor, vulnerable families in our community, and it needs to be accountable for that. That level of accountability has to ensure that people are not duped by the types of changes that will be bulldozed through the House over the next few days. People need to know about them. I can see Paul Hutchison looking at me quite carefully; the people of Tuakau, in his electorate, need to know the cost of this tax cut to those families in Tuakau, whom Mr Hutchison knows I represent, who will be negatively affected. They will not see a dime. They will not see any benefits from this policy. Mr Hutchison knows that and I know that. When we are at our next community meeting, I look forward to his explaining this policy to many members of my constituency.

Let us recap. At a time when the most vulnerable in our society need more support, not less, we have tax cuts that are not delivering to them, at all. People should be very concerned. Annette King, the previous Minister of Justice, raised very good points about the implications in terms of lifting about 220,000 children out of poverty. How will this measure benefit those families? There is no explanation from the other side of the Chamber. The Māori Party must be very, very concerned at this time. Those members should be hanging their heads in shame. As I said, 74 percent of the people in the Waiariki electorate earn less than $40,000, very few of whom will see any benefit from this measure today.

Dr PAUL HUTCHISON (National—Hunua) : I move, That the question be now put.

The CHAIRPERSON (Lindsay Tisch): The Hon Ruth Dyson.

CHRIS TREMAIN (Junior Whip—National) : I raise a point of order, Mr Chairperson. We have had 19 speeches on this part of the bill today. That is a significant number of speeches.

The CHAIRPERSON (Lindsay Tisch): I am the sole arbiter of the time allowed for the debate. I call the Hon Ruth Dyson.

Hon RUTH DYSON (Labour—Port Hills) : Mr Chairman, thank you for the opportunity to give my first contribution in this part of the debate. I am very keen to ask the Minister of Finance some questions, and I am even keener for him to answer them. That is because I have been watching his National colleagues respond to our contribution on this Taxation (Urgent Measures and Annual Rates) Bill, and it is very clear to me that National Party members, and in particular Chris Tremain and John Hayes, do not understand what is in the bill. Either they have not read it or had it explained to them, or the printed version is different from the draft they were given. We know that the taxation policy of the National Party was released in October. That was not very long ago. I would have thought that before a bill came before this Committee, the members of the party that is supporting it would have it explained to them.

First of all, I ask the Minister whether he has explained the bill to his colleagues. Do they know what is in it? Are they prepared to put their names to it, fully aware that they are increasing taxes for the lowest-paid and most vulnerable people in our community? [Interruption] The constituents of the Wairarapa should know that their member of Parliament, John Hayes, has confirmed that yes, he is prepared to put his name to a bill that increases the marginal tax rate for the lowest-income earners in our country.

I ask Mr English, as the Minister, to respond to this next question. Under existing law, what is the 2011 marginal tax rate for a person who is earning between $14,000 and $20,000 a year? Mr English does not know the answer to that, but the Hon Dr Michael Cullen has indicated he does, so if he interjects—

Hon Dr Michael Cullen: 12.5 percent.

Hon RUTH DYSON: It is 12.5 percent. That is the answer to that question. That is currently the 2011 marginal tax rate in the existing law. Under the legislation that we are now debating in urgency, which is a matter of critical importance because it increases the tax rate for the lowest-income earners in our country, what will be the marginal tax rate for those same people? What—and it will be in force immediately upon the implementation of this legislation—is it proposed to be?

One would think that the proposed rate might be lower than 12.5 percent, because those people are the lowest-income earners in New Zealand. Well, the answer is 21 percent. The current law is for the 2011 marginal tax rate to be 12.5 percent, and the proposal is to put it up to 21 percent. I ask Mr Hayes, which is higher: 12.5 or 21? The answer is that Bill English is proposing to this Parliament that the marginal tax rate for the lowest-income earners in New Zealand be increased from 12.5 percent to 21 percent, and all the National Party backbench members should know that before they put their names to this legislation. ACT probably thinks that that rate is getting close to being about right.

The Māori Party should know that its most vulnerable constituents, the people who make the most effort to work fewer hours than the full-time cut-in for the amazing new independent earner tax credit, are going to be penalised so that the chief executive of Telecom and the Prime Minister of New Zealand can get a lofty great tax cut. What is fair about that? What is progressive about that? How does that help any single individual or family, let alone the New Zealand economy? The answer is that it does not. It takes us back to the division, the poverty, and the disempowerment that we saw Bill English preside over as chair of the Finance and Expenditure Committee during the bad old days, with Ruth Richardson as Minister of Finance. During the election campaign people up and down the country said that National had said it would not go back to those days, and it would not penalise the most vulnerable people in New Zealand. Less than 24 hours into the start of this Parliament, we see promise after promise being broken by the incoming National Government. The most vulnerable people in our country are paying for that, and we will make sure that they know exactly what the National members are doing.

JOHN HAYES (National—Wairarapa) : I move, That the question be now put.

LYNNE PILLAY (Labour) : Thank you, Mr Chair, for recognising the importance of debating this horrible Taxation (Urgent Measures and Annual Rates) Bill. I think that this bill should be renamed the “Personal Interest Tax Cut Bill”. It is for the personal interest of the National Party, and its wealthy supporters who will benefit the most from this bill. It is the redistribution of wealth from the poor, the working families, and the modest-income earners in New Zealand to the wealthy. It is from a party that campaigned on a brighter future.

  • Sitting suspended from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m.
  • Debate interrupted.

Points of Order

Bills—Availability in Urgency

Hon Dr MICHAEL CULLEN (Labour) : I raise a point of order, Mr Chairperson. Before we resume, can I raise again the issue of the absence from the Table of the House of those bills for which urgency has been taken. There is now some public concern as well as concern from members of the House.

Hon GERRY BROWNLEE (Leader of the House) : I think that is a legitimate concern, and I will make every effort to ensure that those bills are available as the afternoon progresses.

Taxation (Urgent Measures and Annual Rates) Bill

In Committee

  • Debate resumed.

Part 1 Personal tax cuts (continued)

LYNNE PILLAY (Labour) : As I was saying before the lunch break, the personal tax cut part of this bill is actually a redistribution of wealth; a redistribution from working New Zealand families, from modest-income earners, and from beneficiaries to the wealthiest, who are the biggest beneficiaries of this bill. Every worker earning under $44,000, and particularly those who have families, will be worse off, yet those are the people who need tax cuts the most. Over 2 million New Zealanders—65 percent of New Zealanders—will not benefit, and some will be disadvantaged by this bill. That shows how out of touch the National Government is.

Let us look at the 800,000 people who have signed up to KiwiSaver. They have committed to saving 4 percent of their incomes, with fair employer contributions—and 4 percent is a fair employer contribution—[Interruption] Yes, this change is on top of the tax cuts. Now the employer contribution will be slashed to 2 percent, and that will have a dramatic impact on those people’s ability to save for their future, on their children whom they have signed up to KiwiSaver, and also on their dream of having a sizable deposit for a new home. National members have said they will maintain Working for Families; after their calling it “communism by stealth” and pouring vitriol over us for introducing that policy, they are going to maintain it. But, indeed, working families are going to be much worse off under National’s tax policy.

I think many, many Kiwis have been conned. They are expecting a sizable tax break. When Kiwi battlers get their first pay cheque in April they will realise that, oh my goodness, the future is not very bright for them, and they will wonder what they are going to do. They are on a low income, and they have not had a tax cut. Their income has been cut—not their taxes. They may think that State housing can help them get ahead, but guess what? Building new State housing has ceased under the National Government, as well. They may think about compensating for the cut in their income that, effectively, the tax increases have given them. They may try to get a better-paid job, so that they can break even and be where they were before. If they get a new job, they may get an extra 50c an hour, but guess what? They will have no security of tenure in that job. Under National’s policy, in the future they can be sacked any time within 3 months after being hired. That will be a big risk for them to take, if they want to better their income, to get ahead, and to get back to where they were before. Kiwis have been conned. They believed that there was going to be a brighter future. I say that if this is a brighter future, I would hate to see a gloomy future for Kiwis.

Another implication of the tax cuts is that we will have less money in the tax take. There will be a big drain of money from the tax take, because of the big tax cuts for those on high incomes. People such as members of this House will benefit tremendously, at the cost of low and modest income earners and Kiwi families. The implications of the tax cuts will affect us all. They will affect health spending. They will affect education. They will probably affect early childhood education, tertiary education, and apprenticeships—all the trade training that started under this Labour Government.

NATHAN GUY (Senior Whip—National) : I move, That the question be now put.

A party vote was called for on the question, That the question be now put.

Ayes 68 New Zealand National 57; ACT New Zealand 5; Māori Party 5; United Future 1.
Noes 52 New Zealand Labour 43; Green Party 8; Progressive 1.
Motion agreed to.

A party vote was called for on the question, That Part 1 be agreed to.

Ayes 68 New Zealand National 57; ACT New Zealand 5; Māori Party 5; United Future 1.
Noes 52 New Zealand Labour 43; Green Party 8; Progressive 1.
Part 1 agreed to.

Part 2 Research and development tax credits repeal

Hon DAVID CUNLIFFE (Labour—New Lynn) : Now we come to the heart of this bill. How is it funded? The goodies that are being handed out, apparently willy-nilly, have got to come from somewhere. They come from two substantial sources. The first is $3.5 billion from KiwiSaver, which we will be talking about in the debate on a subsequent part. The second is the cancellation of the 115 percent research and development tax credit. Through that measure, $1.5 billion will be saved. We believe that the Government will come to regret the day that it moved this part.

It is very interesting to begin with the analysis set out in the explanatory note of the bill. It recognises that there are significant externalities associated with research and development. The company undertaking the research and development can never capture all of the benefits. Innovation benefits the whole of society, the whole of our economy. It lifts the game, it improves productivity, and it drives us all forward. The data we have shows that companies that invest intensively in research and development tend, on average, to employ more people, to grow more quickly, to register more patents, to have higher productivity, and to export more products and services. Why would the Government not want to encourage such companies? Moreover, how could it begin its year with the commitment that it will do everything it can to focus on productivity and growth, then cancel one of the better growth tools in the innovation tool box—the research and development tax credit?

The second issue we have is one of trans-Tasman equivalence or business diversion. It is accepted that our colleagues in Australia give their Government a much more proactive role in boosting research and development, both directly—historically—through the magnitude of its subsidies to the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation and many other organisations, and indirectly through significant subsidies and tax concessions for innovative firms. One of the principal reasons why New Zealand’s research and development tax credit was brought in in the first place was to ensure equivalence between New Zealand’s innovative firms and those of their colleagues across the Tasman—to make sure that the Government’s footprint was not accentuating any trend towards trans-Tasman business migration. That theme was picked up by the current Government—then Opposition—during the election campaign. The bogey of New Zealanders moving across the Tasman was repeated at every opportunity, like a mantra. So what has happened? On the first business day of the House, the National Government attempts to repeal the research and development tax credit, which has been one of the sources of guaranteed trans-Tasman equivalence.

The reaction has been completely predictable. Selwyn Pellet, the chief executive of one of the Deloitte/Unlimited Fast50 fastest-growing companies—Imarda—said: “We are right this minute deciding where we do R&D whether it’s New Zealand or Australia and the removal of the tax credit here negatively incentivises the decision to bring it back to New Zealand.” The Manufacturers and Exporters Association has been highly critical of this bill. It has been highly critical of the removal of the research and development tax credit—which was, to be fair, signalled before the election. It has been highly critical of the environment that New Zealand manufacturers, exporters, and innovators have to cope with. This move makes it worse.

When we look at the ledger of what is being done and what is being undone, we have to ask why. On the one hand we have the removal of something we know is generating sound returns; on the other hand it is going in order to fund a consumption tax cut that is both highly inequitable and badly designed. It is so badly designed that the explanatory note of the bill states that neither the proper consultation nor the regulatory impact assessment has been completed, and the impacts have not been quantified.

Some of the key issues, as we debated in the debate on Part 1—[Interruption]—9 years to do it—are, first, that this is a long-term fix for a short-term problem. It is a structural tax change to address a recession trend. Second, we are putting in place a consumption tax cut—funded largely by borrowing and these productivity tools—whereas what we need is something that will lift productivity itself. In that respect, this cut is in extremely stark relief.

I think the reaction of general commentators is instructive at this point. John Armstrong from the New Zealand Herald said the winners from this package, taken on balance, are easy to identify: working singles and couples without children. The comparative losers are families or those on below the average wage. Jenny McManus from the Independent said: “Voters awaiting National’s grand plan for managing the effects of the global financial crisis will be disappointed at the tax and economic package …”. Jo Doolan from Ernst and Young said that she is “gutted” at the package: “The whole thing is hurried and ill-conceived. … We need to develop a savings culture and this sort of thing doesn’t help.” Gordon Campbell said: “Putting tax cuts ahead of science and research neatly underlines the lack of vision, or sensible strategy for growth in the National package—”.

I know from walking around the press gallery that journalists—and, no doubt, soon the public—know what is going on. They know that, despite the rhetoric of the election campaign, on this first business week of the House certain things are being done that deliver certain benefits to constituencies that have it “owing to them”. Surprisingly enough, it is not our innovative exporting businesses that are getting the nod here; it is the financial sector and top-income earners who will be the general beneficiaries of the package. It is our poorest Kiwis, our struggling families, and, oddly, our innovative businesses that will pay for it.

Leaving aside the equity arguments that we discussed in the debate on Part 1, the lack of logic between the negative productivity impacts of this move and Government members’ stated aim—even if we take them at their word—is extraordinary and compelling. Mr English, in speaking to Part 1, said: “Well, we poked and prodded at your plan. We campaigned on ours. Our having been elected, there is no need for our plan to be scrutinised.” So there is no need for it to be scrutinised, no need for the select committee process, and no need for bills to be tabled? The bills to be debated in the rest of the week are still not on the Table. That one has gone through an election campaign is justification, apparently, for setting aside the normal process of Parliament. Of course, we have seen the lie to the proposition that “No one is worse off, because certain changes have not happened yet.” This bill undermines measures that have already been passed into law, and therefore the Opposition is fully justified in showing that people are worse off.

In summing up, taken as a whole, the retrenchment of this research and development tax credit will be bad for our best businesses, and bad for New Zealand. It will be bad because it is a poor source of funding for a misguided bill. But even if one takes the Government at its word and swore for a moment that these tax changes are necessary, funding them by removing the research and development tax incentive does not serve even this Government’s stated ambition of lifting productivity and growth.

Dr PAUL HUTCHISON (National—Hunua) : I am grateful for the opportunity to speak on Part 2, “Research and development tax credits repeal”. This is a very sobering part and it has been undertaken with great thought over a period of time—

Hon David Cunliffe: Minutes!

Dr PAUL HUTCHISON: That is quite wrong. This move was indicated quite clearly in National’s pre-election policy, and the great concern was about the quality of the investment. If we look around the world, we see one of the points made in Australia’s innovation policy of 2002 is that unless the basic business environment is optimal, it is very hard for research and development and innovation to thrive. This is underlined in the foreword to the policy where the point is made that it is very important to have a low, broad-based, simple tax system, that it is important to have a flexible labour market, and that it is important to have an optimal regulatory regime.

All these things will be carried out by the National Government, and the direct opposite happened, unfortunately, under the Labour Government. Nevertheless, there was a question, at one stage of events, of whether 10 percent of this tax credit would remain. However, due to the extraordinary circumstances—the legacy of the Labour Government—that were established in the pre-election fiscal update whereby the seriousness of the international crisis was beginning, at last, to be felt, and certainly was ignored very largely by the Labour Government, the realisation was that it was inappropriate to continue with this tax credit.

It is important to remind the Committee that in the select committee, prior to this tax credit coming into being, it was opposed by the major accountancy firms, it was opposed by Treasury, and it was opposed by Business New Zealand. However, once it did come in, the major accountancy firms set up a travelling roadshow, around the country, to give people an opportunity to use the tax credit. The great danger was that it would not be a quality investment, research that was going to be carried out anyway would be carried out, there would be new business activities that were inappropriate to research and development, and, on balance, it was felt that, in these dire economic times—times left as a legacy of the poor management of the Labour Government—it was appropriate to repeal the tax credits.

I for one am absolutely committed to championing the evolution of research and development in New Zealand into the future. But we want to ensure that the spend is a quality spend, and I am quite sure that over time the National Government will achieve exactly that. I remind the Committee that in the Hon Bill English’s media release of 9 December he stated: “We firmly believe in the importance of research and development to keep New Zealand internationally competitive, but the tax credits aren’t the most effective way to ensure that. We will work with business to better target government expenditure on innovation.”

I am sure that Mr Hodgson must feel very disappointed, given the fact that he worked on this matter for about 9 years. I think it was back in 1988—or maybe 1998—when he proposed that such a thing should happen. Once again it took 9 long years and more. It was almost equivalent—

Hon JIM ANDERTON (Leader—Progressive) : The really scary thing about that speech is that the member said that it had taken a long time and a lot of thought to come up with this policy. I would have been much more comforted if Government members told me they gave it no thought and had no time to spend on it. The fact that they spent a lot of time and thought on it and came up with a dog of a policy like this is almost beyond belief. But the incredible thing is that we are told that we cannot afford to have research and development tax credits at a critical time for the New Zealand—let alone the world—economy, but we can have, and we can afford, in the face of this enormous financial crisis around the world, personal tax cuts that deliver 132 times more for the most affluent New Zealanders compared with the poorest. We can afford that, but because of the world crisis we cannot afford to have research and development in New Zealand.

Then we are told that we really want a quality spend. Well there is one thing that is slightly worse than that and that is no spend at all, which is what this bill proposes. Part 2 is about destroying research and development capability in New Zealand. This part is an example of a Government that has put class warfare ahead of the need to grow our economy. We heard a lot about growing the economy yesterday—going for growth! The Government is going for growth one day, but the next day it is cancelling all of the research and development credits proposed in previous legislation. On day one it is going for growth; on day two it is cancelling the possibility of growth by having no research and development credits.

The most incredible thing of all is that it is not about punishing all businesses in New Zealand, it is about punishing the most innovative and creative businesses in New Zealand—the businesses we depend on for our economic growth and development. Those are the very businesses the Government is targeting with this bill. It will target those companies in a way that is almost beyond belief in that, at the same time, someone who is earning, say, $750,000 a year will be 132 times better off than someone who earns $25,000 a year. So even if the Government is going to target the most innovative businesses in the community, one would think it would help those who are the poorest, but, no, it is doing the reverse.

The National Government is clearly opposed to innovation. It can say what it likes, but it is opposed to it. The Government is opposed to business success, because the very businesses we want to succeed are the ones this bill punishes. The National Government is opposed to the agricultural backbone of our economy. I never thought I would have all the evidence to say that in this Chamber, but this bill is clear evidence of it. The bill is what it looks like when we have a Government run by sneering city financiers instead of people who understand the real productive economy.

Allan Peachey: Oh, ha, ha!

Hon JIM ANDERTON: I will prove it to the member then. Can Government members answer three questions? How many times in the Speech from the Throne was the word “agriculture” used? None. There was not one mention of it in the Speech from the Throne. Where was the Minister of Agriculture in having any input into that? How many times in the Speech from the Throne was the word “exports”, on which the First World standard of living of this country depends, mentioned?

Hon Ruth Dyson: How many?

Hon JIM ANDERTON: None. There was not one mention of exports. How many times were the words “scientific research” mentioned in the Speech from the Throne? Scientific research is what our First World standard of living will depend on for the future in terms of the quality of the processed goods we produce and export to the world.

Hon David Cunliffe: Twice?

Hon JIM ANDERTON: No.

Hon David Cunliffe: Once?

Hon JIM ANDERTON: No, none. In the Speech from the Throne there was no mention of scientific research, which will set up this ambitious, visionary Government for New Zealand. There was no mention of the most important backbone of the economy of New Zealand—our agricultural production—which members opposite suggest they represent. There was not a mention. I wonder what I will hear from Federated Farmers tomorrow. I got a framed certificate for putting agriculture at the top. Government members are not even putting it at the bottom. It does not get any mention whatsoever. Despite all the cant we had from Dr Hutchison, scientific research could not even get a mention in the Speech from the Throne.

CRAIG FOSS (National—Tukituki) : I will totally ignore the previous speech, as will most of New Zealand probably, because it was not particularly relevant. [Interruption] That has woken the Opposition members up. I am sure those members had a very good lunch. Part 2, “Research and development tax credits repeal”—

Hon Dr Michael Cullen: Tukituki—farming, horticulture, viticulture?

CRAIG FOSS: If members opposite want to have a bit of a go, I can tell them that there is an interesting provision in clause 20(2) that makes a change to the Income Tax Act 2007, which came before the Finance and Expenditure Committee. The current Opposition spokesman on finance may have further advice on that, because clause 20(2) states: “The definition of district health board is repealed.” He may want to speak on various other ways of doing that later on.

Hon David Cunliffe: I think you need to focus on finance.

CRAIG FOSS: Yes, I will focus on finance, because this is a financial bill.

When the 2007 bill came before the Finance and Expenditure Committee there were many, many submissions on the research and development tax credits. From memory, most of the submissions were along the lines that the tax credits would create tax arbitrage and accounting arbitrage. Of course, everyone argued that he or she should be included and that perhaps someone else should not be included. In fact, I remember that an organisation that is partially funded by the Crown came before the Finance and Expenditure Committee and told us the truth. It told us what was really going on. Then I subsequently found out that the organisation had a very interesting phone call from a Minister’s office not long after that, telling it that it should never appear before a committee like that without the Minister knowing, and that he did not like what it had said. But, anyway, I digress a wee bit.

Hon David Cunliffe: A wee bit? How about coming back to the bill?

CRAIG FOSS: I mentioned the words “accounting arbitrage” before, and I will explain that term to the member later. What is going on here is that the higher the tax burden is and the more imposing the tax structure is on an economy, the greater the incentive is to find ways around it, through it, to plead for a credit, and to take something from someone else and get a credit for oneself. That is what happens, and it is what is going on with regard to the research and development tax credit.

Some members have argued that the tax credit has only just started, so how can we say all these things? Very simply, as my colleague Mr Hutchison noted earlier, there were roadshows going around the place. Companies were going to them and they were being told: “Show us your expenditure sheet, show us your models, and we will try to make them fit the new definition of research and development in order to get you a tax credit. We will try to do that. Of course, we cannot do it straight away, but we will go through your books and try to find what we can to get you some benefit out of this.” So the roadshows were being entrepreneurial if one likes, but it was to the detriment of the New Zealand economy because it did not add to the quantum of research and development in New Zealand.

About 3 months before the election I had a very interesting meeting with a company that had started to set up some research and development under the model in the existing legislation. It was looking to invest the money and to take some benefits from it with its 15 percent. That was OK, but then the company told me about the problem. The problem was that it could neither attract to New Zealand nor keep the people here to do the research and development, because of New Zealand’s high personal tax structure. It was, quite simply, because of that.

The finance spokesperson on the other side of the Chamber, David Cunliffe, alluded at the start of this debate to the fact that these research and development tax credits have been—or at least will be—repealed in order to help fund the personal tax cuts that we announced long before the election, and that were resoundingly endorsed by New Zealand. The point is that we can have all the credits we like, but if we do not have the people who are attracted to New Zealand stay here, who can be rewarded for the risk they take in being here and being involved in research and development in New Zealand, it actually does not matter. Unless we have those people here adding to our economy, we can have all the research and development tax credits we like, and it will not matter. Some of the stuff I saw going on was stuff that was being structured in New Zealand to utilise Australian people to whip over here and do the research and development, so that local companies could enjoy the research and development tax credit, and of course the individuals concerned were located in a lower tax environment—that is, in Australia.

The research and development tax credit part of the bill—the clauses here—is about priority, because there are some hard choices to be made. Once the books were opened—or at least partially opened—in the pre-election fiscal update, and when they continued to be opened a bit more recently with all the other shenanigans going on, it actually made it even more pertinent that we repeal these credits right now.

MOANA MACKEY (Labour) : Well, we just learnt from Mr Foss in that extraordinary speech that he does not want highly qualified, skilled, educated people coming from other countries to work in New Zealand because of the research and development tax credit to help grow our economy, to grow our tax base, and to pay for all the things that New Zealanders want paid for. The research and development tax credit has, apparently, been keeping people away from New Zealand and if we get rid of it—dumbing down our economy—as this legislation does, that would be good for New Zealand. Well, that kind of falls in line with the Speech from the Throne from the Prime Minister that we heard yesterday. We can gather from that that the only turbocharging we will get is a turbocharging of empty slogans and empty rhetoric. For all their talk about innovation, for all their talk about turbocharging everything, nothing in this bill does that—nothing. In fact, it does the complete opposite.

I wish the Minister for Research, Science and Technology were in the Chamber so that he could speak to this issue. We asked him questions earlier because we wanted to confirm that the third of this money that is being saved from cutting this research and development tax credit will still go to Crown research institutes and universities to fund research; he refused to answer earlier on. He refused to answer, but I think that the scientific community deserves to know whether that money will still go there. I am sure if Dr Paul Hutchison were in Cabinet he would have an answer like that, because that is the kind of man he is. I am very sad that he did not get that portfolio; he worked very hard in it when he was in Opposition, but, no, it was whisked away from him and given to someone else.

Hon Pete Hodgson: What’s his name?

MOANA MACKEY: Oh, I cannot remember. He has a lovely new haircut, though. I say to Mr Foss that it is appalling that he stands up in this Chamber and says that he will not respond to the speech made by the Hon Jim Anderton. He deliberately said he would ignore his speech. Why? That is because he has no answers to that speech. He has no answers to answer why, when we are going into a global crisis and when liquidity in the capital venture market will become more restricted, we will be penalising and raising taxes on our most innovative companies. These are the companies that we should be putting front and centre, and the companies that we should be saying are the ones that will help lift us out of this global recession, and that on average export more, pay more highly, and grow our economy more.

What is the National Party’s answer to that? The National-ACT - Māori Party Government will raise the taxes paid by those companies by getting rid of a research and development tax credit, which is supported—for all that Mr Foss may say—by all their friends. We know that when National announced their tax policy people were flying all over the country to meet with Mr English to say: “Don’t do this. This is a huge mistake.” It is a mistake for the economy, it is a mistake for our exporters, it is a mistake for our manufacturers, and it will be a mistake for New Zealand when it comes to growth and coming through this recession in a positive way.

What Dr Hutchison says is that they just rort it—scientists just rort it. This is a member who went around the country campaigning on how we need to trust scientists, we need to let them do their own thing, and that there is far too much management of what they do. Then in the Chamber today he stands here and says that the scientists just rort it—it is not new stuff, they just write down stuff they are already doing as new stuff, so they are just rorting it. He also, by the way, wants to get rid of the $700 million Fast Forward Fund and direct the way that that goes as well, and direct that solely to try to get out of the mess National has got itself into on the emissions trading scheme.

I refer to Jacqueline Rowarth, who is the Massey University director of agriculture. She said that she is incredibly concerned about the ramification of the removal of the research and development tax credit, and she says: “Australia removed its R and D tax credit because it thought people were fiddling the books.”—as Dr Hutchison thinks—“Then it reinstated it within a year because the downturn was worse than that fiddling.”

So when Dr Hutchison gets up and talks about how this is the way the world is going, he is actually not telling New Zealanders the truth. The fact is that the Labour Government brought in this tax credit to make New Zealand internationally competitive. Members on this side of the Chamber understood that these kinds of policies will assist our small and innovative businesses, our businesses that are going to lift our economy, and our businesses that do a significant amount of exporting. Even Business New Zealand chief executive Phil O’Reilly, who has been quoted by Dr Hutchison as saying he was opposed to it, has said that we need to give this research and development tax credit time. John Key said that no one has taken it up yet.

Then we heard from the Manufacturers and Exporters Association’s Mr Walley, who said that that was a daft statement, as the tax year has not even finished yet. How would John Key know unless he had the power of clairvoyance—and I am not saying that he does not claim to have the power of clairvoyance—how many people will take it up?

DAVID BENNETT (National—Hamilton East) : When we talk about the research and development tax credit it is important to remember some of the history of what has happened in the Labour Party.

Hon Pete Hodgson: You come from the Waikato, remember?

DAVID BENNETT: Yes, let us talk about the Waikato and what the Labour Party has been doing there. It is pretty rich for these guys to come into this Chamber and talk about research and development tax credits, when AgResearch was laying off staff before the election and they did not do a thing. Where did we see the Labour Party in the election campaign? In Hamilton East we campaigned against the Labour Party. Labour members would come along to campaign meetings and say “Look at our research and development policy.” All I had to ask them was why they were laying off people at AgResearch. They would not come to the support of scientists.

The reality is that scientists have never got anything out of the Labour Party, and they never will. Scientists’ incomes are about 15 percent lower than any other profession, and the Labour Party did not come and help them, did it? It had 9 years of talking about how it loves science, how it loves research and development, how that is the future of New Zealand, and how we will have a knowledge wave and a global economy. What did it do? It gave up on the knowledge wave and it did not give those increases in wages. In fact, it put AgResearch in a position where it had to lay off staff to meet its budget. That is what the Labour Party does: it says one thing and then it does another. Reality speaks, and the reality is that the National Party has come to the aid of scientists, helped out, and made sure that we do not have the degree of job losses that the Labour Party started out with.

There has been a great change in mood, because people realise that reality is more important than words. Labour members are bringing out words today—look, they have all gone silent now! They know they are in trouble. They know that they cannot go out there and say what they have been saying, because it is not true. They know that they were the ones screwing the research and development budgets by making sure it was hard for AgResearch to employ people, and that is the reality of the situation. How dare the Labour Party come in here today and try to say how it is the research and development party and how it is there for agricultural research! Labour should have put its money in front of it when it was in Government; it did not, so it should not come in here and try to do it now. It had its chance and it blew it—it will not get another chance to do it again.

The reality is that the biggest thing we can do for the research and development sector is to give it a growing economy. That is what it needs. If there is growth in the economy, businesses will invest in the future. That is the reality. These tax cuts are the first step in providing that growth economy. This is what the National Party is about. We have a programme for growth, and these tax cuts are the first step. If we really want to look at what will be best for research and development in the future, we see that it is the growing economy that the National Party will produce. We will invest in this country’s infrastructure, and we will give people money in their hands so that they can spend it in this economy.

We will not invest all our money in the US stock exchange, just as Mr Cullen did, and lose it. We will look after our people in our country, and we will build a stronger country. This is what will happen. The reality is that New Zealand will be stronger, we will have a growing economy, we will have a position where businesses want to invest in research and development, and we will be able to deliver to the agricultural, the research, and the scientific sectors the vision they require. They will actually see a future ahead of themselves, because they will see corporates and enterprises making money that will be able to be invested in research and development. This is not a question about the tax credit as such; this is a question about how we provide the environment for research and development to flourish. To create that environment we need a growing economy, and the National Party is committed to that.

Labour members are sitting there now and trying to attack this legislation on the basis of research and development expenditure. Well, that is not the case. The case is that the Labour Party did not come to the aid of research and development, did not come to the aid of AgResearch before the election—you just let them go. You were quite happy to see those people go out of work; you went through an election campaign not actually doing that—

Hon Trevor Mallard: Point of order—

The CHAIRPERSON (Lindsay Tisch): I know what—

Hon Trevor Mallard: If you are aware of it, you should be stopping it.

The CHAIRPERSON (Lindsay Tisch): The member cannot use the word “you”.

DAVID BENNETT: The Labour Party did not come to the aid of that sector. It did not come to the aid of those people who were going to lose their jobs.

Hon Dr MICHAEL CULLEN (Labour) : Parts of this bill are either unfair, dishonest, incompetent, or plain stupid. This is the plain stupid part—the abolition of the research and development tax credit. The member has just been talking about tax cuts. Let me enlighten him: this is a tax increase. This is a tax increase of $330 million a year on business. This part claws back what is getting on for half of the corporate tax rate cut. Why should we be surprised? Which Governments have ever cut corporate taxes in New Zealand? Only ever a Labour Government has, in 1998 and in 2008. Those are the only times in the last 50 years that corporate tax rates have been cut in New Zealand, and both times were by Labour Governments. National has never ever cut those rates.

So when we cut it, this was yet another one of those bitter little things for Mr English, which he had to reverse some way or another, because he was not allowed to let Labour have any credit for anything. So he is clawing it back, but is he clawing it back off everybody? He is clawing it back off the most innovative, productive, and exporting firms in the country. Let me tell Mr Bennett something else. What was he referring to as Agriculture New Zealand?

David Bennett: AgResearch.

Hon Dr MICHAEL CULLEN: No—that is a Crown research institute. AgResearch is a Crown research institute that has been underperforming, actually, for some years. But that is public sector research and development. If the member knew anything, he would know that New Zealand’s underperformance is in private sector research and development. Why? That is because we are about the only country in the world, up until recently, that has not been offering any inducement to private sector research and development. In an ideal world no country would offer incentives for research and development. In an ideal world we would have a level playing field, and decisions would be made by the market, and nothing would happen. But once some countries have research and development incentives, it becomes very hard.

You see, National is still playing the early 1990s’ trick. It is still Star Trek in reverse for National. Its members still want to go where no man will follow. They still want to go down a route with no research and development tax incentive, and they will be surprised that firms will shift research and development to Australia where there are research and development tax incentives. What have we heard for years from National members? “Everybody who is bright has gone to Australia.” And looking over the other side of the Chamber whenever they said it, I thought maybe it was true, because what was left, from what I could see, was not bright. They said: “We’ve got to stop people going to Australia.”

So what do they do? They do something to threaten portability of superannuation, and they remove the research and development tax incentive designed to get research and development in New Zealand and to keep it here, because they want it to go there. And what are they going to make it up with? They are going to put more money into the State’s research and development. When they go up on the platform and slaver in front of Business New Zealand, the Chambers of Commerce, and the Business Roundtable, dripping sincerity, say, in the way only Tony Ryall and others can: “It is the private sector only that creates wealth in New Zealand, so what we will do is take money out of the private sector and put it in the public sector.”

That is what is called Logic 101 for the National Party—just follow the logic: “Only the private sector creates wealth, so let’s take that wealth away and give it to the public sector. And if a public sector identity or entity is not performing particularly well, and not managing to live within budget, we’ll just give them more money. We won’t ask any questions about what they are doing. We won’t say whether other CRIs, such as HortResearch, might be doing better research. We won’t say whether they should work better with the private sector. No, we’ll just give them some more money.”

That is what the Government has done. So that is wise, is it? That will grow the economy? I listened yesterday to the sorts of clichés, in a kind of National Film Unit documentary for the 1950s way, that finished off the Speech from the Throne, and I heard about the turbocharging of the New Zealand economy. I now understand it. We are going to have a turbocharged 1953 Morris Oxford, and we will call it the New Zealand economy. I have to tell the Committee that a modern Japanese mini-car can outstrip a turbocharged 1953 Morris Oxford. It is no wonder that the leading agricultural scientist in the National Party was not allowed to be a Cabinet Minister. He was parked on the Speaker’s bench, instead, because in fact he might know too much about some of these areas to be involved in making decisions.

Do we really want to grow this economy, and how do we do it? We do it in the modern world by developing human capital, by investing in research and development, and by investing in new products. In New Zealand we do that particularly in the primary sector industries, because that is where our comparative advantage lies. So what is the Government doing? It is abolishing what was going to be a $2 billion Fast Forward Fund to invest in agriculture and to invest in the primary sector, and it is giving a lick and a promise that it will increase funding for the Crown research institutes.

But, of course, Mr English is about to work on a Budget. He is about to work on a Budget that will project cash deficits in excess of $10 billion a year by the end of the forecast period. So do Mr Hutchison and others think they will get this extra money in large amounts for Crown research institutes? That will be a lick and a promise; it will get pushed out and squeezed, and will not look like the Fast Forward Fund. But that fund was there, it was locked in, it was provided for, and it was going to happen. The Labour Government was getting ready to do it. It is a bit like broadband, where people are lined up ready to put their stuff in. They have made the applications, but now they will have to wait 18 months or more for National to work out how actually to operationalise its funding in that area. We will wait ages.

We have firms working in research and development, but we are told they are rorting the system. Well, how do we know? Nobody has had a research and development tax incentive approved by the Inland Revenue Department yet. They have yet to apply. Indeed, the only complaints that I have heard of is that it is too hard to get the incentive. It is not too easy to rort it; it is too hard to get it. Indeed, we will find that out after April when people apply, but they knew. Indeed, National members did not put lots of thought into this. It was not a well-developed policy to abolish the research and development tax incentive. National announced its policy months ago. The policy was to cut the incentive to 10 percent—which is at the lower range of international comparability, whereas the 15 percent was at the higher range of international comparability—to save a bit of money.

Then, of course, those members had the preview, and for some peculiar reason they did not think the preview was going to show a worsening situation compared with the Budget. They knew what was going on in the world. It was pretty obvious to anybody that the world was slowing down faster than we had all thought in April of this year. Then they said: “Oh, my gosh!”. We promised the average person on the average wage a $50-a-week tax cut. Well, we can pretend that it is not on top of Labour’s package, so that will save us a lot of money. And now we need to squeeze and push. So what goes?”.

What goes is the remaining 10 percent of the research and development tax credit. This is called going for growth—$2 per week, on average, per taxpayer to pay for the research and development tax credit. That, I tell Mr Bennett, will really turbocharge the New Zealand economy. It will be an extra couple of dollars a week of spending power in the average taxpayer’s pocket, but no doubt it will be spent in large part on imported consumer goods. It might provide about the equivalent of one drop of petrol for the South Chinese economy, not for the New Zealand economy. The Government should be investing in the private sector to gear up. The private sector has been woefully inadequate in New Zealand in investing, in almost any way, in future development—such as research and development, human capital, and new plant and machinery. So the Labour Government lowered the corporate tax rate. We increased depreciation rates. We brought in the research and development tax credit. We put forward an integrated Skills Strategy, and improved the investment in that Skills Strategy in the workplace.

Those are the drivers of economic growth, not piddling little tax cuts going into consumption to buy stuff not even noticed—not even a block of cheese, barely a slice of cheese, not even a half of the kind of loaf that Paul Hutchison would buy every day. He would not buy the $1 loaf at the garage; he would buy the $6.99 special loaf down at the Italian bakery. This tax cut would not even buy half of one of those loaves of bread a week, and we are somehow going to turbocharge this economy. Well, we might be slightly heavier, we might be slightly weightier, but we will not have a faster-moving economy as a result of this part of the bill.

National is reducing savings, and investment in research and development and human capital, and calling that turbocharging. This is National going for growth. I say this is the worst of all possible nightmares for anybody with any aesthetic sense. This is Ruth Richardson without a tracksuit.

Hon BILL ENGLISH (Minister of Finance) : Well, Dr Cullen is wrong about one thing. I do give him quite a bit of credit—or whatever the terminology was that he used—as easily the most competent member of the previous Labour Government. He did all the hard work, and he has something to show for it, but none of the rest of the members of that Government do, including the previous Prime Minister. I give Dr Cullen full credit for the huge effort he put in while he was the Minister of Finance.

That does not mean, of course, that he was right about everything, and it does not mean that when the Government changes there will not be different priorities. That is really what this debate on the research and development tax incentive is about. It is an idea with some merit. The question is whether it has sufficient merit to be put ahead of all the other calls on the Government’s resources, including what was National’s top priority in Opposition, and what remains its top priority now that we are in Government, and that is to reduce personal income tax rates. In the situation that New Zealand is in, with the economic outlook that we face, we have to make choices about priorities. Opposition members think the world is always the way that they experienced it when in Government; they experienced a fiscal tsunami every year of waves of money crashing on to the Government beach, where they lazed around, deciding among themselves how to give it out to someone.

Hon Tony Ryall: Like some sort of version of From Here to Eternity.

Hon BILL ENGLISH: That is right. It may well be that any Government in that situation would behave in the same way. I happen to think that Labour is more partial to enjoying giving out other peoples’ money than perhaps other Governments would be. But that was the business of Government. That has now changed. Now we have to make decisions about priorities. In the case of economic growth, we did not believe that this tax incentive would be a sufficient driver of it. The Opposition believes that it would be. All I can say is the Labour Government floundered in the knowledge wave. After 7 or 8 years, and hundreds of millions of initiatives driven off the idea that the economy could be transformed, we ended up with a conversion on the road to Damascus whereby the only member of the Progressive Party suddenly decided that New Zealand was about primary production. Well, that was fantastic. It just happened to contradict all the policy that that Government had tried to implement for the previous 6 or 7 years.

The reality is that a National-led Government with a good understanding of, and strong representation from, the whole productive sector of the New Zealand economy is focusing on lower tax rates, less regulation, better infrastructure, and higher education standards. Certainly, we could focus on 16 other objectives. Every strategy of the previous Government that I read had about 16 other objectives—all contradictory, none of them achieved, but lots of meetings that gave the impression of action. Well, we will not go down that path.

We have discussed the research and development tax incentive with people who are using it, and, actually, we get contradictory stories. One of the strongest advocates owned up in my presence that he had spent $70,000 on the accountant, and it turned out that the research and development tax credit was only $50,000. The deal he had was to give the accountant 40 percent of any recoverable credit, which I gather is the upper end of the going rate. Most accounting firms are pitching themselves at 20 percent to 30 percent. They turn up to a business with their Australian supervisor, go through the books, work out what the tax credit might be—it is turning out to be quite a bit smaller than many companies had expected—then take about one-third of it as their fee. Well, that is innovative, but it is not what we would call innovation.

In Australia, it is not 3,000 highly productive companies that get this credit; banks and mining companies make up by far the largest number of claimants of this incentive. In New Zealand, the banks have their own ideas of what they regard as research and development. They now represent themselves as being essentially information technology companies, because they are based on information technology, and any development that they do in that area must count for the research and development tax credit—and how would one say no to that?

A research and development tax credit is not a bad idea; it is just that it is not the priority of the newly elected Government. We are focusing on basic things that will affect every organisation, company, and household, such as lower taxes and better infrastructure.

Hon PETE HODGSON (Labour—Dunedin North) : I did hear the Minister of Finance say that we have to make choices about priorities. I did hear him say that. In fact, that is what Governments do all the time; they do it all the time. I would like to suggest that the choice that the Government has made to eliminate the tax credit for research and development is simply the wrong choice. I want to adduce a little bit of evidence to that effect.

Members will be aware that New Zealand is a poor performer in the research and development stakes. The normal way of measuring research and development effort is to measure research and development expenditure as a percentage of GDP, and to look at it in the public sector and in the private sector. Compared with countries around the world, in the public sector New Zealand underperforms a little. We are around about three-quarters of the Western World average. It would be good if we could get ourselves up to 100 percent or, indeed, 120 percent of the Western World average, but we are below the Western World average in the public sector. However, in the private sector we are not at 75 percent of the Western World average; we are at 33 percent of the Western World average. New Zealand private sector investment in research and development is amongst the lowest in the world. The good news is that it used to be even lower. In 1999 it was not 33 percent of the Western World average; it was 25 percent of the Western World average. A number of things have contributed to that increase, such as the Venture Investment Fund, Technology for Business Growth, the Pre-seed Accelerator Fund, the law around venture capital, and the establishment of the Incubator system, and on and on it goes. Throughout the past 9 years a lot of private sector effort and a lot of Government effort have gone into improving private sector investment in research and development. It has gone from 25 percent of the Western World average to 33 percent. That is progress, but it ain’t much progress.

When the Labour Government decided to introduce the tax credit at 15 percent—and it came in on 1 April 2008—the Inland Revenue Department had to determine how much money it would forgo. It had to do the modelling. It knew that it would take a while for private sector entities to get used to the new system. It knew that it would take a while for companies to gear up their research and development. It knew that it would take a while for companies to stop oozing offshore and to start coming onshore with their research and development. It knew that it would take a little while, so it did a 4-year projection, and at the end of 4 years the amount of money forgone—the amount of money going to businesses for innovation—would have been $332 million a year.

The point is that if we do our sums and work out how much research and development would have to come to book in order for $332 million to be forgone, we see that New Zealand’s private sector research and development would rise from 33 percent of the Western World average to almost exactly twice that—to almost exactly 66 percent of the Western World average. That is still below 100 percent of the Western World average, but way better than 33 percent. Of course, we know that it would include some research and development that was under-reported. That is known, that is taken into account, and that is modelled. It is also known, to give the case cited by the Minister of Finance, that the banks might call themselves information technology companies and claim that their software development was somehow eligible for a research and development tax credit. So we put a cap on that. We said that a company could not claim more than $2 million per year for software. That was a black hole that we would not let the Inland Revenue Department fall into. So the tax credit was designed to be both generous in terms of rate and limiting in terms of rorts. It was designed that way.

We had long enough to design it. As the previous Minister of Finance, the Hon Michael Cullen, said, he wished he had done it earlier. But, you see, if the Inland Revenue Department predicts that New Zealand’s reported private sector research and development expenditure will go from one-third of the Western World average to two-thirds of the Western World average over the next 3½ years, then I suggest that if we are to pass this legislation, we have to be prepared to acknowledge the fact that that expenditure will stay at 33 percent over the next 3½ years, that therefore the economic base of New Zealand will stay at a lesser amount than it would otherwise have been, and that therefore the taxable base will be a lesser amount than it would otherwise have been.

This is fiscal nonsense. This is, as Dr Cullen said, the stupid part of the legislation. To have the good Dr Paul Hutchison get up and try to defend it—well, all I can say is that I saw him wringing his hands, and he wrung his hands for the whole 5 minutes that he spoke. I heard Mr Bennett, the member of Parliament from the Waikato—I am sorry; I have forgotten his first name—get up and tell Labour members to put our money where our mouth is when it comes to primary production research and development. My retort, rather obviously, is that we did—$0.7 billion. It was called New Zealand Fast Forward, and this Minister of Finance swiped it. He swiped it. He got rid of private sector involvement, got rid of the fact that there would be a legacy fund, got rid of the fact that there would be certainty about the money, and replaced it with nothing. Labour members think that that will be very, very bad for New Zealand’s economic development future.

The tragedy is that 3½ years from now this $330 million, if it is divided amongst 4.1 million New Zealanders, will put about $1.60 in the pocket of every man, woman, and child per week—$1.60 a week. That is the price we pay for a dumb economy. Every person in New Zealand will get it, except, of course, the poor people—they will get nothing. The rich people will get, let us say, $3.20 a week in their pockets, and we will have a dumb economy, a slower-growing economy, a less export-oriented economy, and a less innovative economy, and we will have a bunch of firms that will not be able to grow faster, because they do not have a tax credit and therefore cannot fund their own growth as quickly as they otherwise could have done. It is a really dumb policy. It is one that I am really sad about. And when I am not sad about it I am angry about it. I think New Zealand will be a worse place as a result of this decision, I think $1.60 per person per week is a very, very low amount of money, and I do not think the decision that this Government has taken—it says that it has to make choices about priorities—is the right one. I think that if it is going to prioritise an extra $1.60 per person per week for consumption over an innovative future, if that is its priority choice, then clearly it has taken the wrong choice.

Dr PAUL HUTCHISON (National—Hunua) : Thank you, Mr Chairman, for the opportunity to speak again on Part 2, “Research and development tax credits repeal”. I think it is important to reaffirm that central to the Australian innovation policy was getting right the basic business framework, in order to carry out research and development innovation and in order for that country to benefit from it. Australia’s priorities were clearly spelt out as getting taxes down, getting the regulatory regime right, and having a flexible labour market. There is no doubt that this Government’s programme does exactly that, and in terms of the scientific field it will be helped by the improvement of the Resource Management Act and the Hazardous Substances and New Organisms Act.

I acknowledge very much the fact that the Hon Pete Hodgson put a lot of effort, thought, and time into research and development over the last 9 years. I think that some worthy programmes were brought in, such as the Incubator phenomenon, the Venture Investment Fund, the Pre-seed Accelerator Fund, and numerous others. However, this question of the quality of the tax credit has certainly played on the minds of many thinkers throughout the world for many years. The Hon Jim Anderton might say that to remain competitive we have to do what the rest of the world has done. But Finland, one of the countries that have demonstrated high economic growth year after year, and prominence in innovation, does not depend on tax credits, at all. In fact, it has targeted funding of research and development.

I emphasise once again the press release that the Hon Bill English put out the other day. It pointed out: “We firmly believe in the importance of research and development to keep New Zealand internationally competitive, but the tax credits aren’t the most effective way to ensure that. We will work with business to better target government expenditure on innovation.” This is one of the areas that I, for one, will make sure I keep reminding the Minister of Finance about.

But I also think it is important to point out that it was the Hon Pete Hodgson who said that New Zealand was underfunded in terms of investment in research and development, both in the public sector and, certainly, in the private sector. Well, it is a bit rich for Labour members to talk about this. They had 9 years, and, as a percentage of GDP, investment in the public sector actually went down slightly over the last 9 years. It went down at a time when New Zealand had the greatest opportunity to grow investment in this crucial area. After all, it was Helen Clark who said in the Speech from the Throne in 2005 that research and development innovation was critical to driving New Zealand’s economy, yet the next Budget spent billions of dollars on areas that will only cement in intergenerational welfare dependency, and a mere $19.4 million was put into research and development. Here they were, at the eleventh hour, setting up the Fast Forward Fund, which we will be replacing with exactly the same amount of funding but far, far less bureaucracy. We have committed to the initiatives that are of high quality, and to spending very much the same amount, but we will avoid the duplicative bureaucracy that Jim Anderton managed—inevitably, with his Pavlovian, socialistic reflex—to put into that fund. But we think investment is very, very important, and I accept that.

The other point, which Moana Mackey made, was regarding the $315 million over 3 years. That $315 million is absolutely committed to go to secure funding for the Crown research institutes, something which has been recommended by the OECD and many others for many years. That was very much the point made by my colleague the good Mr Bennett from Hamilton East, who said that one of the legacies of our pre-eminent Crown research institutes, AgResearch, is the fact that it is having to make 50, 60, or 100 scientists redundant as a result of its poor performance under the watch of the Labour Government. That is a particularly important point. The other 50 percent of that $315 million will go to the Health Research Council, the Performance-based Research Fund, and the Marsden Fund. Clearly, those are funds that are very much in need of support from Government, because they will not get it from anywhere else.

In terms of private research and development and the effect of the tax credit, there certainly has been a very mixed reaction on behalf of businesses. Many of them have said to me—and I personally am involved in two businesses that carry out research and development—that they are going to carry on with the investment despite the repeal. They will carry on and they will most likely increase their investment, because of the fact that a new National Government will improve the business environment so that many thousands of businesses in New Zealand, particularly innovative businesses, can indeed thrive. We will continue to decrease taxation, we will improve the regulatory regime, and we will make the labour market more flexible.

As Bill English said, there is no doubt that this is a matter of choice, and in the circumstances where we had dire warnings in the pre-election fiscal update, this was the only wise choice to make. After all, this Labour Government has left us the legacy of 10 years of deficits, and it did not even have the honesty to disclose the huge accident compensation losses. When Dr Cullen says this particular part of the bill is dishonest, unfair, and plain stupid, I would reply to him that he is myopic, in denial, and the man responsible for taking New Zealand two steps further down the ladder of the OECD. There is no doubt that research and development are vital for New Zealand, that they absolutely will play a part in the economic growth of the future, and that National will be committed to high-quality investment in this area.

Hon JIM ANDERTON (Leader—Progressive) : Unlike Mr Foss, I want to deal with some of the idiocies trumpeted by the last few speakers. If the National Party thinks that private sector investment and public sector investment are important for the future of this economy, I ask why on earth it would throw away the first and most important partnership between the Government and the private sector in our most important economic base—agriculture and horticulture, and the scientific research and development that backs it up—to the tune of $2,000 million, comprising $1,000 million from the Government matched dollar for dollar by the private sector. Here is the challenge: can Dr Hutchison or anyone else, Mr Bennett and all of them included, guarantee to me that the private sector will put up $1,000 million over the next 10 to 15 years without the Fast Forward scheme and without the research and development tax credit? If those members can, let us hear all about it.

Hon Dr Nick Smith: They never promised that.

Hon JIM ANDERTON: Here comes Mr Smith again. Mr Bennett says that science is very important to National. It is so important that in the aspirational and visionary—as National members describe it—Speech from the Throne it was not mentioned once. That is how important science is to National. I think it came as a surprise to Dr Hutchison and a few others over there that it was not mentioned. They could not believe it; they know how stupid that was. The agricultural sector was not mentioned, and exports were not mentioned. I ask how that fits with a Government that is “going for growth”.

Mr Bennett says that tax cuts will lead to equal growth in science. I see. Will someone on $750,000 who gets a $264-a-week tax cut invest that money in Crown research institutes, or in research and development to support agriculture? They are more likely to go for a holiday to Bali, actually. That is the truth of it.

This is a terrible indictment on a Government that claims that it wants to “go for growth”. What does this mediocre, visionless Government propose to do? The first act it takes in this Parliament is to introduce the largest tax increase on business in New Zealand’s history—the largest tax increase on business in New Zealand’s history. Never before has any Government come into this Parliament and massively increased tax on innovation.

Hon Dr Nick Smith: It’s not as much as the Alliance wanted.

Hon JIM ANDERTON: Mr Smith would not know anything about it, of course. Never before has any Government come into this Parliament and carefully targeted tax increases at not just any businesses but the most innovative and creative businesses in New Zealand, the ones that we need the most for our economic development. What are the chances that this aspirational and visionary policy and leadership are going to succeed?

Dr Paul Hutchison: Very good.

Hon JIM ANDERTON: Very good, are they? I see. The title of an earlier part of the Taxation (Urgent Measures and Annual Rates) Bill was “Personal tax cuts”. If we are consistent, the title of this part of the bill should be “Business tax increases”. That is what the title should be, because that is the reality.

Before the election, a very creative and successful Auckland business leader took out a full page advertisement in the New Zealand Herald. Members may have forgotten it, so I will show it to them. The advertisement said: “I’ve voted as many times for National as for Labour. I’m a founder of five successful companies selling globally to more than 30 countries.” Then he went on: “The party that should get your vote is the one with the best policies for real economic growth.”—the one “going for growth”. Well, I ask members to guess which party it was. It was not the party now on the Government benches. If people want to know why, they just have to look at this bill. He goes on to say: “Borrowing for tax cuts”—which is what this Government is doing—“going into a global recession is an attempt to drive a consumer spending recovery, and frankly that is placing our kids in debt without addressing the financial crisis in any meaningful way.” I have heard today that we can afford tax cuts for the richest people in New Zealand, but we cannot afford research and development investment for companies in New Zealand to develop our economy. I ask how that squares with “going for growth”. The truth is that it does not. I suspect that most of the members of the National Party know it. Most of its members outside Parliament know it, and most of the people here in the House know it.

Hon Dr Nick Smith: They voted against it.

Hon JIM ANDERTON: Yes, I am quite sure that the National Party told people “Don’t worry about it; we’ll fix it.” I think removing tax credits on research and development undermines our manufacturers and our exporters and their ability to compete against global competition. The global competition they are competing against has tax credits. Most of them do.

Members can say that the previous Government brought in the tax credits late in the piece. That is fine; I will accept that. I had been arguing for them for some time, to be honest, and others had been too. Anyway, we got there. We were late, sure, and we should have done it earlier, sure, but we got there. We had not only research and development tax credits but also a partnership with industry whereby industry would put in $1,000 million. What does this visionary, aspirational Government do? It cans the lot. Research and development investment and Fast Forward are gone. Where does the replacement come from? It comes from $262 a week extra for someone on a salary of $760,000. Well, that will do it! It is like that Tui ad: Yeah, right!”. That will fix it. That will give us the visionary economy.

By abolishing the research and development tax credits as well as Fast Forward, National is telling New Zealand that we have enough research and development in this country already. Do we? We know that is not true. It is saying that it will work against companies that are thinking about doing more investment in this vital area. It is going to work against them. It is going to punish them for doing it. It is going to punish the most creative and innovative ones—not the rest, but the ones who are actually doing the job now.

In the last election—perhaps more than in any election in recent history—the economic management of this country was a critical issue. I accept that. People expect that we will make decisions for the long-term future of New Zealand. How is the long-term future of New Zealand benefited by $260 a week for, say, the richest New Zealanders versus research and development tax credits and investment in Fast Forward?

I can give the Committee one simple story. The best and brightest student at Massey University—the best and brightest—had a scholarship to go to the UK. When our Government announced the Fast Forward scheme, he announced, without any influence from anybody, that he was going to leave that scholarship after 6 months and come back to New Zealand because he could see a future here for scientific investment, research, and development, particularly in the agriculture and horticulture sector. What are we saying to him now? We are saying: “Don’t worry, it will be all right, because when you are on a salary of $760,000 a year you will get another 262 bucks a week.” That is not what he said he was coming back for. He was coming back to be a part of a future for research and development industry in New Zealand, as the best and brightest student at Massey University.

The National Government is closing the door on students like that. If it wants to see the best and brightest New Zealanders leave this country—and it claims it is against that—then it should just carry on with policies like this one, and it will succeed. Countries are going to the IMF for loans, and banks are closing all around the world. New Zealand, I must say, is in a much better position than most of those countries. We have a much better opportunity, particularly as the world’s most efficient country in terms of food production. Our future, in my view, is much more secure than that of many countries, but it will depend on the quality of the research and development investment we make at both public and private levels. In my view, right now in Wellington, in this Parliament, the National Government is closing the door to that future, because it is saying “No” to investment and it is saying “No” to long-term development, in favour of a short-term return that it thinks will garner it support.

I say to the Māori Party in particular and to United Future that their constituencies did not vote for this kind of future. Many of the Māori incorporations and developing Māori companies will be hit because of this research and development close-off. The challenge for the Māori Party is to work out what it is going say to the Māori companies and corporations, which are starting to be an important element in New Zealand’s economic development.

It seems to me that this legislation is the most short-sighted that I have seen in Parliament for a very long time. It is short-sighted in inspiration, it is short-sighted in aspiration, and it has no practical hold on the reality of what our country desperately needs. This side of the House will fight for the next 3 years to make sure that the National Government and its acolytes, if they vote for it, are held accountable for what will happen as a result of this failure.

CHRIS TREMAIN (Junior Whip—National) : I move, That the question be now put.

Hon SHANE JONES (Labour) : Tēnā tātou katoa. Firstly, I say greetings to you, Mr Chairman, and I acknowledge the status that has been bestowed upon you. No doubt you sought something else, but your very dry and balanced approach from the deep south will balance our liveliness from the north. Tēnā koe. To those who have been made Ministers, I say we look forward to ensuring they earn their keep and to returning all the favours they sought to send in our direction—including Mr Hide, who occupies the seat of Winston Peters and who no doubt celebrates his success in politics, such as it is, by wandering around Auckland and claiming to be the man who buried Winston. He, of course, will in good time learn that what goes around comes around, and I look forward to enjoying many lively whakataetae with him.

Hon Rodney Hide: I raise a point of order, Mr Chairperson. There are two things about the Hon Shane Jones’ speech. First, he is not actually addressing the Committee stage of the bill, which he is required to speak to even at this late stage under urgency. Secondly, I have always been quite clear about it being Mr Peters who buried himself and the Labour Party. I did not do anything.

The CHAIRPERSON (Eric Roy): That is not a point of order.

Hon SHANE JONES: There were three points coming out of the Speech from the Throne, crafted for the Prime Minister. It stated that it is “very clear that at all times strengthening the economy will be front and centre of … priorities. For it is this growth agenda upon which my Government’s vision for New Zealand rests.” Other than the mangled and worsening style of speaking—obviously John Key is the worst presenter we have seen in terms of a Prime Minister—the first thing we see today is the stripping away of the capital base of New Zealand’s industry by this mean-spirited attempt to take away the research and development contributions, imagining that somehow the funding will materialise when it has not been there for nigh on a decade. Where is it going to go? It will go to reward the partisan interests of those who have quietly plotted away to bring John Key forward, and surely John Key will bring out his foul scheme.

Not only do we see a complete absence of anything in that speech about how we are to inject greater strength in the capital base of New Zealand’s economy but we see absolutely nothing to grow exports and to grow value-added industries. Rather, it is a revision, a return, back to Ruth Richardson’s approach, which is, firstly, to strip people of their labour rights, and, secondly, to reward those who are doing well and in some way to make the vulnerable and the anxious more insecure, as if that will stop the flow of Kiwis going to Australia. And to ensure that the Kiwis whom the Government is supposedly apprehensive about disappearing go even more quickly, the Government says it will destroy the KiwiSaver scheme, and make it a skeletal, anaemic version of what the Aussies enjoy.

So it is a disappointment, Mr Chairman, that you, so early in your tenure, should be exposed to such falsehoods. First, the savings regime is being gutted. Secondly, this measure is very mean and short-sighted—it fits with Mr English’s Cheshire cat, Lewis Carroll style of enigmatic smile, which we have tolerated. But the reality of point number two is that these research and development tax credits are indeed business growth credits. When they are stripped away, that weakens the firms that are supposedly to grow the jobs and grow the wealth of New Zealand. National is scaring further people away from coming back here, because that reduces our competitive advantage to a dreadfully low scale. Thirdly, I note a great line here from the Speech from the Throne: “Honourable members. In going for growth”—permanent growth—“my Government will be acutely conscious of the fact that it is … to the detriment of us all, to allow an underclass to develop in New Zealand.” I say that without jobs, without ongoing investment in firms, without the creation of a flow of goods and services through excellent research, and without income within the class of those people in our society who are vulnerable and anxious, that rhetoric there will be made into a dreadful lie.

So it will be great over the next 3 years, as invidious as this position is proving to be personally, to remind all our iwi that the Māori Party is actually supporting a set of initiatives that not a single Māori on the Māori roll voted for. Secondly, it will be great to remind that party that it is supporting a group of people who are rewarding a very narrow, partisan group within society, without a skerrick of concern for the broad base out in the pastoral farming areas and in industry, and in the knowledge that the Aussies have double the performance in relation to research and development as a percentage of GDP that we have in our country. Without an initiative of this nature, we will never recover. Of course, National does not want us to recover. It actually wants to reward that narrow group who are doing reasonably well as it is. One does not send this type of Christmas present without being rewarded with a harsh response.

DAVID BENNETT (National—Hamilton East) : I move, That the question be now put.

  • A party vote was called for on the question that the question be now put.

The CHAIRPERSON (Eric Roy): Before I announce the result of the vote, I just remind members that votes are to be taken in silence for two reasons. The first is that it is hard for the Clerk at the Table to hear at times if he or she is computing, and, secondly, no member in this Chamber will vote under the duress of having other people speaking for whatever reason when he or she is voting. So I just remind members, and say there will be no tolerance about breaches of that rule.

A party vote was called for on the question, That the question be now put.

Ayes 68 New Zealand National 57; ACT New Zealand 5; Māori Party 5; United Future 1.
Noes 52 New Zealand Labour 43; Green Party 8; Progressive 1.
Motion agreed to.

A party vote was called for on the question, That Part 2 be agreed to.

Ayes 67 New Zealand National 57; ACT New Zealand 5; Māori Party 5.
Noes 53 New Zealand Labour 43; Green Party 8; Progressive 1; United Future 1.
Part 2 agreed to.

The CHAIRPERSON (Eric Roy): We come now to Part 3. This part sets the rates of income tax for the 2009-10 year—that is, clause 29 does. Standing Order 333 requires the Committee to take such a provision as a separately debatable question, unless the Committee, by leave, decides to do otherwise. As clause 29 sets the annual rates of income tax, we will take it first, before the other provisions of Part 3. It is, in fact, the first clause in Part 3. The question is that clause 29 stand part.

CHRIS TREMAIN (Junior Whip—National) : I raise a point of order, Mr Chairperson. I am seeking clarification. Are you saying that clause 29 is to be taken as a separate, debatable motion?

The CHAIRPERSON (Eric Roy): Yes.

Hon Dr MICHAEL CULLEN (Labour) : The member is probably not aware that this is a new provision in the Standing Orders. It actually came in with the changes made just before the election, as a result of Standing Orders Committee deliberation.

The CHAIRPERSON (Eric Roy): I hope that is clear. I think members ought to be cognisant of the fact that the debate should pertain particularly to the tax rates for the 2009-10 year. That is what the debate is about. It is not a wide-ranging debate.

Hon Judith Collins: It is a wide-ranging debate.

The CHAIRPERSON (Eric Roy): Well, it is wide ranging but it is about taxation issues.

Hon Dr Michael Cullen: It should be about the rates of tax.

The CHAIRPERSON (Eric Roy): Yes, exactly. Do we all understand?

Clause 29 Rates of income tax for 2009-10 tax year

Hon DAVID CUNLIFFE (Labour—New Lynn) : I will restrict my comments to one brief call on this very specific clause. It sets the rates for the 2009-10 tax year, and as such it brings us to the heart of a point formerly made by the Minister of Finance. His suggestion was that nobody would be worse off, because the progressive tax reductions that had been put in place by the previous Government had not been implemented yet. Well, if that were the case, there would be no need for this part, which changes the tax rates for the coming year. This particular clause is necessary because Labour’s proposed rate reductions are already part of our law.

That takes us to why significant proportions of the New Zealand public will, in fact, lose. Before I return to the specifics of the mechanisms that mean that many New Zealanders will lose, let me clarify a very important prior point, and that is the difference between the average-income earner and the median-income earner. We know that the “average” income is $45,000. It is very interesting that in my electorate of New Lynn 66 percent of all taxpayers earn less than $40,000—earn significantly less than the average income. Two-thirds of people on less than the average wage? What is that about? It is because the average is skewed by a small number of very high earners who drag the average above the median. So when we say that the average-income earner gets $1.92 out of the National Government’s tax reduction, and anyone on below $44,000 with children gets nothing or loses, we are actually saying that two-thirds of all taxpayers in my electorate of New Lynn are either not affected or worse off, and only one-third gains. In Mr Tremain’s electorate of Napier 71 percent of all taxpayers earn less than $40,000, so 71 percent of his taxpaying constituents—if they have children—potentially are worse off as a result of this tax change. Why is that? When we get into the mechanics of the bill—

Hon Steve Chadwick: Is that “nobody”?

Hon DAVID CUNLIFFE: That is nobody who will be voting for Mr Tremain next time.

This issue is of particular importance to the Māori Party. The Māori Party is supporting this bill. If two-thirds or more of all taxpayers across the country earn less than the average income, and therefore are going to be losers under this bill—if they have children—imagine the implications for Māori communities, whose incomes are skewed below the mean. The vast majority of Māori New Zealanders will be hurt by this bill. We know, as a start-off, that most people who voted for Māori Party candidates gave Labour their party vote, so this is a sensitive matter for the Māori party members anyway, given that they have gone into coalition with National—all for two seats outside Cabinet.

Hon Clayton Cosgrove: Mana-enhancing!

Hon DAVID CUNLIFFE: Mana-enhancing for the individual Māori Party MP but not for the community. Those people will be asking their representatives why they have done this. Why have they inflicted upon them, in the first business week of the House, a tax increase?

What is the mechanism? I see that Mr Tremain still does not understand. If one is on an income of between $14,000 and $20,000, by April 2011—following the period during which this clause applies—one would, by law, have been on a marginal tax rate of 12.5 percent under Labour; under National those people will be on a rate of 21 percent. That is a big difference. That is a big, big difference. Merry Christmas to all of those people who thought that they were going to get a tax cut!

Hon Clayton Cosgrove: They did not tell us that before the election!

Hon DAVID CUNLIFFE: They did not tell us that before the election. I think this measure is a symbol of a much, much deeper problem, and, of course, it is a problem that the Māori Party will have to wrestle with, and that is that National campaigned on the glossy idea that everybody would have everything that he or she would have had under Labour, but with a few fresh faces to carry it forward. It was a very palatable suggestion. It fed into that old idea that it was time for a change—“But we actually quite like you guys, so we do not want too much change.” Mr Key understood that, and he campaigned on not making too much change.

But the rhetoric did not match the reality. On the first business day of the House, in comes a tax bill that gives a tax rate cut and a threshold lift to upper-income earners, and, of course—supported by the financial sector—penalises real businesses, our innovators and exporters, which lose their research and development tax credit, and penalises low and middle income families, the heartland of New Zealand. It disproportionately penalises Māori and Pacific Island New Zealanders. Good luck to Mrs Turia, good luck to Dr Sharples, and good luck to all the Māori Party MPs in their next round of hui as they explain what is in this bill for ordinary Māori people, who will be paying more, not less, tax during the period to which clause 29 applies.

Hon Dr MICHAEL CULLEN (Labour) : This is an interesting clause—and in ways a somewhat unusual one—which is a kind of historical relic. We have to pass legislation to confirm the annual tax rates, even though in Part 1 of the bill we have set the annual tax rates for 2009-10. In Part 3 we have another provision to confirm that we have actually set those annual tax rates for 2009-10. One may well ask why on earth we have to do that. Well, the historical reason is quite simple: we are confirming the Sovereign power to tax, and we are not allowing the King, or in our case these days the Queen, to levy monies without the consent of Parliament. Although in one bit we have said that those are the tax rates, in this bit we confirm that it is the intention of Parliament, and we have the authority of Parliament, to levy those particular tax rates.

This is interesting because this is the one year in which nobody loses—2009-10—because the current tax law provides for a series of tax cuts in 2010-11. In 2010 the bottom threshold will move from $14,000 to $17,500, and then to $20,000 on 1 April 2011. On the other hand, the changes made in Part 1 will remove that increase to that threshold, so on incomes from $14,000 to $20,000 a year, a higher level of tax will be paid. But that change will not occur until 1 April 2010, so for this one brief year of glory the National Party will be able to parade around the country saying that nobody is worse off as a result of its tax changes.

But wait—help is on the way from this side of the Chamber, as has so often been the case so far in this Parliament. We have had to help those members procedurally, and we are now going to help those members in terms of what they will try to tell everybody up and down the country. Very shortly we will come to an amendment when we get on to the next question. It will continue the ability to ensure that nobody is worse off as a result of this bill, by providing a mechanism where nobody will see themselves worse off than they would have been under the provisions in place before this bill is enacted and comes into force.

That is where it will be very interesting to see how people vote. I am particularly interested to see how the Māori Party votes both on this clause and on later clauses. The Māori Party has been calling, I think, for a kind of expansive policy—for the first $25,000 to be tax free, for the lowering of GST, and for an enormous range of things, which add up to a vast and gob-smacking sum of money that would clearly have to be raised by an enormous number of raffles being run up and down the country, because it would run into many, many, many billions of dollars a year. What it had to do with Māori needs is by no means apparent to many of us. Those members now have the chance to decide whether they really want to vote for big tax cuts at the bottom or big tax cuts at the top, because this tax bill provides for tax cuts at the top and increases in tax at the bottom.

I do not think the Māori Party members understood that. I do not think they were properly briefed on that. I do not think that when they signed up to something that was supposed to be mana-enhancing, they thought they were signing up for the exact reverse of what they had promised their constituents. We will be happy to help their constituents, as well. We will be happy to remind them of how their members have voted, because we know that for small parties of only five members it can be very difficult communicating with their constituents and telling them what they have done. We will be very happy to assist in that and make sure the Māori Party’s constituents are properly informed about how their members have voted within Parliament.

We will also be very interested to see what judgment those constituents make upon that party. It is not beyond the realms of possibility that those constituents will decide that having seen a tax increase over what they were expecting to get, that is somewhat mana-reducing from their perspective rather than mana-enhancing. It may well be goodbye to the Māori Party at the 2011 election, which will solve a lot of problems for a lot of people. But of course Mrs Turia has a way of making up the difference. She believes that Māori own the foreshore and seabed; no doubt she will be charging for entry to that at some point in the future under a National Government, and that may well make up some of the difference for some of the families involved.

I think not; I do not see the National Party going down that route. The polling tells us—amazingly—that people believe that any change to the current law should reduce Māori rights, not increase them. So I strongly advise the Māori Party to adopt the route that Ngāti Porou has taken, and to advise people to negotiate very strong agreements that will give proper recognition of those rights rather than hold out a false impression that something more significant can be gained from a National-led Government, which will certainly not be the case when reality sets in. Like the Resource Management Act changes, it will be the reverse of what many people were hoping to see.

Therefore, this small part confirms those annual tax rates. For this one brief year of glory nobody will lose, and then the losing will begin.

Hon DAVID PARKER (Labour) : I rise to take a brief call on this particular section of the Taxation (Urgent Measures and Annual Rates) Bill, as well. As has been said by the previous speaker, this section of the bill sets the tax rates for the forthcoming years at the rates that have been set out earlier in the bill. In other words, this entrenches for the future a decrease in taxes that is weighted to those who already earn the most, and a tax increase for those on lower incomes. It is exactly the opposite of what Māori Party members say that they stand for, given that Māori are disproportionately among those who are low earners. Their already low socio-economic status will be hurt by the provisions in this bill that will entrench tax cuts for those who are better off and tax increases for lower-income earners.

This also entrenches the somewhat inconsistent position taken in the legislation, compared with the National Party rhetoric in prior years. Over prior years they have continually said that the price point or the income point at which the highest tax rate kicks in should be raised. The Labour Government legislated for an increase to $80,000, above which the higher tax rate kicked in. This new tax rate kicks in the highest tax rate at $70,000. This seems to me to be yet another broken promise by the National Party compared with the rhetoric of yesteryear, on what is but day two.

Here we have a National Government doing exactly what the Labour Party predicted it would do; that is, prefer the interests of those who are already well off over those who are less well off. Far from being the friendly face, from being all things to all people as National members tried to present themselves over the last period prior to the election, they are already being exposed as preferring the interests of those who are better off over those who are less well off. It seems unimaginable at a time when we have rising unemployment, as that means that there will be more people on low incomes, as they are reliant on part-time rather than full-time work. They will fall within the low-income bands rather than the high-income bands. Against that reality that we know is real at least for a short period in New Zealand, given international events, those members are proffering a tax package that reduces the tax entitlements of people who are on lower incomes and prefers those who are on higher incomes. It is funded, of course, by the research and development tax credit cuts that were spoken of recently, and also by the gutting of KiwiSaver. So we have fewer jobs in the economy, and those on shorter hours of work as a consequence, with lower incomes, will be among those who suffer the tax consequences of a lower taxable income. It is a matter of some concern for me that the first act of National Party members is to visit the cost of their unwise tax cuts upon those least able to afford the loss of income that will accrue.

Hon CLAYTON COSGROVE (Labour—Waimakariri) : Earlier in the debate I took out a copy of the National Party’s taxation policy. In referring to this part of the bill, I note it confirms the tax rates going forward for 2009-10. I reflect on Dr Cullen’s words and those of my colleagues Mr Parker and Mr Cunliffe, when they talked about fairness. I look back at the National Party’s weighty document of propaganda and recall how all the National members—some soon to give their maiden speeches, some from Māori constituencies as well; and now supported, aided, and abetted totally, sycophantically, by the Māori Party—went around and said National knew that New Zealanders wanted a tax system that was fair. I reckon we could probably all sign up to that; we all say we want a tax system that is fair. The problem lies in the definition of fairness. If members look at the confirmation of these rates, they will see that what we would define as fair, and what most ordinary New Zealanders would define as fair, is not something that the National Party defines as fair.

National Party members told everybody before the election, not about these rates and how they would be confirmed today, but that the tax system would be fair. The document also states: “National’s tax package will give households confidence and some cash in their back pockets.” I just ask, as the Government confirms these tax rates, what is fair about what we have heard today, when, for instance, a person with no children and an income of $23,999 a year will get nothing? I wonder what Mrs Turia and Ms Parata, the new member who will purport, I suspect, to represent a Māori constituency, will say to their constituents when they go back to the marae. As the National Party confirms these rates, they know that those at the very bottom will get no assistance at all, or will end up paying more tax than they currently pay. I wonder how those members will respond when somebody on the marae stands up, probably quotes this document, and asks Ms Parata or Mrs Turia: “How do you define fairness?”

To be charitable to the Māori Party—let us be a little bit charitable—maybe it got sucked in by this bill. Maybe the Māori Party members did not read it or it was not explained; maybe they were hoodwinked, or maybe they were not told. Let us be as charitable as we can. But they have been told today and they were told yesterday about this measure; it has been explained over and over again. What will be etched in my memory is the face—and I have some sympathy for him—of poor old Hone Harawira, as he buried himself behind the desk yesterday and put up his hand to vote with the National Party—

Hon David Cunliffe: Trembling!

Hon CLAYTON COSGROVE: —knowing that morally this is wrong. He knows that all the constituents he works for—and I am told he is a damn hard-working MP and is respected, as Mr Mallard said last night—will be sold out by this measure in toto. I am going to find the situation very interesting, as we deal with the confirmation of these rates, when some of the Māori members go back to their marae and their communities and somehow explain this measure to them. It is going to be an interesting course of events.

It shows me that this is a traditional National Party move: to have an election, promise fairness, equity, aspiration, love, peace, and happiness to all, and then to do people over—put the sword into them and slash at the most vulnerable part of our communities. The National members are doing that before Christmas under urgency, with no select committee scrutiny, in the vain hope that people are tired of politics. They hope people will want to get out to the barbecue and go to the beach with the family, to have a few sausages, play a bit of golf or whatever else, and be with their kids, and will not concentrate on politics. They hope and pray that our communities are thick. Well, I say our communities are not thick, and when people open their pay packets in the months and years to come, and when they try to do some good for their children and their loved ones—

Chris Tremain: I raise a point of order, Mr Chairperson. Clause 29 is a very narrow clause. The member is an experienced speaker. He is way outside the scope of clause 29, which is very narrow.

Hon CLAYTON COSGROVE: Speaking to the point of order, I have consistently referred to the confirmation of the tax rates, and I am now explaining the consequences of confirming them. That is in order.

The CHAIRPERSON (Eric Roy): The Hon Clayton Cosgrove.

Hon CLAYTON COSGROVE: Thank you very much. The National members may not like that, or course. They do not like to hear that. They do not like it when Dr Cullen repeats that. A couple of them over there grin and laugh, and they do not like it when we repeat what the consequences of the actions taken in this Parliament over the next few hours will be. They can jeer and they can laugh. Mr Dunne is a straw man who blows with the breeze—the great man of common sense. I suspect that deep down—although he has his backside in the LTD, I have respect for the member—even he knows this is wrong. Even he knows this is wrong, deep down.

It is very interesting, I say again, as we confirm these rates, that not one member in the National Party has contradicted Dr Cullen, me, David Cunliffe, Mr Mallard, or Mr Parker, when we have stood up and given case after case of situations where injustice will occur as a result of confirming these rates. Not one of them has contradicted that. I would have thought that if we were wrong, OK, we were wrong. But the National members should tell us that, give us the evidence, stand up, and justify their position. They cannot do so; they will not do so. They have no evidence. I look forward to holding up this document around the country and inviting people to say whether, in their communities, they have been treated with fairness, with dignity, and with respect. Have they had their aspirations warmed and supported, and have they chosen a brighter future, when those who need some dough and some help are being sold out by those guys over there?

  • Debate interrupted.

Maiden Statements

Hon STEVEN JOYCE (National) : Firstly, I would like to congratulate my local MP, Lockwood Smith, on his election to the role of Speaker.

Could I start by saying a fond greeting to Jeremy Greenbrook-Held of Oriental Bay. In the letters to the editor in the Dominion Post on 24 November, under the heading “Just who is this man Joyce?”, Mr Greenbrook-Held lamented that I had made it into my role without giving a single interview. This will come as a surprise to a number of journalists who had interviewed me prior to that time, but I will nevertheless attempt to fill some gaps for Mr Greenbrook-Held today.

I live north of Auckland but I am a Naki boy—born and raised in New Plymouth. It is a wonderful part of the world, and I love to go back to visit the mountain, the parks and the wild west coast. However, I have to say I am a fan of pretty much all of this country; I am actually a bit of a greenie, just not the type who sits over on that side of the House.

As it is for all of us, my family came here from lands far away. My father’s family are Irish Catholics. My great-grandfather Eugene Joyce arrived as a young man on the Invercargill in 1879. He married Ellen and they settled in Taranaki, where they had seven children. One of them was my grandfather Len, a bee-keeper who lived with his wife, Eileen, in Eltham, which is where my father grew up.

On my mother’s side, my great-grandmother Granny Hooper was a Cockney. She migrated with her family in 1878, landing in Nelson after 4 months at sea. She must have liked it here because she lived to 101, and I can vaguely remember her 100th birthday party, held when I was about 5. My mother was born in Kaponga. Her father was a lawyer turned insurance salesman, and a lay preacher in the Anglican Church. Their family were staunch Anglicans, my father’s family were staunch Catholics, and that was a time when those differences did matter. It tested both families when my parents married in 1961, now nearly 50 years ago. I am thrilled they are both here together in the gallery today.

My parents scrimped and borrowed and bought a Four Square dairy in New Plymouth. They were not greatly educated—they both left school at 15—but they worked really hard to make a go of their business and their family. They ran a 7-day business and brought up five kids at the same time. From where I am sitting today, that seems pretty heroic. My family, then, is from a long line of small-business people. Apart from a few years managing a supermarket, my father and mother always owned their own businesses, including their own supermarket. So it is probably not a surprise that I did the same.

I had my first taste of radio when I was finishing my zoology degree at Massey University in 1983. A bunch of us worked at Radio Massey. In 1984, members may recall, there was an election, so we decided to run a series of current affairs shows in the style of the political television shows of the time, with intercut interviews. With seriously inferior equipment, a fearless group of us worked 24 hours at a time to bring to air the hugely important Radio Massey election specials on political issues of the day. We interviewed luminaries like the late Bruce Beetham and the late Trevor de Cleene, and put those shows to air for audiences of roughly 50 people each night, probably 48 of whom would have preferred to hear the latest Joy Division track.

So I could have been a journalist, maybe. I have a brother and a sister who are members of that truly esteemed profession. Instead, it was during those late-night sessions at Radio Massey that five of us decided to start a commercial radio station of our own. We each put in $100, and Energy Enterprises—which became RadioWorks—was born with $500 in the bank. Energy FM ran as a summer station in New Plymouth for 3 years, which was all we were allowed to do under the law at that time, each time making a bit of money to help pay for our full-time FM licence application. We chased down shareholders and a board of directors, went to a licence hearing with the Broadcasting Tribunal, then waited 15 long months for a decision to be released. During that time we lost three of our number—I think they got bored—and found one more. In mid-1987 Energy FM got a licence to start broadcasting across Taranaki, and on 30 November that year we went to air.

Running one’s own business is hard work. It is hard work a lot of the time, and fantastic fun some of the time. Running one’s own radio station is even more fun. The three of us poured all we had into that business. We continued to live like university students for years, on the grounds that if we did not become used to a more comfortable lifestyle, we would not miss it. We bought stations in Tauranga and Hamilton. We started The Edge, and Solid Gold FM, and built those two and The Rock into national, satellite-delivered networks. We added stations by growth and acquisition, until by 2000 we had offices in every major town and city in the country, and 650 staff across four networks and 18 local radio stations. It was an amazing ride. We all learnt a huge amount about growing and running companies, organisational cultures, and getting the best out of people. I met, and worked with, hundreds of fantastic people, many of whom I count as friends today. Throughout, we had mostly the same board: Norton Moller, Derek Lowe, and John Armstrong. They were my mentors commercially, and I am greatly indebted to them.

CanWest raided our share register on the stock exchange in 2000. Some of us held out for a while, but eventually we realised the dream was over, and I retired from my role as chief executive officer of RadioWorks on my 38th birthday.

It was time to take stock, and time to give something back. I joined the gym. I started running; unfortunately, I later stopped running. And I joined the National Party. I put my name forward, and nearly stood, in 2002, but as it turned out it would have been a purely academic exercise. Instead, I got my first National Party job after the election. I was asked to join the campaign review, and then the full strategic review of the organisation. It was an absolute honour to do both, and to be trusted by a set of people who had no history by which to trust me. The party in 2002 was hurting pretty badly, and I was conscious of the need to take real care.

The rebuilding of the National Party was a team effort, and I am very proud to have played my part. However, a lot of the credit must go to our party’s president. Judy Kirk is now coming up towards 7 years in the role. In 2002, when she took over as president, an opinion poll that week rated the National Party at 18 percent. For the first time in its history it was in danger of no longer leading the centre-right in the New Zealand Parliament. In the 2008 election—1 month ago—the National Party achieved 45 percent of the party vote, the highest vote by any political party under MMP, and the highest vote full stop since 1990. It is a fantastic turn-round, ably led from the front by our new Prime Minister, the Hon John Key, and, prior to him, our previous leaders, Don Brash and Bill English. However, any great leader needs an organisation to lead, and Judy Kirk rebuilt that organisation, without sacrificing either her decency or her principles. When all is said and done, I am confident her name will be up there as one of the National Party’s great presidents, alongside the name of her mentor, Sir George Chapman, and that will be no more than she deserves.

It is traditional to thank your electorate workers in your maiden speech for helping you get to Parliament. I am, of course, one of the lesser beasts—a list MP—and, worse still, one who did not stand in an electorate. But I did run a campaign of sorts. It was a little bit dire in places, according to some of my critics, but redeemed by a fine candidate who shone through despite the poor support he received from his national campaign chair! There are many people I can and do want to thank for that campaign, particularly those at campaign HQ in Wellington, and the thousands of volunteers around the country who put up with the rather dictatorial requirements of the Wellington crew. I will not mention names today. They all know who they are. Can I just say that I could not hope to work with a finer bunch of people.

So, via a stint running another marvellous, proud, smallish New Zealand company with another great team of people, Jasons Travel Media, I arrive here in this building, this hermetically sealed vortex, which is our Parliament. So what contribution can I make to this place? Who do I represent? Well, I think I can be a voice for the people who always pay their taxes and who want to see them go to a good home. Primarily because I have been in business for most of the last 21 years, I can bring an understanding of the thinking of business people—small and medium sized business people in particular, who organise most of the wealth creation that takes place in this country.

I understand the mentality of those who become frustrated at Government getting in the way of their doing their job, who chafe at needless regulation and the sight of wasted tax money, who become frustrated by poorly performing infrastructure. I understand the fear they have of Government organisations muscling in on their industries by spending public money to compete with them in their marketplace for no good reason.

I bring a real understanding of the value of a dollar. From the time I was a little tacker, sitting at my family dining table as my parents added up the week’s takings, I understood that there was no money around if you did not go out and earn it yourself. I understand those people who see Wellington as a “great sucking sound” that hoovers up more and more of the nation’s money so that politicians can look like heroes when they spend it—people who are happy to pay their share but are not happy to see it wasted. I also understand what drives people: the desire to better the lot of themselves and their families under their own steam, and to not have to rely on Government handouts.

I understand that as a country we have limitless calls on our resources, and limited resources. I know that the only way we are going to progress in the manner we all hope for and provide for those less fortunate is by spending wisely the money we have, and spending most of our time working out how to grow faster to pay for all the things we need. And I think I understand what is possible in organisations that think small and nimble, where the frontline is encouraged and well resourced and the back office is pared back, and that are tuned to what the customer is seeking.

One of the distinctive features of this country is that we are a small group of islands at the bottom of the world. There are only 4.25 million of us. Small can be tough. It means small home markets, not as many resources, and not as big a pool of talent as some bigger countries have. However, our smallness need not be a negative; it can be a strength, and it should be more often. Individuals with ambition and drive have shown throughout history that they can achieve a lot more here a lot more quickly than they can in bigger countries. One great running coach, one great rowing coach, can achieve amazing things. Our smallness means that a high proportion of us are interconnected. People used to talk a lot about the six degrees of separation; in New Zealand I am sure that half the time it is just two or three degrees.

Our smallness can translate to nimbleness: the ability to change course, move quickly, make things happen. Sadly, from a vantage point outside the Government and, now, from inside it, I can see that we get wrapped up in the fact that this new regulation or law, or entitlement, or initiative is world best-practice, that by doing it we are suddenly right up there with the EU, or the UK, or the US. Maybe a world-beating, all-singing, all-dancing, multilayered process is the correct approach for a large country. Maybe for us we can trim it down, shorten it, and, dare I say, spend less money doing it. Put it this way: if we cannot, how can we compete with much larger countries? I am all for fair and sensible rules of commerce and social interaction; we just need to scale them to our size and look for the simpler way.

I believe we have a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity in this country, and a corresponding risk that goes with it. We can recapture our mojo and become the feisty, resourceful, exciting, No. 8 wire sort of place that enabled all our forebears to make a success of themselves way down here at the bottom of the world; or we can fade away and continue on the path of figuratively, and maybe one day even literally, being the smallest and poorest also-ran state of Australia.

I do not believe I bring any pretensions to this new role. I am honoured to be provided with the opportunity to serve, and I will work diligently to repay the confidence that has been shown in me by my party, by my leader, and by New Zealanders. When it comes to work I am a believer in doing the hard yards. In rugby terms, and I stress that my familiarity with the code has pretty much always been as a fan, I like to grind it out—nothing too flashy.

I also, these days, like to have a little balance. Members may ask what I am doing here! Apparently, it is a little bit tricky in this Parliament to have balance, but I find that it helps people to keep perspective—which also might be a bit tricky here. I have an inspiration, though: my wonderful wife, Suzanne; our daughter, Amelia; and Gemma the retrodoodle. I know they will insist on seeing me regularly, no more than I will insist on seeing them.

Mr Speaker, I will work diligently to help make this country a stronger, more successful, and proud place. That is why I am here—for no other reason. If I can help to do that, then I will be able to hold my head high when I report back to New Zealanders when my time here is done.

HEKIA PARATA (National) : E te Mana Whakawā, tēnā koe. E ngā whanaunga, e ngā hoa, e te hunga kāinga i haramai i tēnei rā ki te tautoko i ahau, tēnei te mihi aroha ki a koutou katoa.

[Greetings to you, Mr Speaker. Also to relatives, friends, and to those from home who travelled here today to support me, this heartfelt acknowledgment to you collectively.]

I acknowledge my family and friends who have travelled here today to share this occasion.

Ko Hikurangi me Aorangi aku maunga, ko Waiapu me Waitaki aku awa, ko Ngāti Porou me Ngāi Tahu aku iwi. I identify through my cultural frame of reference my mountains, Hikurangi and Aorangi; my rivers, Waiapu and Waitaki; and my iwi, Ngāti Porou and Ngāi Tahu.

Tēnei te mihi ki te mana whenua ki a Te Āti Awa me ngā waka katoa i tau mai nei ki Te Whanga-nui-a-Tara. I acknowledge the guardians of this land, Te Ātiawa, and all those waka that have come ashore here in Wellington.

Tēnā koe e te Pirimia John Key. Ka tīkina e ahau ngā kupu o tētahi waiata nā tōku tīpuna, nā Hānara Rire, i tito mō Tā Apirana Ngata e pā ana ki a koe i tēnei wā.

[My greetings to you, Prime Minister John Key. I reach back in time for the words of a song that my grandfather Arnold Reedy composed for Sir Apirana Ngata—words that I consider apply aptly to you at this point in time:]

I greet you, Prime Minister, and recall the words of a song originally composed by my grandfather Arnold Reedy for Sir Apirana Ngata:

“Te wa-ka o Aotearoa, he tini ngā kaihautū, ko koe rā e Hone kei te kei, e koro kia ū.”

[“The New Zealand canoe has many captains, but you John, are at the helm, hold fast.”]

“The waka of Aotearoa has many captains, but you, John, are at the helm.”

Kei te rangatira kei a Helen Clark, mō tō whakahaere i ngā tau kua pahure ake nei, tēnā koe. Tēnā koe e te whanaunga, Parekura. Talofa e te mema mō te rohe o Mana, a Luamanuvao Winnie Laban. Otirā, tēnā koutou katoa ngā kaihoe o tēnā waka, o tēnā waka o te Pāremata.

[To you, Helen Clark, former leader, I acknowledge your stewardship over these past years. Greetings to you, my kinsman Parekura, and to the member for Mana, Luamanuvao Winnie Laban. Indeed, my acknowledgments to all oarspersons of each parliamentary canoe.]

To our former leader, for her stewardship over these past years, I salute you, Helen Clark. To my kinsman, Parekura Horomia, I greet you. To the member for Mana, I acknowledge you. To all the different waka that have berthed at Parliament, I greet you.

Mauriora!

Mr Speaker, I should like to congratulate you on your appointment. I also acknowledge the Governor-General, who commissioned the opening of the forty-ninth Parliament; my colleagues Peseta Sam Lotu-Iiga and Melissa Lee—fakafetai and ahn nyung ha se yo—my colleague the Hon Steven Joyce, who opened our paepae this afternoon; and those who will follow. Tēnā koutou katoa.

As I stand before you today, I am at once conscious of the weight of history and expectation that press upon me and the lightness of possibilities that beckon. I am familiar with this dichotomy; I have grown up in a culture that walks through the present with the constant companions of the past and the future. This practice prepares us particularly well for this parliamentary role, I think, as we weigh actions of today against those of the past and the implications of the future.

In 1885 my great-great-grandfather Tame Parata entered Parliament as the member for Southern Maori. He served a distinguished career of 26 years, dedicating his efforts to his people in their search for quality citizenship in their own lands. Later, in 1905, another tipuna of mine—ours—Sir Apirana Ngata, entered Parliament as the member for Eastern Māori, and committed his public service of 38 years to seeking opportunities for, and emphasising obligations to, citizenship.

They, along with many others, shared a profound appreciation of the birthright of this small, young nation and its potential. They also held in common an attitude that characterised those generations of the reciprocal responsibility to return in equal or greater measure that which had been given. I enter Parliament and I begin this phase of my public service journey proud to follow in the footsteps of these ancestors in the pursuit of quality citizenship for all. They provide a model that I am glad to emulate: unambiguously Ngāti Porou and Ngāi Tahu, unequivocally a New Zealander.

I come to Parliament by way of an extensive Public Service career, with detours into wealth-creating and whānau-employing business experiences, and punctuated by recalls to my home of Ruatōria, the capital of Ngāti Porou. I grew up in the central business district of Ruatōria when our area was famous for land innovation, dairy factories, cultural foreign policy, lawyers, educators, and public servants. It was a community where Ngāti Porou was the spoken language except in schools, and te reo Māori was for dealing with other distant tribes and their strange dialects and practices.

I grew up at the centre of a strong and dynamic web of kinship relationships, amongst orators, thinkers, debaters, and composers, where competence and whakapapa were the determinants of leadership—not gender. I grew up believing that everyone was Anglican, all worshipped Sir Apirana Ngata, Hikurangi was the highest mountain in the world, and the Waiapu swept majestically to the sea. I saw no need for reality to intrude upon this set of beliefs, because they performed the very useful function of securing identity.

I came from a community at a time when it was peopled by hard, hard workers, who eked out livings on infertile and soft country that, even as it was farmed, slipped away into the river and out to sea. These people suffered the boom and bust of officialdom, the capricious ideas of what next to invest in, how now we might be saved—always by well-meaning yet very distant bureaucrats and politicians, and all the time oblivious to the possibility that we might actually save ourselves.

I come from a community where whānau was the pivot round which life turned; where education was the magic bullet; where self-reliance and self-determination were practised, not talked about; and where humour, courage, hope, and gratitude were the hallmarks of citizenship—most nobly personified in the 28th Māori Battalion, literally the most costly in lifeblood.

In my lifetime I have seen the very kinds of communities of my upbringing succumb to the disease of dependency, where State intervention is the norm, not the exception; where caregivers, providers, facilitators, and sector workers replace aunts, uncles, neighbours, and friends; where State welfare rather than social welfare is the first resort and the basis of an intergenerational life sentence rather than a lifeline; where despair and alienation are masked by drugs, alcohol, and abuse; where displaced anger makes victims of children and their mothers; where low expectation in schools is predictably repaid with low achievement; and where fault and blame-laying have become the defence of failure.

Ruatōria, I now know, was always economically challenged. But its cultural wealth and social richness, its determined self-belief and hard work kept it viable. We must find ways to lay bare all the causes of these symptoms, so that we might, with purpose and compassion, find durable solutions. I feel called to Parliament to do something about this.

I have spent my professional career in the Public Service informing policy with these realities, striving to create opportunities for communities to drive their own development, advocating fiercely for meaningful resourcing and realistic time lines, resisting the bureaucratising of the original flair and ingenuity that attracted funding in the first place, promoting the value of different cultural approaches, and exposing the presumptuous bias of majority culture presented as the norm.

I was born and brought up in a family of eight by parents who instilled in us the importance of family, education, community service, education, hard work, education, high expectations, and an attitude of success. Our parents worked; we worked—often several jobs at once. None of this was unusual or peculiar to our family. All the families we grew up with, went to school with, and continue to be in touch with lived lives like this. These are the whānau I know and recognise. This is the model that informs my vision for the building blocks of modern Aotearoa New Zealand.

My parents’ very different backgrounds converged successfully in their children, I think, and gifted us with the very New Zealand legacy of mixed ancestry: Scottish, Irish, English, Ngāi Tahu, and Ngāti Porou. So I come to Parliament a fully committed bicultural citizen, a descendant of both Māori and Pākehā, and imbued with the spirit of Sir Apirana Ngata’s prescription for life: “Grow up and meet the needs of your generation, master the technologies of the modern world for your material well-being, cherish the treasures of your ancestors as a plume for your head, your soul given to God, author of all things.”

I come to Parliament equipped with our experience of starting our own businesses and managing them through all the highs and lows that attend such initiatives. We have faced the risks that small businesses up and down the country face. We have slogged through the mire of compliance regimes and related costs. We have encountered the impervious official at the point of export, indifferent to the effects of inexplicable bureaucracy and the costs incurred. We must liberate businesses to create employment and wealth, and bend our minds to that rather than to ever more clever ways to redistribute it.

I come to Parliament by way of my residence in the greater Porirua region—a microcosm of Aotearoa New Zealand. It is an area of great diversity, with a high proportion of very old people and very young people; with extremes in socio-economic status, with some of the highest average household incomes and some of the lowest; and balanced by a deep pool of potential and a crucible of cultural richness in the form of Māori, Pacific, Pākehā, Asian, and other ethnic minorities. It is a growing, creative community, well served by the internationally renowned Pātaka Museum and Art Gallery, which is to be complemented—when we can secure the resources—by a performing arts centre; and by the strong and innovative Whitireia Community Polytechnic, which with sufficient investment can and will design programmes that arise out of the cultural wealth of the region, creating new technologies we know to be essential to the productivity and growth and international competitiveness of our nation. And, cradling it all, there is an environment that is both beautiful and fragile, and while it looks after us, we in turn must care for it.

Mr Speaker and honourable members, I come to Parliament with high expectations of what is possible. I come shaped and moulded by the influences and experiences I have outlined. I come with an unshakeable belief in the potential of this country, its people, and this Parliament. My recipe has three simple ingredients from my own life story: family, identity, and education. We must restore whānau and families as the cornerstones of our communities, invest in the cultural diversity of this country—not because it is fashionable, but because it carries identity and the potential for innovation and new technologies—and join the crusade for literacy and numeracy and for a good-quality education for every New Zealand student. We must adopt an uncompromising attitude that failure is not an option. All our other aspirations for economic growth, raised standards of living, and national confidence and pride will flow from getting these basics right.

I come to Parliament determined to add to the legacy of those who have gone before—the pursuit of quality citizenship. As I go to my office in this historic building, I pass my own panel of scrutineers, their faces challenging and supporting me. I am grateful to walk alongside them.

In closing, I should like to acknowledge all the people who have touched my life. A small number have been able to join us here today; others watch Parliament TV at home on the Coast, down South, and around the country. I know that my mother, Hīria Te Kiekie Reedy, will be watching, and I pay tribute to her constant love and support, as I do to that of my brothers and sisters and their partners and families, who together form the kind of whānau that is so easy to have policy theories about but who everyday work hard at making it real.

Finally, I would like to especially acknowledge my husband, Wira Gardiner, whose pragmatic approach to what is possible, encapsulated by Maggie Thatcher’s instruction to her generals “Go to war with what you’ve got.”, has become part of the language of our home, and keeps me grounded when in pursuit of perfection. And to our two wonderful, gorgeous, smart, funny, demanding, fabulous daughters, Rākaitemānia and Mihimaraea, I say that you deserve the very best. Since having their bright lights shine into my life, there has been a heightened sense of urgency and a sharpened focus on the kind of society in which their aspirations and ambitions can be given loft and momentum, and through which they can walk with confidence and poise as Ngāti Porou citizens of the world, blessed—as we all are—to call this magnificent country, Aotearoa New Zealand, home.

Mr Speaker and honourable members, I come to Parliament with high expectations of what is possible. Tēnā koutou, tēnā koutou, tēnā koutou katoa.

  • Waiata; haka

AMY ADAMS (National—Selwyn) : It is with a great deal of respect that I rise to present my maiden speech in this Chamber, and I offer my congratulations to you, sir, on your election. I stand before this House as the representative for the newly formed Canterbury seat of Selwyn, and I am conscious of the great debt that I owe to the people of my electorate for the faith they have shown in me. I would like to begin today by pledging to them my commitment to work in their interests and for their advancement for the time I am here.

I would also like to pay a personal tribute to the Prime Minister, the Hon John Key. Our Prime Minister is a man of great honour and real charisma, and a man with a heartfelt empathy for the people of New Zealand. He has been an inspiration to me, my electorate, and all New Zealand, and I am especially honoured to be serving in his Government.

We seem to raise strong politicians on the Canterbury plains. I come from the same part of the country as the great Sir John Hall, a farmer, and former Premier of New Zealand, who in the 1870s formed and maintained a Government in a period of great change and instability. Sir John is particularly to be remembered for one of his final acts of public life, which was to successfully shepherd the women’s suffrage bill into the House in 1890.

In the passage of time we seem to have lost sight of the enormous contribution Sir John made, and, as a woman now representing his home area, I take a moment to acknowledge his legacy. As a farmer, he and his brothers formed one of the first large-scale sheep runs in the South Island, which later became Terrace Station. As a politician for the original Selwyn seat, he was respected for his integrity and huge contribution to the developing nation’s landscape. Sir John was a staunch conservative who felt that women would bring more decorum and civilised behaviour to politics, and who would be least likely to countenance official extravagance. Women, he noted, “instinctively possess a far keener insight into character than men, and the result of giving them a vote would be that a candidate’s chance at election would depend more on his character, for trustworthiness, for ability and for straightforwardness than on mere professions made on the hustings.” He said: “A clever ready-tongued political adventurer may cajole a set of dull-witted men, but if he has to pose before a number of women they will see right through his real character. It will be of no use trying to get around them with blarney and humbug; they will soon discover whether he is the unselfish patriot he professes to be or a selfish hypocrite who wishes to make use of the people for his own benefit. Women’s intellect would be a surer guide in cases of this kind”, Sir John said, “than that of the majority of men.”

One hundred and fifteen years since that pivotal moment in our history, I am extremely proud to represent the new Selwyn electorate, and I wish to acknowledge the many notable members of this House from the area who have come before me, including two former Prime Ministers: the Rt Hon Sidney Holland and the Rt Hon Jenny Shipley. I come to this House as a commercial lawyer and a Canterbury sheep farmer and, based on that, just last week in Wellington someone called me a “typical Nat”. Well, I make no apology for that side of my background. I am extremely proud of what I have worked very hard to achieve. But for those who are looking to stereotype me, it is worth pointing out that I also grew up in a sole parent household, always short of money, with my mother putting herself through a degree with two preschoolers underfoot, to eventually become a psychologist bonded to the Education Department. Her job, working with some of the most unfortunate families, meant we grew up all over the place—Ngāruawāhia, Hamilton, Wellington, and eventually Auckland.

Compared with many Kiwi kids, though, I was fortunate, because I came from a family of self-starters who believed that anything was possible if one worked hard enough. One of my grandfathers was an engineer and an inventor, who started a factory in his Wellington garage that employed many people for decades. My other grandfather is a well-respected accountant in Motueka, who again built his business from the ground up—a business that has strong roots in the agricultural and farming communities in the Tasman region. For myself, it was while I was at Canterbury University and met my husband that I began my relationship with the farming and rural sectors.

Back in Sir John Hall’s day, New Zealand was a young country, building its fortunes on the sheep’s back—an agricultural economy with a bright future. Today agriculture is still the backbone of our export-based economy. It was our past, and it remains our future. It is the primary sector that will help us as a country find our way through these troubled financial times. However, the farming sector is under threat from all sides, and the threats that face the rural sector in New Zealand are serious, and will need commitment and innovation to find solutions. At this time, we need the rural sector more than ever. We need to treasure our rural communities, not trash them.

Something that worries me is how many New Zealanders have lost touch with the land. Most Kiwi kids do not visit farms any more. They do not see lambs in the spring, and they do not grow up knowing that farmers care about their land—its health and its future. It is not in farmers’ interests to pillage nature. Farmers farm for future generations, and they farm for the prosperity of all New Zealand. Environmentally, we must find a workable balance between the needs of the environment and those of the rural sector and other stakeholders. But when we talk about sustainability, as we must, let us not forget the need to also be economically sustainable in the international marketplace. Although the issues we face will be challenging, and at times contentious, I am confident that if all sides can approach the issues collaboratively, solutions can be found and implemented.

We must also remember that the plight of agriculture is not just about the success of our economy. The world has a massively expanding population, and UN predictions are that feeding those people will be one of the biggest challenges in years to come. We cannot afford to let our agriculture industry in New Zealand shrink, where we have the proven capability to produce some of the best, and most environmentally sound, foodstuffs in the world.

The management of water, and in particular the need for large-scale water storage facilities in Canterbury, is one of the most difficult but also most important issues facing my electorate. Water is life, and nowhere is that more true than on the farm. In rural homes throughout the country, the amount of rain that has fallen, and the forecasts from the rain radar, are not just small talk. They can make the difference each year between survival and foreclosure. To resolve the matter we must look for the optimal solution, and then ensure that the law enables it to be achieved. Decisions should not be driven by who got in first, or which option is most expedient under the Resource Management Act. Rather, a macro-analysis of long-term outcomes and community needs must be the central consideration. We as politicians must ensure that the law supports rather than hinders such an approach.

That brings me to infrastructure. For too long, politicians have dodged the issue of infrastructure development. Time and time again, infrastructure has been shunted into the too-hard basket. Infrastructure requires long-term thinking, long-term funding, and long-term commitment. I have no doubt that short-term thinking has already cost this country considerably. We have to start thinking as a nation and not just as individuals. It really is a case of doing it for the greater good. And it is not just the economic cost. Communities suffer when schools, roads, libraries, broadband services, and the like do not keep pace with population growth. The lack of community infrastructure is a major issue for many parts of Selwyn. I do not want our communities to be nothing more than a place where people go to sleep. For communities to support their people, we must first support our communities. For New Zealand to succeed, we cannot keep saying no to infrastructure projects because they involve change. The process should instead focus on fairly balancing all competing interests, including wider public needs. To build New Zealand’s productivity we need to get innovative, take risks, and do it fast.

Fifteen years as a commercial lawyer has taught me that there are already hugely innovative and talented people in our business communities, but we are making it very hard for them to succeed locally and on a world stage. All over the country, these business people are telling me that one of the biggest challenges is getting a straight answer from central and local government. People are generally happy to work within the rules. They just want to be told definitively what the rules are. Businesses need to have certainty, and to be able to plan ahead, confident that the playing field will not change every few years. Being told by central or local government that the system means that it will take many months or years and often cost hundreds of thousands of dollars in consultant and legal fees to work out whether something can be done is not OK. It is a huge drain on business, and it is pouring productivity down the plughole.

Making laws that effect people’s lives is a very grave responsibility. When the law does put restrictions on people, we owe it to them to make the rules clear and concise, and not open to subjective interpretation leading to wide inconsistencies of result. An example is that of a farmer in my electorate, who was building two sheds that were exactly the same, a few paddocks apart on the same farm. One council, two building applications, and two different council officers were involved. The approval for the first shed took just a few weeks, and did not require anything further. The second identical shed took months, and required the furnishing of considerable further information and reports, and, of course, extra costs. That is not right.

Of course, we must have regulations, but let us think very carefully about what any restriction on people’s freedoms actually gives to society. If the benefit is minimal, and the compliance or productivity cost is high, let us not do it. Business in this country has often been demonised in recent years as large, heartless corporations making money off Kiwis for their international owners. But in reality, the face of New Zealand business is a couple of guys working in a workshop out at the back of town fixing cars, or a mum selling kids’ products on the Internet from home, or builders, sparkies, cleaners, lawn-mowing contractors, and painters. The productivity of this country is in their hands. They form the bulk of New Zealand businesses, and they will be very exposed in the coming economic storm. They are the infantry of our economy, and they are fighting on the front lines right now.

So are we sending in reinforcements, or will we abandon them? And it is the same in the social sector. We need some long-term thinking, focused on early intervention initiatives that can make a real difference. We have serious social issues to confront as a nation. While there are outstanding programmes in place, we need more. We need major attitudinal change right across this country. I believe that the key is fostering a strong sense of individual responsibility. As a parent, I can say that there is only one way to teach responsibility, and that is for there to be clear and consistent consequences for one’s actions. If 3-year-olds can get it, I think other Kiwis can too. That means that to be part of the very special community that is New Zealand, we expect people to take responsibility for themselves and their families. The State is here to help, but it is not its role to run our lives, tell us what to do, or tell us how to do it. The role of Government is not to wrap us in cotton wool to save us from ourselves.

I can assure people that I will stick up for the right of Kiwi kids to play on swings, see-saws, skateboards, and cycles; and to climb trees, and build tree houses without the need for a building consent.

I want to take the opportunity to publicly acknowledge my husband and my two wonderful children who are here today for their unending love and support, and for making sure that my feet stay firmly on the ground. Don, Thomas, and Lucy, you are the reason for everything I do, and I love you deeply. Thanks must also go to my wider family, my parents, my sister Belinda, particularly, and to my new Selwyn electorate family for all their tireless work supporting me over the previous year. There are simply too many of you to name, but you know who you are. My thanks also go to the National Party, its president Judy Kirk, and our regional chairman, Roger Bridge, and my caucus colleagues for your unfailing support and guidance.

I conclude by saying that in my view for most of the past decade New Zealand has been heading down a no-exit street—economically, socially, and psychologically. We have been penalising hard-working families, struggling to keep their heads above water, with higher costs and higher taxes. We have been strangling business with red tape, making it harder for them to hire staff, and miring them in a field of regulatory uncertainty. We have been downgrading the education system, creating meaningless qualifications, giving kids poor work habits, and loading teachers with responsibilities that should rest with families. For too long we have had a culture where the State thinks it knows what is right for every family, and for every business; a culture where every social problem is renamed a condition that people should not be held accountable for; a culture where violent offenders seem to have greater rights than their victims. Well, that is not OK with me. I have higher aspirations for this country, and I have a strong belief that we can achieve them.

I would like to finish with the words of Sir John Hall back in 1890: “We cannot afford as a nation for [our politicians] to stand aside from the work of the nation: we need all their spirit of duty, their patience, and their energy in combating the sorrow, and sin, and want that is around us.” Mr Speaker, I look forward to serving the people of Selwyn and Aotearoa, for as long as they allow me the privilege of representing them. I thank you.

TODD McCLAY (National—Rotorua) : Mr Speaker, I begin my maiden speech today by offering congratulations on your election as Speaker of this great institution. I also congratulate my new colleagues, the Deputy Speaker, Lindsay Tisch, and Assistant Speakers Eric Roy and Rick Barker.

I pay tribute to our Prime Minister, John Key, in the way that he has led the country since the election on 8 November. Many, many people in my electorate of Rotorua have told me that this is the type of leadership they voted for, and the change they want. I also paint a glowing tribute to the National Party president, Judy Kirk. Judy is an exceptional person, and many of us were helped to be here today by her hard work and dedication.

I praise the central North Island chair of the National Party, Jo Stewart, and thank her for standing on the side of the road with me waving placards during our campaign. In the streets of London, as on the sports fields of Munster, New Zealand has a reputation for reward for hard work. I thank my campaign team for their hard work over the past year: my electoral chairman, Ian Patchell, who is here today; my campaign chairman, councillor Mike McVicker; my finance agent, Don McFarlane; Ian McLean for his great wisdom and guidance; and the many, many others who were responsible for our success in Rotorua this year. I also acknowledge the people who have travelled from Rotorua to be here today, and thank Neil for the unfettered access to his fridge during the campaign.

I make special mention of a very special person—my father-in-law, Ron Wattam. Ron and my mother-in-law, Margaret, live in Cromwell, and they came to stay with us in Rotorua for a week about 6 months ago, and they are still there. Ron worked from early in the morning until late in the evening, removing great moustaches from my hoardings. I say to the Prime Minister that the people of Whakarewarewa believe that I look better with a moustache than he does. I report that bakeries in other electorates should not bother entering the national pie contest next year, because I can vouch for the pies made in Maketū. I know this for a fact, because I consumed nearly 500 of them during my campaign this year.

I pay tribute to the Hon Steve Chadwick, across the House—a worthy opponent who dealt with the issues on the campaign trail, and fought a clean campaign. Mrs Chadwick has great affection for Rotorua; I am grateful that she has offered for us to work together over the next 3 years to advance the interests of the people of Rotorua, and I accept this offer.

If I had forgotten it, I was certainly reminded during this year’s campaign that my family is the most important thing to me in this world. My ambition as a member of Parliament, the things I want to do for my community, and the reason I want more violent criminals and drug dealers locked away for longer are all because I have an overwhelming desire to protect my family and offer my family opportunity. On issues of conscience in this House, I will be guided by what I want for my four small children, and by whether they will grow up to be proud of their father, based upon his decisions and how he voted.

My wife Nadene and I have been have been blessed with four outstanding children: Joshua, who is 10; Samuel, who is 8; Caelen, who is 6; and my daughter, the perfect one, Ana-Kiera, who is 4. Joshua, Sam, and Caelen attend Lynmore School in Rotorua, and have told me how excited they were to see their dad on TV today. I must for a moment speak of the great love and understanding of a truly exceptional and long-suffering woman—that is, my wife, Nadene. Nadene and I have been married for 14 years this year, and the last 14 years have been a joy—well, at least for me! And never could I have imagined that I might complement somebody so well. Without Nadene’s support, understanding, and perseverance as a wife and as a mother, my life would have been much more ordinary.

It is important to remember one’s origins. I am proud to say to this House that I was born in Rotorua, as was my mother before me, and I am the son of a school principal with a lifelong commitment to improving children’s lives. When I was born my parents lived in Reporoa, and my father drove a school bus each morning before teaching children how to read and write. The school bus in Reporoa is no longer driven by a teacher, and, sadly, early next year it may no longer be based in the district—and this is not right. I thank my parents, Roger and Dawn, for sharing this day with me. I had a great childhood and, against frequent demands for retribution from my siblings, do not ever remember my father raising his hand against me in anger. My two brothers, Tim and Steven, are extremely hard-working, successful New Zealanders. They are good fathers, and they are great brothers.

I grew up in Taupō and attended Tauhara College there, and Wesley College in Pukekohe. I am sure that the honourable Minister Paula Bennett would agree that my school in Taupō was better than her school in Taupō! In my younger years I had many jobs. I cleaned cars, I cut firewood in the bush, and I worked for Carter Holt in its sawmill. But, mainly, I was like many young New Zealanders: I loved fishing, I enjoyed hunting, and I played rugby with a passion. I had little interest in politics, and I am not sure that education was as important to me as it should have been.

My journey to this Chamber, as for many of us, was not without detours. I have spent much of my adult life outside of New Zealand. I have worked in one of the world’s largest bureaucracies, in and around the European institutions in Belgium. At that time few, if any, New Zealanders had worked in the European Parliament politically. As a result I am no fan of bureaucracy, and to quote a former President of the European Commission, Jacques Delors: “I firmly believe that governments should do less, but what they do, they must do better.”

I have owned a business where, on a daily basis, we balanced the demands of finding and keeping good staff with the need to remain competitive and productive. I have great sympathy for every New Zealander who will fight to survive in the coming months and years as the world’s economy struggles to change. I do not subscribe to the view that employers are bad people, yet I accept that employees must be afforded rights.

I have experience of diplomacy. In 2000 I travelled to Cotonou in Benin to attend the signing of a development and trade agreement between Europe and the countries of Africa, the Caribbean, and the Pacific Islands. There I met the Foreign Minister of the Cook Islands and the Premier of Niue. Over months, these two countries decided to establish diplomatic representation to the European Union in Brussels. I was honoured to be asked to represent those two beautiful countries as their ambassador to Europe. I declare an interest: in 2005 I was awarded honorary Cook Islands nationality by the Government and people of the Cook Islands. I am proud to stand here today and say to the people of New Zealand that I am a Cook Islander, and I send greetings to my friends in Rarotonga: kia orana.

After many years in Europe, my wife and I were faced with an important decision—a decision that would decide the very people our children would grow to become. Our choice was between living a life different from that of our childhoods or embracing the very things that make New Zealanders unique. It was not a choice between a life in Brussels, where it always rains, and a life in Wellington, where it never does. During my campaign I met a man in Rotorua while I was door-knocking who wanted to talk to me about how to keep young people out of trouble, and I was impressed by this man. He had been a gang member for much of his life; he had served time in prison. He said that he had never voted because he just did not care, but when he last came out of prison he decided to change. He wanted to change because of love for his family, and he wanted a different life for his children. He left the gang, he got a job, and he now works with the community. His children will have a brighter future, and in future when I am faced with decisions that affect New Zealanders I will think of this man.

I want for a moment to reflect upon the country that we live in. Many years ago New Zealand society was based upon the structure of the family. Neighbours knew each other and they liked each other. Rural communities were strong and perhaps life was simpler. When a school needed a new swimming pool—and schools used to have swimming pools—or a small community needed a hall, funds were raised to buy timber and cement, and people came together to build these things. Today funds are raised for resource consent and for development levies, and many of our children no longer know how to catch a fish or climb a tree.

The Rotorua electorate is an exceptional place and it is reflective of much of New Zealand, from our beautiful lakes—and we have many in Rotorua—to Mount Tarawera and Ngongotahā, and to the trees of the central North Island. Indeed, Nick Smith and I were known to hug such trees during the early part of our campaign this year, on the foreshore of Lake Tikitapu. We have great beaches at Maketū and Pukehina, and some of the best saltwater and freshwater fishing in this country.

My electorate is truly a place of vast opportunity. We are rich in culture and Māoridom is strong in this region. I believe Māori culture to be my culture, because I was born in this country. Kawerau and Murupara are communities where the people are proud, and where they have achieved together. Kawerau is the smallest council district in New Zealand, and we should learn from its commitment and emulate its successes in other parts of this land.

I lay claim to the following claims on behalf of the people of the Rotorua electorate. Rotorua is the tourism capital of New Zealand. Next year the Bay of Plenty will celebrate the upgrading of the Rotorua airport to international standard. This airport will be a gateway to the Bay and will provide benefit to the many towns and cities in our region. Visitors come to Rotorua expecting the very best service. They want memorable and unique experiences, and they want to eat and drink, and go shopping. In parts of our country this is possible, but in Rotorua over Easter it is not. If we are serious about tourism in this country, if we are to embrace the benefits of increased visitor numbers, then we need to change. The message that we send from this tourism capital is “Don’t come to Rotorua over Easter; it is closed.” We need to change this message to fully embrace the future.

The Rotorua electorate is also the forestry capital of New Zealand. Engineering, trucking, and transport innovation all play a vital role in our local economy. I believe that forestry has importance to our future; the way to meet our international environmental commitment is to plant more trees and then to process those trees in this country—to add value to them here. We must send a clear signal to the forestry industry that as a Parliament we offer support. I am fully committed to working with the forestry sector and to all those whose livelihoods are dependent upon it for the future of my electorate.

Following boundary changes my electorate is also the kiwifruit capital of New Zealand. Our kiwifruit are impressive. They are large, they are sought after by international markets, and some of them are even shaved. The kiwifruit sector, like others, has suffered over recent years, but the development of infrastructure in the Bay of Plenty and an unrelenting focus on productivity will help the kiwifruit farmers of Te Matai Road. I will work closely with them to ensure that their industry is managed as they wish it to be.

During her maiden speech yesterday my colleague Melissa Lee spoke of the horrific death of little Nia Glassie in Rotorua. It would be easier to speak of only the good things about my home and to ignore the problems as if they had not happened, but that is not my way. It concerns me that the very people who should love and cherish our young the most—Nia’s parents and grandparents—treated her life so cheaply. The action of those found to be responsible for Nia’s death was evil, and I know of no other way to describe it. Justice for Nia Glassie will be done only when horrific child abuse in all parts of New Zealand stops. Today I challenge all communities of New Zealand to care more for our children. It is a privilege to be a parent; it is not a right. It will take more than reports and inquiries to stop this cycle of violence—child abusers do not read our reports—it will take consequence and personal responsibility. It will take each of us, as a community, to stand up and say that violence of any type is not acceptable.

Two weeks ago I met a small boy who attends Ōtamarākau School on the edge of my electorate in the Eastern Bay of Plenty. He asked me what my job was and I explained that the job of an MP was to represent, and to be a loud, clear voice on behalf of, the people of his electorate. I also said that more than anything I believe the job of a member of Parliament is to listen, not just to talk, and, quoting a Greek philosopher, said: “This should be easy, as I have two ears and only one mouth. I will be able to listen twice as much as I talk.” This small boy studied me. He looked at me and he said: “Sir, I think you will be a great MP. I can see two of your ears.”

To be a member of this House is a privilege, and I pledge to remember this each and every day I am here. It is an opportunity to work hard to help others, and to make New Zealand and my home, Rotorua, better. The day that I forget this privilege will be the day that it is time for me to leave this place. Tēnā koe, Mr Speaker, and I thank the House.

PHIL TWYFORD (Labour) :

Pou hirihiri, pou ramarama

Tiaho i roto, mārama i roto.

Tēnei te pou

Te pou ka eke

Te pou kai a koe nā

Ko te pou o ēnei kōrero

Tihei mauri ora.

[Pillar that recites spells and gleams,

Is radiant and lucid within.

This pillar that controls and consumes you,

And is the pillar of these utterances.

’Tis the sneeze of life .]

I rise for the first time in this House, proud to be a Labour member of Parliament, inspired by the democratic tradition this House represents, and humbled by the great parliamentarians who have come before. I congratulate you, Mr Assistant Speaker, on your election, I acknowledge the Speech from the Throne, and I look forward to contributing to a robust Opposition that fulfils its constitutional duty for the next 3 years.

As I look around the walls of this debating chamber and reflect on the battles waged and lives lost by thousands of New Zealanders to help forge our young nation, I am moved by the simple but brilliant concept of this House. Like the countless, often nameless, people who have served and sacrificed for New Zealand in war, we too are servants of something bigger—something grander; something bolder. We come from varied backgrounds, but we all are united in a goal to collectively serve. At the end of our times here, some of us will be remembered, but most of us will not. Regardless, we all will have served our nation, and for that I greet every member of this House, regardless of whichever side of the aisle he or she sits, and I look forward to working with all members, and to disagreeing strenuously with some.

If there is one thing that unites us all in this House, I would hope it is the belief we can make New Zealand the best it can be. It seems a minor miracle that this little collection of islands at the bottom of the Pacific with a mere 4 million people can sustain a successful, modern nation State that boasts some of the best quality of life the world can offer. What an implausible but heroic project it is, bringing together the descendants of the first settlers who, 1,000 years ago, crossed the Pacific by waka to this, the last significant land mass in the world to be settled by humans, and also the 19th century Europeans who sailed to the other side of the planet to build a new life free from class exploitation, and the 20th century Boeing arrivals who fled poverty and oppression, or who were simply seeking a better life for their children. We are all united by a desire to create a better world, and the only difference between us is when our waka touched these shores.

This common bond created a whakapapa of pioneering social reform: the Parihaka prophets of Te Whiti and Tohu, who offered a strategy of non-violent action to resolve previously lethal disputes; Kate Sheppard and the suffragettes, securing the vote for women; Richard Seddon and the Liberals, bringing in ground-breaking social and industrial legislation; Michael Joseph Savage, creating one of the world’s most comprehensive social security systems in the 1930s; Peter Fraser, at the UN in 1945, helping to draft the Universal Declaration of Human Rights; Norm Kirk, in the 1970s, standing up for a nuclear-free Pacific; and the Treaty settlement process started by Kirk and Matiu Rata, a unique effort at post-colonial reconciliation over more than 3½ decades. There is much to be proud of, and to draw inspiration from.

Let us not forget our other nation builders: the entrepreneurs, the scientists, public servants, our artists, educators, sportspeople, the men and women who worked the land, the workers who built the roads, raised the kids, and fought the wars when we asked them to do so, and those who clean the offices, run the footy and netball teams, look after our older and frail New Zealanders, and work in the kitchens, shops, and factories.

In spite of our national tendency to self-doubt, we know we are capable of great things. I believe that to achieve great things there are a few things that we must do first. I believe we must unleash the talents of all of our citizens. This will take great health and education systems, and a shared belief that unemployment, incarceration, and ill health are above all a waste of human potential that we cannot afford. I believe we must recognise there are some things we do more efficiently and fairly together, rather than privately. Smart, strong Government can deliver the essentials: health care, cost-effective social insurance, education, and superannuation. These social supports mean we all get the best possible start in life, and after that it is up to each of us to apply our talent and hard work. This, to me, is modern socialism. This, to me, is what it means to be in a modern New Zealand Labour Party.

I reject the notion that Government is a burden. In a global market place, where billions of dollars can be moved across borders at the click of a mouse, it is easy for the big to get bigger, at the expense of the vulnerable. Rules are needed for fair competition and to make markets work. Government can have a role in owning strategically important enterprises. I believe we must constantly look for ways to help our firms to grow and create high-value jobs, and seize the opportunities in global markets. We have to invest more in research and development and science, based on our comparative advantages. We have to keep building the infrastructure for a 21st century economy, and we must meet head-on the challenge of sustainability. If we win, we can continue to do business in a post-carbon world, and enjoy a truly clean and green New Zealand. If we lose, it does not bear thinking about. Is there a New Zealander who does not want his or her children or grandchildren to once again be able to swim and fish at our beaches and rivers and lakes?

None of this will happen unless we strike a deal with each other, based on the common good: a deal that says if we work hard and play by the rules, we will have every opportunity to get ahead and enjoy the fruits of our labours, and that we pay our fair share of taxes because they are the price of a decent society and the only way to truly protect the Kiwi way of life: the fair go for all. They are the price of a decent New Zealand, where the local school provides a great education, where access to health care is not determined by the size of someone’s wallet, where people who are injured at work or play are looked after, and where no one needs to live in a gated community to feel safe. That is why I am proud to stand here today as a Labour member of Parliament.

One of the issues we need to talk about is the constitution. That conversation about our nation’s destiny must be framed by the republic, and not by the constitutional trappings of our colonial past. We have been far too shy of having this debate. But as our nation rapidly changes its make-up, its ties to England will become even more strained and irrelevant. As I look around this Chamber I see the most diverse House in the history of this institution, and the last thing that I think of is the Queen on the other side of the world. It is not a debate we should leave for the Australians to have first, then, by some kind of osmosis, follow in New Zealand. We must have this discussion on our own terms.

It is a journey that I hope to play a role in as a first generation New Zealander, the fourth child of Sam and Gillian Twyford, who arrived fresh off the plane at Whenuapai shortly before I was born in 1963, as part of the great post-war British diaspora. My mother, who will be watching this speech on television, more than anyone made me who I am. She brought love and hard work to the task of raising five children on her own. We were never what you would call poor, but to put jam on our bread she cleaned other people’s houses and worked the night shift at a local rest home. In mid-life a stroke left her disabled, but she recovered amazingly and has lived independently for the last 23 years, thanks to her grit and drive.

Although mother is the core of my being, I trace my political awakening to a couple of important moments. As a fifth former at Westlake Boys High School, I listened on a transistor radio at lunchtime to a news broadcast of the police and army evicting Ngāti Whātua from Bastion Point on the orders of then Prime Minister, Rob Muldoon. It struck me as shameful that a democratic nation could send in the might of the State to evict these people from their land. The second was the visit to my school by Michael Lapsley, a New Zealand Anglican priest who was part of the anti-apartheid movement in South Africa. A parcel bomb from the South African intelligence services blinded him and blew his hands off. I wagged a class to hear him speak to a group of older students, and the story of his courageous refusal to compromise his beliefs before the unyielding power of the State changed my life.

My moral and political compass took its bearings through the economic and social turbulence of the 1980s. Like thousands of other New Zealanders I marched against apartheid, blockaded our harbours against nuclear-armed ships, and door-knocked for the election of the fourth Labour Government. Its independent foreign policy, long overdue social and environmental reforms, and progress on the Treaty were cause for elation. But, as for many, the sweet taste of social progress turned to ashes in my mouth. An economic crisis became the pretext for an ideological blitzkrieg that tried to impose a commercial model on almost every facet of our nation’s life. Change was needed, but by God we paid the price in terms of poverty, inequality, loss of productive capacity in our firms, and damaged generations. We are still paying.

It is possible, I believe, to run an open economy that welcomes good foreign investment while also protecting what is good and valuable about our landscape, our institutions, and our way of life. It is possible to have a business-friendly environment while respecting the rights of workers and treating them with dignity. It is possible to celebrate success and wealth creation while also giving a hand up to those who need it. It is possible.

During the dark years of the Douglas-Richardson experiments, I refocused my energies on humanitarianism and development, first as the founding executive director of Oxfam New Zealand, then as the advocacy director of Oxfam International, based in Washington DC. We gave many thousands of New Zealanders the chance to help in a practical way to make our planet a fairer place. We smuggled medical supplies into Bougainville through a military blockade, so mothers who had fled the fighting by going into the bush would not die from preventable deaths in childbirth. We funded loans to Ethiopian farmers driven from the land by famine, so they could start businesses. We provided legal support for widows who lost their husbands and children in the Guatemalan civil war, so human rights abusers would be brought to justice.

I tell members these things to illustrate my view that we all need to stand up against what we see is wrong in our communities. Not to act makes us part of the problem. My latter years with Oxfam taught me that one cannot achieve lasting change without politicians who are prepared to be courageous and to take risks to do what is right. As I lobbied the UN Security Council against the invasion of Iraq, Helen Clark’s stand against the Bush-Blair-Howard war made me proud to be a New Zealander.

As a social democrat it is hard to underline enough how important Helen Clark and Michael Cullen and their generation in Labour politics have been to our hopes for this country. They rescued our party and rebuilt it. They brought our nation’s politics back to a better, more sensible place. They reconstructed a working model of social democracy anchored in Labour values. For that, I say thank you.

I want to conclude by thanking those who have travelled with me so far on this journey: my colleagues in journalism, my fellow members of the Service and Food Workers Union and the wider labour movement, my Oxfam mates both here and abroad, and numerous party colleagues. I want to single out my campaign manager, Barbara Ward, and the members of the North Shore Labour Electorate Committee who have campaigned alongside me for two elections, particularly Frances and Bill Bell. And most of all today, for my partner, Joanna, and our son, Harry, I say this: this land is our land, and nothing is too good for the future generations we will pass it on to.

Nō reira, e ngā mana, e ngā reo, e ngā rangatira maha kua rūpeke mai nei ki raro i te tuanui o tēnei o tō tātou Whare, tēnā koutou, tēnā koutou, kia ora mai anō tātou.

[So to the powers, languages, and the many leaders gathered beneath the roof of this House of ours, greetings to you, greetings to you, and greetings once again to all of us.]

KELVIN DAVIS (Labour) :Whakarongo mai, whakarongo mai. Whakarongo mai ki tēnei uri o Ngātokimatawhaorua e tū atu rā i te ākau o Ipīpiri. E tuwhera atu rā te awa o Taumārere-herehere-i-te-riri. Ka rere mā Ōtūihu, tae ki ngā rekereke o Tapukewharawhara. Raro i a Puketohunoa, ko Pūhangahau, takoto kau ngā kōiwi tūpuna, ara mai he tētēkura. Ka hiki te manawa i te kakara reka o Te Kāretu. Ngā kaitiaki o te ahikā ko Ngāti Manu. Tiheiwā mauri ora. Tēnā tātou katoa i whakarauikatia mai i raro i te tāhuhu o tō tātou nei Whare. Tēnā rā hoki koutou e tōku whānau whānui kua patu mai i ngā huarahi, mai i ngā pito tawhiti o te motu ki te tatū ki konei, hei tautoko i te kaupapa o te rā nei. Tēnā tātou ō tātou mate maha.

[Hearken, listen to my words. Take heed of this descendant of Ngātokimatawhaorua. I stand on the shore of Ipīpiri at the mouth of my river Taumārere-herehere-i-te-riri. It flows by Ōtūihu, and reaches the heels of Tapukewharawhara. There at the base of Puketohunoa is Pūhangahau, the final resting place of the ancestors. A new frond has arisen. My heart is imbued by the sweet scent of Te Kāretu. Ngāti Manu are guardians of the homelands. Sneeze, ’tis the breath of life. Greetings to us all assembled here under the ridgepole of our House. Greetings to you, my extended family who set out on the highways from distant points of the land to be here to support today’s event. And greetings to you, our many dead.]

Mr Assistant Speaker, I acknowledge and congratulate you on your election to your position. I also acknowledge the leaders of the Labour Party, the Hon Phil Goff and the Hon Annette King. I look forward to working with them both and with the Labour caucus, and to making a contribution to our team and nation. Also, I would like to acknowledge and congratulate the Rt Hon Helen Clark on her formidable leadership of the Labour Party and, indeed, on having been the Prime Minister of New Zealand for the last 9 years. I thank Helen for the way she honoured my people of Ngāti Manu earlier this year, when she visited our valley and marae and endorsed my candidacy.

With affection I acknowledge my family and friends—those who have been able to traverse the length of Te Ika-a-Māui to be here, especially my wife, Moira, and my father, Pānapa, as well as those who could not be here, including my children, Kelly, Billie, and Rēweti; my mother, Glenys; my brothers, Patrick and Greg; my sister, Sonya; my brothers-in-law and sisters-in-law; my mother-in-law and father-in-law, Tom and Raewyn Hoddle; my numerous nephews and nieces, aunties and uncles, and cousins; and my whānau from Ngāti Manu. I also acknowledge my many tribal connections in the mid-north to Te Kapotai, Ngāti Hine, Ngāpuhi whanui, Ngāti Wai, and Ngāti Whātua. I acknowledge in the far north the iwi Ngāti Kurī, Te Aupōuri, Ngāi Takoto, Ngāti Kahu and Te Rarawa, and also those of my iwi further south—in particular Ngāi Tai, Ngāti Kahungunu, and Ngāti Raukawa.

I am honoured to have stood for Labour in the seat of Te Tai Tokerau, and although disappointed not to have won it I acknowledge my whanaunga Hone Harawira, who was successful—tēnā koe e Hone. I also congratulate and acknowledge all other Māori members of Parliament and hope that Māori will see the benefits of our presence here.

I hail from the valley of Kāretu. Across the road from our marae stands Puketohunoa, one of our ancestral maunga. On the summit of Puketohunoa once dwelt my tupuna, Whētoi Pōmare. From his whare named Tīhema he had sweeping panoramas of the valley and across to Ruapekapeka, the site of the last battle of the northern land wars. At the foot of our maunga, Puketohunoa, flows our Kāretu creek, which runs seaward and connects with our tupuna awa known as Taumārere-herehere-i-te-riri. One of our Ngāti Manu waiata connects these three features to one another in the lines: “Tū ana mātou ki runga o Puketohunoa, ka titiro atu ki Ruapekapeka, ka hoki mai ki te puna o ōku mātua e, e karekare nei e, ko Taumārere.”

[“We stand on Puketohunoa and look upon Ruapekapeka and back again to the rippling waters of our parents’ bathing pool, it is Taumārere.”]

If one was to drift in the current of, first, the Kāretu creek past the foot of Puketohunoa, then into the flow of Taumārere, one would eventually pass by the cradle of our nation, Waitangi, where as we all know in February 1840 a number of Māori chiefs, including my tupuna Whētoi Pōmare, drew their moko on to a piece of paper that is now known as the Treaty of Waitangi. I would like to believe that when my tupuna Pōmare etched the shape of his facial tattoo on to that piece of paper, he did it in the hope that his actions would ensure the future prosperity of his whānau, his hapū, and his iwi. The world has changed, 168 years later, beyond what my tupuna could have imagined. But what has not changed, at least in my whānau, is that in the six generations since, from generation to generation through to my grandparents, parents, and my brothers, sister, and myself, is the understanding that our actions today leave a legacy for generations to come and must contribute to the ongoing prosperity of whānau, hapū, and iwi.

The prosperity of all Māori is necessary if we are to fulfil the words of our great Tai Tokerau rangatira Sir James Hēnare, when he once said: “It is preposterous that any Maori should aspire to become a poor pakeha when their true destiny, prescribed by the Creator, is to become a great Maori.” What makes Māori great? I believe all Māori who achieve their potential or beyond and bolster the standing of their whānau and community achieve a measure of greatness. As a former principal it was immensely rewarding to witness the joy and satisfaction on the face of whānau when their children achieved. I was acutely aware, though, of how thin those ranks of achievement are in many of our schools. New Zealand history shows that Māori can succeed in the face of adversity. But this success needs to become the norm rather than the exception. The greatness of a nation is linked to the distinction of its people.

I come to the House seeking to make a contribution that enriches our nation through expanding the ranks of those Māori families who seek educational achievement. The lessons of the chalkface have value and ought to be borne in mind as we debate how to innovate, fund, and improve our system of education. Being a great achiever begins for our children when they enjoy aroha—that is, unconditional love from parents and caregivers who realise that raising children is not a right to do as one likes but an obligation to the next generation. Educational engagement and achievement is vital to Māori greatness and prosperity. We will achieve more with one full generation of highly educated Māori than we will from the last 168 years of grievance. We need Māori to be educated so that we become the people of influence and the decision makers.

I have spent 20 years at the chalkface in education. I enjoyed a 14-year career as a principal, and am especially proud of the achievements of the board of trustees, staff, and students of Kaitāia Intermediate School, which in 7 years saw a school turn from almost total academic failure to academic success. We proved at Kaitāia Intermediate School that Māori do not need to wait decades or generations to see improvements to Māori achievement and well-being at school. It can happen almost immediately. With the right approach by principals, teachers, bureaucrats, politicians, and others within the system, Māori can, and will, make immense and rapid gains in achievement. Those will lead on to gains in Māori health and life expectancy, financial well-being, leadership positions and influence, and being able to collectively and fully contribute to our country.

We must ensure our education system engages Māori from their first day of school right through until their last day at end of year 13, and on to a lifetime of striving for knowledge, wisdom, and understanding. For many Māori disengagement from the educational system is but the first step in disengagement from society in general. Māori will never achieve greatness or beyond our potential unless we are educationally successful. Therefore it is imperative, if Māori are to achieve great things, that we get the education system right for Māori.

Conversely, we, Māori, have to realise one of our greatest weaknesses is to blame the system. We know that history has conspired against us. We know a heck of a lot happened to our people that has set our progress and development back and has resulted in our struggle to prosper and achieve greatness. But as critical as I am of those who deny the effects of the damage the system has done to Māori over the last 168 years, I am equally critical of Māori who blame only the system for their own failings. Do we, as a people, have the courage to accept responsibility for our lives? It is time for us to collectively step up and, as we say, para te huarahi—blaze a trail. I have sat in hui where the talk has all been about the injustices, the grievances, and the excessive navel-gazing that stagnates the mind and saps the energy and the soul. It is time we stopped wallowing in self-pity and instead looked for solutions. It is time our hui were all forward thinking, positive, and solutions based.

Last Wednesday I attended a seminar where a group of Māori gathered to discuss information and communications technology. These people were educated, professional, and motivated. There was no self-pity, there was no talk of grievance, and there was no talk of injustice. There were problems and frustrations, but they searched for solutions. We need to replicate that sense of purpose and mission in our hui, our marae, and our homes. Blaming the system implies we are too weak as a people to help ourselves—that we are victims. Bad stuff has happened, but we must cease to be victims. Māori need to sort ourselves out. Education is the passport, but we need to put ourselves on the flight to the future. Obviously policy, process, and ideology are a part of the journey and it will happen with a collaboration of the spirit.

A kaumātua said to me earlier this year that the problem with our Māori youth is actually us, the adults. His words to me were: “We need to lay off our youth and sort ourselves out.” If we want our Māori youth to act in a certain way to achieve personal greatness, then they need Māori adults to be the role models and demonstrate how that is to be done. If we are serious about wanting to prosper and provide hope for our kids then Māori adults need to step up. We Māori men need to step up. It is said that being a male is a matter of birth, but being a man is a matter of choice. Likewise, being a Māori is a matter of birth, but being a Māori achiever is a matter of choice. We Māori men must have the courage to lead our whānau and hapū towards prosperity and greatness. We are renowned for our warrior spirit, but it is time that warrior spirit manifested itself in new ways. We need to replace anger, grievance, and self-pity with dignity, determination, resilience, and forgiveness.

I conclude by stating that I have hope for the future: the future of my children and the future for us as Māori. I believe that by lifting Māori educational achievement and by us as Māori having the courage to take control of our present we will as a people achieve prosperity and the future greatness that is our destiny. That road to greatness has been paved with trials and tribulations. But those trials and tribulations never stopped Sir James Hēnare, a boy from Mōtatau deep in the heart of Ngāti Hine, from standing as an example of how our destiny as Māori, prescribed by the Creator, is to achieve greatness. I look forward to the contributions I can make to this forty-ninth Parliament as an educator, a politician, and a Māori, for the benefit of the whole nation.

Nō reira tātou mā, huri noa i tō tātou Whare, rau rangatira mā, e te whānau, tēnā koutou, tēnā koutou, tēnā koutou katoa.

[So to all of us throughout our House, the many leaders and the family, greetings to you, greetings to you, and greetings to us all.]

  • Waiata

IAIN LEES-GALLOWAY (Labour—Palmerston North) : May I add my congratulations to you, Mr Speaker, on your election to your position. I look forward to your guidance and wisdom as my colleagues and I find our feet in this place. I am proud, honoured, and humbled to enter this House as the member for Palmerston North and a member of the Labour caucus. Unlike my esteemed predecessors Steve Maharey and Trevor de Cleene, I am not a native of Palmerston North, nor did I spend my formative years in the same State house on Savage Crescent where, coincidentally, that pair grew up.

Hon Ruth Dyson: Together?

IAIN LEES-GALLOWAY: Not together. My childhood was spent a world away on a beef farm near Waiuku, south of Auckland. For me, the decision to live in Palmerston North was a conscious one that was made without the weight of parochial loyalty that I now feel towards my home town—and Palmerston North is my home. I have lived there for close to 11 years, I met my wife there, and my children were born there. Over the last 10 years all of my immediate family have followed me to Palmerston North, and it is my desire that our family will have a close connection with the city for many, many years to come.

Like my relationship with Palmerston North, my relationship with the Labour Party is not one founded on generations of family loyalty. Exactly how a privately educated boy from a beef farm, who had Bill Birch as his local MP, grew up to become active in the student and Labour movements still has many people somewhat perplexed, not least my parents.

That is a story for another day, but the reason I joined the Labour Party is quite simple: its values match my own. I believe in communities. I believe in decent pay for good work. I believe in strong public services, and that the State is still relevant and necessary in a modern economy. I believe in freedom of choice and individual responsibility. I also believe that we each have a responsibility to work in one another’s best interests, and not just our own. Most of all, I believe in empowering people. That means investing in our communities and in each other. It certainly does not mean withdrawing support from those who are the most vulnerable and at the margins of our society.

These are values that were taught to me by my parents who, I am pleased to say, are watching us from the gallery today. Everything they did for their two growing sons was done out of a desire to give us the very best opportunities in life. It is fair to say that these days my family and I do not exactly see eye to eye politically. In fact, it seems it caused quite a dilemma for my parents when choosing between voting for their son or for the local National Party candidate. My parents are lateral thinkers and they came up with a novel, if not slightly drastic, solution. They moved out of the electorate. I am sure Simon Power will be relieved to know that he has two more loyal supporters. Nevertheless, I know that I would not be here today if it were not for the love and encouragement that pervaded my childhood, and for that I thank them both.

The city where my wife Clare and I have chosen to raise our own children is a bustling, vibrant regional centre. It has a robust economy, thanks to a mix of public and private sector industries and services. It excels in servicing the agricultural sector of the Manawatū and beyond. It excels in research, education, retail, manufacturing, and distribution. The city is full of innovative people and the work being done at Massey University, at the Fitzherbert Science Park, and in numerous small businesses in the city has the potential to put Palmerston North and New Zealand on the map as a leader in sustainable agrifood research. Such research and the teaching of the skills required to carry it out are at the heart of New Zealand’s ongoing and necessary economic transformation. The public sector must support the kind of blue-skies research required to make substantial scientific advances and it is right that Governments remain committed to funding such work, as well giving our scientists the freedom to explore avenues of potential benefit.

However, it is equally important that an environment is created in which New Zealand businesses are encouraged to invest in research and development. New Zealand’s private sector research and development investment is woeful by international standards. In fact, as a percentage of GDP it is one-third the OECD average. The countries ahead of us have been offering something called research and development tax credits for years. Currently 21 OECD countries are offering research and development tax credits; it is soon to be 20. Our research and development investment must improve, becauseNew Zealand needs a private sector that is committed to research and development. As my colleague the Hon Pete Hodgson told the House last night, businesses engaged in research and development are by their nature more likely to be high growth, economically sustainable, more likely to have a commitment to staff retention, and more likely be exporters. They need skilled labour, not cheap labour. They are what this country needs.

If we are to remain on the path towards a high-wage economy, we must stay focused on what makes New Zealand unique. Part of what makes New Zealand unique is that thing we call our clean, green image. When thinking of New Zealand, most international travellers tell us that they come here to experience our lush native bush, our pristine mountain ranges, our unblemished beaches, and our pollution-free rivers. The marketing is perfect: 100 percent pure New Zealand. Unfortunately, the reality does not quite match the hype. But it is not just the tourism industry that relies on clean, green New Zealand. The quality of our exports will increasingly be judged by the environmental impact of their production. Yes, we already do well by international standards, but given the distance to our markets and the misleading attention given to food miles, there is increasing pressure to be cleaner and greener than everybody else.

But the arguments in favour of environmental sustainability are about much, much more than the economic imperatives. I am immensely proud to be a member of the party that led the Government into finally facing up to the difficult challenge of taking just the first few steps towards reducing emissions. I am equally dismayed to be a member of a House of Representatives that plans to stall the progress of the emissions trading scheme. To me, the sustainability question can be boiled down to this: in what state will we leave our one and only planet for future generations? Will we hand them the legacy of blind greed, of an environment so devastated that there is no foundation for a sound economy? Or will we take action now so that our children, our grandchildren, and our great-grandchildren can enjoy the lifestyle we naively take for granted?

We should also ask ourselves what kind of society we would like our children and grandchildren to inherit. Palmerston North is a great place to raise a family. It is a safe, culturally diverse city blessed with tremendous schools, an effervescent arts culture, and outstanding sporting facilities. The opportunities to learn, work, and play seem boundless. It is a place where children thrive. Sadly, though, so many of our families are unable to create the environments in which children prosper. Some of the reasons are financial, and I ask members to take note of the advice I have received from the Palmerston North Salvation Army and Methodist Social Services, that their food banks are now increasingly being frequented by low-income working families that are struggling to make ends meet.

But money—or the lack of it—is not the root of all the challenges for our young families. When I listen to the principals of our primary schools, there is a clear theme in what they are telling me. When they see a child walk through the door at age 5, they can tell straight away how stable his or her home environment is and, by extension, the likelihood of that child’s academic and social success, and the likelihood that he or she will go on to be a productive and valuable member of the community. We can demand all we want from our schools: to teach our children how to read and write, the fundamentals of maths, science, history, and geography, how to use a computer, and how to access the Internet. We can expect our schools to provide opportunities for children to explore their artistic and sporting talents, and we can even ask them to teach civics and instil discipline. We can ask our schools to do all that, but if our children then go home to an environment where learning is not supported, where there is little or no adult supervision, where violence is a day-to-day occurrence, and where there is no food on the table, then all our demands on our schools are for naught.

I am not saying our nation is riddled with bad parents. I know that the overwhelming majority of parents want the very best for their children. Parents who are struggling want to give their children the opportunities they might not have had themselves. But often they just do not know how. What many of our parents desperately need is guidance and support. We need role models to help set our parents and our children on the path towards achieving their own goals. How can we help? What can we do? Is there a place for the Government to offer assistance or do we baulk at the idea of interfering bureaucrats moving into our homes and telling us how to raise our children? If that is what I was advocating, then I would expect an outright rejection, but it is not. There are already numerous organisations working within their own communities to assist the parents of young families. Te Aroha Noa Community Services is just one of several I could name in Palmerston North. Te Aroha Noa is based in Highbury, a suburb in our city that struggles to hit the news for the right reasons. Five years ago things hit rock-bottom in Highbury. Tensions between rival gangs flared and it culminated in the tragic end of a young life. The community could have chosen to turn a blind eye or to blame some outside force, but they chose instead to take ownership of the problem. They decided they needed to rebuild their community. They decided they wanted people to be proud to live in Highbury and there are now several organisations involved in achieving this splendid ambition, including the primary health provider Te Wakahuia, the Highbury Whanau Centre, and the people of Rangitāne.

I single out Te Aroha Noa because their focus is on children and their families. In particular, it delivers the Home Interaction Programme for Parents and Youngsters—HIPPY for short. This is a home-based programme that supports parents in becoming actively involved in their children’s learning. Parents and children work together for 15 minutes a day with story books, puzzles, and games and the goal is to help those children become successful learners. The tutors are parents themselves who have been through the programme with their own children. They visit people in their homes, so it creates an opportunity to build community relationships. Te Aroha Noa specifically works within the Highbury community and the neighbouring communities of Takaro and Cloverlea—they work in and with their own community. Some of the tutors are young mothers who have themselves struggled—indeed, they are still struggling—to build the life they want for their families.

Earlier this year I met three young women—very inspirational. They are all mothers and all are now giving something back as tutors. They spoke of their goals and ambitions, and more important, how they planned to achieve them. One woman spoke of making Highbury violence free. I wish we could all be so bold to articulate such aspiration. My deep desire is that every parent in New Zealand would have access to the Home Interaction Programme for Parents and Youngsters, or something like it. I appreciate that significant funding is already available through the Ministry of Education but there are still so many families that the providers cannot reach and my fear is that these are exactly the families whose need is greatest.

The Government can and should do more. It will be difficult to measure the outcomes of any spending. We are not likely to see the results for another 20 years maybe. But I say to members that proactive investment is far more cost-effective and far more valuable to our society than trying to fix the problems we are ultimately responsible for through our own inaction. We must also pay attention to the pressures placed on all families by the organisation of Western society in the 21st century.

Our societal focal point is unarguably the workplace. Family time, community activities, and volunteering all take second place and must be fitted in around the requirements of the workplace. I believe we need to shift that focal point towards the family home, or at least promote non - workplace-based activities on to an equal footing with the workplace. There is no doubt that children do better in an environment where there is at least one adult family member available to nurture them. We ask so much of our parents and we are quick to point the finger when things go wrong. I am certain no one in this House would disagree that parenting is the most important job there is and that parents shape the future of our civilisation. The previous Government certainly acknowledged this and made incredible progress in supporting families. But we have considerably more to do to make our words anything more than empty sentiment. I suppose what I am talking about can be summed up in that cliché phrase work-life balance, hardly something politicians are renowned for.

I am sure it is obvious just how important my own family is to me and I would briefly like to mention just how thankful I am that my wife agreed to join me on this journey. Unfortunately Clare and the kids could not be here tonight but—technology willing—they are watching us on the Internet from the other side of the world, which, by the way, I think is marvellous and I hope more of Parliament’s public activities will be available through that medium one day. I am thankful to all the wonderful people in Palmerston North who have supported me thus far. We ran a long campaign and we faced many hurdles. But I was never alone and it was the team that truly carried the day, ably led by our campaign manager, John Shennan. It would be remiss of me not to acknowledge the support and mentoring I have received from the Hon Steve Maharey. I know he will be missed in these halls and will be remembered as a dynamic man of action who achieved lasting change in his portfolios. I once heard him described as the “Minister of Everything That’s Important”, although I must say he showed his wisdom by never taking on the health portfolio. His return to Palmerston North as vice-chancellor of Massey University was warmly received by our community and I look forward to working with him in our new respective roles for as long as Palmerston North will have me.

I cannot count the times I have been told, since my selection as the Labour Party candidate for Palmerston North, that I have big shoes to fill. I hope this does not disappoint anyone back in my home town but I have no plans to do so. Steve Maharey may have been as well known for his fashion sense as anything else he achieved in here, but I want you all to know that I have my own shoes, they fit me very well, and I am comfortable in them. I do hope, however, that my footsteps will leave even a slight impression akin to that of my predecessor’s. That would be an achievement indeed. My focus is on the future, and I expect to be judged on the effect my time here has on future generations of all New Zealanders.

NATHAN GUY (Senior Whip—National) : I seek the leave of the House to allow the next speaker his full allocated time for his maiden statement, which will mean he will encroach into the dinner hour.

Mr SPEAKER: Is there any objection to that course being followed? There is no objection.

Dr KENNEDY GRAHAM (Green) : Tēnā koutou, tēnā koutou, tēnā tātou katoa. Mr Speaker, I greet you and my colleagues in the name of our common spirituality, humbled as we are in the sight of the divine, whatever we each perceive this to be. I acknowledge the mana whenua on whose land this House stands. I honour my late parents, Robert and Patricia Graham, whom I and my brothers continue to miss, 25 years on. I embrace my two sons, David and Christopher, and their families. And I acknowledge, with tender love and devotion, my wife, my friend, my partner-in-life, Marilyn Moir Graham. I acknowledge the two predecessors in my family in whose footsteps I am proud to follow: the Hon Robert Graham, who served this House with distinction a century-and-a-half ago, and whose hei tiki lies here before me; and the Rt Hon Sir Douglas, whose presence on the floor of this Chamber I acknowledge today, who left such a profound legacy of dignity and vision in his ministerial career of more recent times, with whom the fraternal bond remains forever unbreakable. May their contributions prove everlasting for the future of this nation.

I am proud to represent the Green Party, whose contribution to New Zealand is already considerable, with yet more to come. I acknowledge my colleagues in the party, whose collective endeavours laid the basis for our electoral success. I acknowledge, in particular, the peerless contribution to this country of Jeanette Fitzsimons. I pay tribute to the memory of Rod Donald.

I enter this House, imbued with respect for its history, fortified by its many achievements. Let us all ensure that this forty-ninth Parliament honours this House not only with the dignity that is its due but with a foresight that empowers it to meet the far-reaching demands of our time. For it is our duty to pass on to the next generation a planet whose physical integrity enables them to advance their own part of the human story.

To that end, it is my belief that this country, through a unified resolve and strength of purpose, should aspire to the attainment of two related goals: to become a sustainable country and to act as a responsible global citizen. Our human tenure on this Earth is still young. With some five millennia of political experience behind us, we stand on the shoulders of perhaps a hundred generations that have gone before, whose courage and sacrifice enable us to glimpse the future from the strategic heights where we stand today. Our generation looks back with gratitude, mindful of their accumulated trials and labour. Yet as we turn to the future, we glimpse the unprecedented challenges that lie ahead. For ours is the first generation to confront problems of a planetary scale—daunting in their complexity, seemingly intractable in nature.

As our human numbers increase, our Earth-share diminishes. As our materialistic lifestyle expands, our ecological footprint grows ever larger. Humankind today, casting precaution to the wind, is recording an ecological overshoot beyond the planet’s carrying capacity, anthropogenically inducing climate change of unprecedented magnitude and alarming danger. We are drawing down on Earth’s natural resources, borrowing forward on the human heritage, irretrievably encroaching on our children’s right to inherit the Earth in a natural and sustainable state. It is the uniquely dubious fate of our generation to have broken the eternal promise of intergenerational justice.

We in New Zealand are part of the problem, not yet of the solution. Our individual ecological footprints are three times higher than the global average, our carbon emissions almost five times higher. If we offer the world a national ecological surplus, it is not through prudent husbandry or modesty of habit on our part, but because we are simply few in number. A sustainable world, a sustainable country, requires a change in mindset. That requires a new world-view, a transformational change in individual lifestyle, a refashioned approach to governmental management. It is time we measured national success, not through mindless material growth but through genuine progress in human well-being. It is time we relinquished our feverish ranking within the OECD, and began contributing to the true advancement of the emerging global society.

Sustainability is the supreme political value of the 21st century. It is not a concept of passing political expediency—a clip-on word for post-economic environmental damage. It is now the categorical imperative of personal behaviour. Individual freedoms are no longer unlicensed, but henceforth subordinate to the twin principles of survival and sustainable living. The political rights we enjoy today are to be calibrated by the responsibility we carry for tomorrow.

With a sustainable economy, New Zealand can aspire to be a harmonious society. That is the day we rediscover our egalitarian roots, attaining true partnership between Pākehā and tangata whenua. That is the day we reach out to immigrant cultures, welcoming their children to these shores, where the future beckons in this still young land of ours. That is the day when Aotearoa comes of age. And with a harmonious society, this country may then aspire to responsible global citizenship—by honouring our international obligations and never collaborating with those that do not; by thinking of tomorrow’s children and meeting our Kyoto targets today; by showing a true commitment to a nuclear-weapon-free world, not only through our national zone here at home but, more critically, in our voting pattern overseas and support for a nuclear weapons convention; by promoting fair trade and aid in the quantity and quality we once promised we would; and by respecting all civilisations and faiths around the world, in a spirit of respect and due humility.

Above all, it is time we abided strictly by the global constitution of our times, working within coalitions of the lawful rather than the unwilling. Sixty-three years ago, our forefathers created the United Nations to save succeeding generations from the scourge of war that, twice in their lifetime, had brought untold suffering to humankind. Under the UN Charter, “war” has been rendered unlawful. Today, armed force may no longer be used by member States, save in the common interest. By adopting the charter, each member State, including New Zealand, undertakes never to commit aggression. It is time to ensure that we live up to our binding international obligations. It is time that the State responsibility New Zealand has assumed not to commit aggression is implemented in domestic legislation.

Over the years we have translated international obligations into our own legislation—in 1946 to abide by economic sanctions of the Security Council, and in 1987 to forswear nuclear weapons. In 2002 we made it a criminal offence for any New Zealander to commit genocide, war crimes, or crimes against humanity. Now is the time to take the next step: to make it a crime in domestic law for any New Zealander, including its leaders, to commit aggression, as defined by the General Assembly of the United Nations in 1974. This simply requires the adoption by this House of legislation to that effect. If any New Zealand Government were, in the future, to commit aggression in violation of its obligations under the United Nations Charter, it would bring this country into global disrepute, incurring unacceptable political shame to this House. In such a situation the moral legitimacy that underpins the jurisdictional authority of that Government will have collapsed, with potentially far-reaching implications for its constitutional status.

We shall not take the critical step towards the future global society until we rise above the constraints of our national sovereignty, sharing our judgments, our beliefs, and our trust in one another as peoples of this world, united by our common human values, inspired by our common interests, and resolved to pursue our common dreams together. Only through a “new patriotism” shall we free ourselves from the bondage of enmities past, securing ourselves from the carnage of the kind that those enmities once inflicted upon us.

Generations gone before have sacrificed for our cherished freedoms—freedom of speech and association, freedom to practise our religions, freedom from want, and freedom from fear. The rights we proclaim—civil and political; economic, social, and cultural—are matched today by responsibilities that are comparable in scale and shaped for our times. It is the responsibility of each human, endowed with reason and conscience, compassion and concern, to act towards one another in a fraternal spirit in pursuit of the planetary interest with which all legitimate national interests today are compatible.

Mr Speaker, I never knew my uncle. He lies, to this day, beneath the shifting sands of the Egyptian desert. Lieutenant Colonel Alec Greville, 24th Battalion, gave his life for his country, that we might live in freedom and, it was to be hoped, secure in the promise of a better future. It is in his name, in the exercise of that freedom, that I advance these political beliefs, that all New Zealanders might find their true destiny in a global unity with a common strength of purpose across all of humankind. I so pledge myself, and all my future actions in this House, to that end.

  • Sitting suspended from 6.04 p.m. to 7 p.m.

Taxation (Urgent Measures and Annual Rates) Bill

In Committee

  • Debate resumed.

Clause 29 Rates of income tax for 2009-10 tax year (continued)

A party vote was called for on the question, That clause 29 be agreed to.

Ayes 68 New Zealand National 57; ACT New Zealand 5; Māori Party 5; United Future 1.
Noes 52 New Zealand Labour 43; Green Party 8; Progressive 1.
Clause 29 agreed to.

Part 3 Annual rates, independent earner tax credit, and consequential personal tax cuts amendments (except clause 29)

Hon DAVID CUNLIFFE (Labour—New Lynn) : This part is a very interesting component of the bill and merits the close consideration of the Committee for some time. It is a misguided attempt to ensure that New Zealanders do not lose because of the clumsy and haphazard effects of this rushed and ill-conceived tax legislation. Unfortunately, the Government has introduced the independent earner tax credit but is vetoing—on financial veto grounds, I understand—an amendment proposed by my colleague Dr Michael Cullen that seeks to protect all income earners from exactly those effects. Dr Cullen took the Minister of Finance, Bill English, at his word when he said earlier in the Committee debate: “There are no losers under this bill.”

Hon Ruth Dyson: That’s what he said.

Hon DAVID CUNLIFFE: That is what he said, and that is the Government’s position. The interesting thing, of course, is that it is just not true. As we have proven earlier in the debate, anyone earning between $14,000 and $20,000 will, by April 2011, face an 8.5c increase in their tax rate.

Hon Ruth Dyson: Wouldn’t that make them worse off?

Hon DAVID CUNLIFFE: That would make them worse off. Let me prove the point. Dr Cullen’s amendment simply provides for a compensatory tax credit for low-income earners and others who might find themselves “inadvertently” penalised. If we took the Government at its word, nobody would be in that situation, and the cost of the amendment would, logically, be zero. Nobody would lose, so it would cost nothing to indemnify them. However, the Minister of Finance has come along with a very blunt instrument called a financial veto. He has said that the actual cost of insulating low-income earners would be—wait for it—$730 million over 5 years. In other words, he has made a $730 million change of mind—that is the nicest way I can put it. He told us earlier that the penalty would be zero, but he went away and did his sums and found that—oops—he was out by another three-quarters of a billion dollars. Sorry! That is a hole he cannot blame on the outgoing Government. It is a $730 million kick in the guts for low-income New Zealanders.

Who are the people who will pay this $730 million so that someone earning three-quarters of a million dollars can have an extra $260 a week? They are people who might have a second job, cleaners, people who are late in their careers and have a pre-retirement part-time job. They are people who earn well below the average wage. As admitted by the Government, those kinds of people will be taxed in order to subsidise those who do not need a cut. This is Robin Hood in reverse, except that Bill English is not playing the role of Robin; he is playing a rather venal Sheriff of Nottingham, just before Christmas. It is not a good look for the Government, let us all admit, in its first week on the job. In particular, it is not a good look because Government members told us there would be no such penalty, and now they have quantified the real penalty in order to veto Dr Cullen’s rather elegant amendment. They have shot themselves in both feet at the same time.

The particular irony of this rather interesting self-contradiction is that it stands in strong contrast to the so-called independent earner tax credit, which seeks to improve the relative position of certain sectors of the community who felt a little brassed off because they did not get Working for Families payments. To enter that argument we need to think back and ask ourselves why Working for Families was brought in. It was brought in at a time when our families were under particular stress because of increased housing costs, rising fuel prices, and other things that we have all talked about and that we all understand are beyond our control. People who had the responsibility to bring up children faced huge costs, so we prioritised; we targeted State assistance to those who needed it most. It was a pretty fair thing to do.

Ah, along came a little thing called politics. Some of my parliamentary colleagues, from all sides of the Chamber, have probably done what I do occasionally in an election campaign, and that is stand on a traffic island. Jonathan Coleman does that—[Interruption] Mr Coleman’s electorate is just north of the bridge, and I recommend that he go back there sometime soon. [Interruption] Labour won the party vote in New Lynn, thank you very much. And that will be the high tide for the blue tide—let us not worry about that. I noticed while standing on the traffic islands of New Lynn that anybody with a non-Caucasian face would generally give two thumbs up as he or she drove past. But I always knew I was in trouble when I saw a four-wheel drive driven by an overweight white male with a No. 2 haircut. Those drivers would generally wave only one digit and it was not the thumb. That is the market segment that this independent earner tax credit is designed to assuage. The grumpy white male vote is in play here. OK, that is fine; I think we can assume that the Government won the grumpy white male vote in the election.

Hon Gerry Brownlee: He’s sitting behind you.

Hon DAVID CUNLIFFE: No, no. Here he comes. I said grumpy, not bumbling. Mr Brownlee should read the Standing Orders; then he will be just fine in a year or two, if he is still here. The independent earner tax credit is a remarkable achievement for this Government. This bill was predicated on the unevenness of the marginal tax rate effects throughout the tax scale. In some misbegotten attempt to solve that problem, the Government has helicoptered in a tax credit for one particular section of the population. The net effect is that it makes the problem worse by singling out one small group of people who do not receive any of the other high-priority benefits and giving them a seemingly arbitrary gain.

I come back to where I began. If the Government were serious about indemnifying New Zealanders at risk, it would choose not this mechanism but the mechanism that my good colleague Dr Cullen thought of in 5 minutes during the tea break. It would indemnify the net losers, whom Bill English said do not exist—except that he then changed his mind and said that they exist to the tune of $730 million. Merry Christmas, New Zealanders! They thought they had voted for a benign kind of National Government, one that would keep in place the things they appreciated from the last 9 years of a good Labour Government, such as Working for Families, KiwiSaver, and the research and development tax credit that gave help to our innovators. The smiling face of Mr Key, as a likable bloke, bounced from cloud to cloud and told us it would all be OK. Then, on the Government’s first day in the job, it introduced legislation that kicks low-income New Zealanders in the guts. It kicks our innovators in the guts, and kicks in the guts prudent New Zealanders who are saving for their future. Merry Christmas, Mr Key. Merry Christmas, Mr English.

I say to New Zealand that unfortunately this is probably a foretaste of things to come. As one colleague said earlier today, when we look back in history we can see that this week is remarkably similar to the first week of the Ruth Richardson economic reign, when tax cuts to the wealthy, punitive employment relations legislation, and misguided intervention were the order of the day.

It is interesting to see Sir Roger Douglas back in the House. He opposed that Government, and now he is in favour of the same thing. He still holds to the same ideals; it is just that he has had an interesting policy evolution on the way to serve them. I look forward to nothing so much as his maiden speech, so I am getting in early to see whether I can identify the contradiction before he gets the chance to underline it. That will be a precious moment in New Zealand’s economic history—when he justifies the full circle that he has travelled. We look forward to that with great anticipation. That kind of full circle, that kind of logical OODA loop, to use military technology, is rather like the logical backflip that has been done here by the Government. It has put in an independent earner tax credit. It has singled out the grumpy white males with the No. 2 haircuts, and chucked them $10 a week, ignoring low-income families.

CRAIG FOSS (National—Tukituki) : When I look across to the other side of the Chamber I do indeed see some grumpy white males, but not with No. 2 haircuts—not yet. The electorate became sick and tired of hearing a couple of grumpy white males telling them that their taxes could not be cut until those members were 15 points behind in the polls.

Chris Tremain: Then there was the road to Damascus.

CRAIG FOSS: That is right. The independent earner tax credit—

Hon David Cunliffe: There are 9 billion reasons to be generous.

CRAIG FOSS: Did the previous speaker say he was looking forward to Sir Roger Douglas’s maiden speech?

Chris Tremain: He doesn’t get another one.

CRAIG FOSS: He does not get another one. I think he is about 30 years too late.

Hon David Cunliffe: I was giving the member the benefit of the doubt. He may have been deflowered a couple of times but he is still a maiden in our eyes.

CRAIG FOSS: I did make the point to the member that we learnt the other day that Sir Roger Douglas never made a valedictory speech, so I guess he had a premonition that he would be back. That is over to him. [Interruption] “The Return”—whatever. There are a few speech notes there!

The independent earner tax credit forms a cornerstone of one of National’s commitments that we are committed to pushing through in the first 100 days of our administration. Yes, it will be pushed through before Christmas. I note that the previous member talked about a long night, or a long speech—

Hon David Cunliffe: I raise a point of order, Mr Chairperson. I see Sir Roger Douglas is preparing to leave. If indeed he does not need to give a maiden speech, I wonder whether the member who is on his feet would cede part of his time so that Sir Roger can illuminate us, which we would very much like him to do.

The CHAIRPERSON (Eric Roy): That is not a point of order, and it is not helpful to the debate. One of the things that is going to change somewhat is this habit of members raising points of order that are not points of order but some kind of interjection. The tolerance of that is going to diminish as the days go by, let me assure that member and anybody else in the Chamber. Points of order will be points of order.

CRAIG FOSS: Thank you for your guidance, Mr Chair. The independent earner tax credit is a cornerstone of this legislation and of National’s commitment to the electorate. It will be very interesting, because it seems obvious that the members on the other side of the Chamber will be voting against this part.

Hon David Cunliffe: Better believe it.

CRAIG FOSS: We had better believe it. They will be voting against it. They keep talking about the people in the electorate. They are going to rock up to 630,000-odd New Zealanders—stand on traffic islands, you name it; whatever the previous member said—who have not enjoyed any benefit whatsoever from the huge tax gains made over the last 9 years by the previous administration. They have not benefited one little bit. In fact, they have been punished by fiscal drag over those years of 25 percent to 30 percent, I guess. They have been dragged through higher prices, etc., and have been taken into new tax brackets. The party opposite is going to tell those 630,000 people who are eligible for $10 a week from 1 April 2009, moving to $15 a week from 1 April 2010, that they should not share in the tax cuts.

The Opposition has been playing wedge politics. Its speeches are constantly about other parties in the Chamber, and about the make-up of New Zealand. Those members are going to tell 630,000 people that they should not share in the tax cuts that the National Party put before the country at the last election. That proposal led to our being resoundingly voted in. The previous administration refused to cut taxes, and it refused to recognise this particular demographic, who work just as hard as anybody else. They resoundingly voted the previous administration out. This group does not have children. The tax cuts are targeted. Many may have delayed having children. Whatever the reason, what business is it of this House as to why people did or did not have children, or when they did or did not have children? Goodness gracious! The previous administration tried to control light bulbs and shower heads, and now it is trying to control even further what goes on in people’s personal lives. I will not elaborate.

The members of the previous administration are being true to form. Every single speech made by those members shows their true colours. They will not be more clear and succinct than when they vote against this part whereby 630,000 New Zealanders will enjoy $10 a week from 1 April 2009, in these tough economic times, in this deep recession, which began under the previous administration—prior to it beginning in any other country, by the way. Those people will get $15 a week from 1 April 2010.

It is a start. As I said in my first reading speech, it is a start. The tax changes in this bill are part of a greater plan. They send a very special and very succinct message to the electorate. The message that these tax changes send is that Government members value New Zealanders’ hard work. We value the hard work that they do to help make our country great. We value the fact that they are still here in New Zealand, and have not joined their friends and family overseas. We value the fact that they are choosing to make a better life for themselves in New Zealand. We value the fact that one day they may have children, or maybe they will not—it is none of our business whatsoever. The message this bill sends is that hard work is hard work, regardless of family status, regardless of whether a person has children. Does someone who works on the factory floor who has two, three, or four children work harder than someone on the factory floor who does not have children? Yes or no?

A previous speaker, the Hon Clayton Cosgrove, made some superfluous points about the cut-in at $23,999 and argued how arbitrary it was. Yes, in a really academic sense he may be right on that small point, but we should look at it logically. Is hard work different because of who does it? Should not all New Zealanders enjoy the benefits of a positive taxation commitment from their Government? Should not they all enjoy it, regardless of their status? Of course they should.

I have just one other point—I think the next grumpy old man is ready to speak. Dr Cullen raised some interesting points, and I believe he tried to table an amendment earlier. I look forward to it. It obviously is in the same realm as his other accusations about this bill—about pension portability and KiwiSaver—which have been blown out of the water, but we will look forward to discussing it in the debate on Part 4. Thank you.

Hon Dr MICHAEL CULLEN (Labour) : One scarcely knows where to begin on this piece of nonsense. I said at the start of this debate that there were some incompetent and silly bits in this bill, and this is certainly incompetent and silly and certainly unfair. We are told that this independent earner tax credit applies to 630,000 people. There are 3 million taxpayers in New Zealand, so 2.4 million taxpayers are getting nothing out of the independent earner tax credit.

Chris Tremain: But they are in the tax threshold changes.

Hon Dr MICHAEL CULLEN: No, they are not in the tax threshold changes. The member has not listened at all today. Anybody earning $14,000 to $24,000 was getting a threshold change under Labour, but it is taken away under National. They will be paying more tax under National by 2011 than they would have been paying under Labour. They will be paying $9 a week more if they are on $20,000. Everybody believes that. It has been in the newspapers. My God—if we can convince the Dominion Post and the New Zealand Herald then we have the Tory press on side, and that is a pretty good start on winning that particular argument.

We have this nonsense whereby if one is earning $23,999 and one earns $1 more, one will get a $750 bonus—a $780 bonus by 2010 with the independent earner tax credit. So for that $1 I guarantee that there will be an awful lot of people earning exactly $24,000 a year by April 2010. Talk about rorts on research and development tax credits! It will be amazing. We will have businesses around the country saying: “If I slip you 20 bucks extra, give me a couple of hundred back under the table, because you will qualify for a $780 tax credit from the Government.” That will go on—it will be rorted up and down the country. It will not be all the clever guys in the glass towers who work this one out—small businesses will be working it out for themselves with their own employees.

But who does not get the independent earner tax credit? Anyone who is receiving an income-tested benefit. So a solo mum who is struggling to bring up her kids, going out to work—Paula Bennett’s ideal past—and earning, say, $8,000 a year, or $150 a week, does not get the independent earner tax credit. She might be struggling to bring up three kids, and the Government says to her: “Sorry about that. You’re bringing up kids so you don’t get the independent earner tax credit.” However, the guy next door, who is her ex-husband and walked out, does get it. Members would feel pretty ticked off if they were that solo mum. They would say: “What kind of pro-family National Government is this one?”. This is pretty strange, what they are doing here. Had they thought about that? Look at them—they never think about these things when they make up these policies. Why? Because it was made up on the hoof. They promised 50 bucks a week for those on the average wage—which, of course, was including what Labour was already doing. It was not 50 bucks a week on top of that, although they led people to believe that.

Then when they got the Pre-election Economic and Fiscal Update, there was not a dry seat left in the National Party caucus, and they said: “Somehow we have to save some money. So how do we deliver 50 bucks a week at $46,000 a year?”. Then they had a bright idea. They would have a targeted tax credit that would start somewhere or other, fade out by $50,000 a year, and just happen to add up to not quite $50 but $49.13, I think it was, at $46,000 a year. That is where this came from. This was a last-minute put-together job that looked as though it was Gerry Brownlee trying to assemble a Chinese bicycle from the parts. It did not work. The wheels were on top of the handlebars and nothing was going anywhere at the end of the day.

Who else does not get the independent earner tax credit? Anybody who is receiving a veterans pension does not get it. We have heard about all the vets. My goodness, have we not had hands on hearts from various people, including during the Prime Minister’s speech. Well, if one went to one of those places—say, Malaya—and got injured and is on a veterans pension, and one earns, say, 10,000 bucks, which is a couple of hundred dollars a week, one does not get the independent earner tax credit. Because one is not independent. So here is a veteran, 70 years old or whatever, although he is probably a bit older if he went to Malaya. Say he went to Viet Nam, and here he is, at 60 years old, with an injury, and qualifying for a veterans pension, and my goodness me! He will be cut out of the independent earner tax credit. So that is a thank you for his service to the nation—from the party that sent him there in the first place, and did not honour him when he came back. And now it will not give him the independent earner tax credit. I am sure that person will say: “Well, thank you very much—again.”

The person concerned might not be receiving New Zealand superannuation. He or she might have the gall to go out and carry on working, which is a good idea with an ageing population, he said subtly. It is a good idea to carry on working in that situation. But no, that person will not get the independent earner tax credit. And if the person gets Working for Families, both partners, both spouses, do not qualify for the independent earner tax credit—not just one, but both. How did Government members make that up in their minds? How do both people get cut out of the independent earner tax credit because of this? This is the first time I am aware of, in any developed economy, where somebody has developed a tax credit to discriminate against families with children. It is not in favour of families with children, as Working for Families is, but against them. It says it is a bad thing to have children, and if people have children the Government will not say that they are working as hard.

But what about a person on $23,000, or $27,000, who is a solo parent going out to work and slaving, and probably working horrible shift hours, probably paying for childcare, and probably struggling to bring up their kids? Those people are being told, according to Mr Foss, that they are not working hard. Mr Foss, who is lying on the great luxurious Government backbenches, with no real job to do, says: “I know you’re bringing up three kids. I know you’re working 25 or 30 hours a week, but you are not working hard enough to qualify for”—what is it from this magnificent, this munificent, this great turbocharged New Zealand economy? It is $10 a week. When we had a tax cut that, for a full-time earner, was a minimum of $16 a week, it was derided as being merely the cost of a block of cheese. But suddenly $10 a week, providing a person does not buy the block of cheese, presumably, will drive this economy faster into a golden future.

Hon Ruth Dyson: Turbocharge it.

Hon Dr MICHAEL CULLEN: Yes, turbocharge it into the future. Are we seriously meant to take this as an intelligent well-thought-through policy by a party that spent 9 years in Opposition planning what it wanted to do in Government? It is rickety, put-together, ramshackle, and expensive. It is expensive to administer. One hundred extra bureaucrats—

Hon Darren Hughes: What!

Hon Dr MICHAEL CULLEN: Do members remember that word? Members opposite call them public servants now that they are in Government, but they were called bureaucrats when those members were in Opposition only a few short weeks ago. One hundred extra bureaucrats are needed to administer this bill. It will cost ten million bucks a year, which is easily about $100,000 per bureaucrat by the time we take the overheads into account, etc. etc. That is 100 fewer front-line staff somewhere else in the system delivering services. Well, brilliant! It just shows what a brighter future looks like when one cannot think properly, when one cannot work out policy, and when one does not think about the kinds of individual examples that this applies to.

I say to Mr Foss that he should go and tell his superannuitants, if they work, that they do not work hard. He should go and tell the solo mums who are working that they do not work hard. He should go and tell people on veterans pensions who are doing some work that they do not work hard. He should go and tell the struggling families with two income-earners that neither of them will qualify for the independent earner tax credit, and then come back here and tell me what a great policy it was. People did not think that is what was happening. The Government might have had it in the fine print, but that is not the message it sent to them. The message that National sent was tax credits, tax cuts for everybody; that is what National would be doing. But that is not what this bill does, and that is why we are voting against this part.

DAVID BENNETT (National—Hamilton East) : First, I would like to congratulate the Chair on his very good ruling earlier, which set the tone for his chairmanship, which is something that the public and this Parliament have been looking forward to for a long time.

Hon Dr Michael Cullen: I raise a point of order, Mr Chairperson. It is out of order to comment on a presiding officer’s ruling.

The CHAIRPERSON (Eric Roy): Yes, I know it is. I was hoping he was going to terminate. Will the member get on with his speech.

Hon Ruth Dyson: I was hoping he was going to terminate, as well.

DAVID BENNETT: The only termination we have seen is the Labour Party at the last election about a month ago. They are sitting there now, trying to work out what is going on, are they not?

The independent earner tax credit is an initiative that National and its coalition partners have put through in this great legislation, the Taxation (Urgent Measures and Annual Rates) Bill. It is something many New Zealanders have looked forward to for a long time. They have looked forward to a signal from the Government of the day that it actually does reward hard work, and that it sends the right signals to those people who are willing to go out there and make the most of their opportunities. That is what this legislation is about. It is about sending the signal to hard-working Kiwis that the Government does care, that the Government does provide the circumstances so that people can provide for themselves and for their families in the future.

That is what the tax credit for independent earners is all about. Its importance will develop over time, as the individuals who take advantage of this tax credit become the families of the future of our country. A lot of young people starting off in their careers, now find that they are in situations where they pay high taxes, and they feel that they are not getting any support. They are the people who want to get married, have children, buy a house, and set up what we consider to be the heart of the New Zealand community. We have not been looking after those people in this country. We have not been giving them the incentive to stay in New Zealand to actually do the things that develop their communities in this country. Well, National is making a constructive step today to give them some kind of a signal that we want to reward their enterprise and their activity. We want to show them that there is a future in this country, and that the Government of the day will look after them, and will provide the platform for them to go ahead and achieve their dreams.

That is fundamental to building a stronger economy. When we talk about this legislation as being part of a process of economic growth, many people will ask how that will be part of that process. It is quite obvious now that if we look after the young people who are making their first steps in their career, to encourage them to stay here, and to deliver for this economy, then we are building a stronger economic base for our country. That is the fundamental element of this legislation, and the reason behind it. We want to give that future—that brighter future—for the next generation of New Zealanders.

To do that, we must give them the tools to invest in themselves, and also give them the tools so that they get the reward for that investment. No other Government has done this in recent times, but National has. We are not afraid of taking the steps to set out an agenda and a process for New Zealanders to succeed and prosper. We are not afraid to set out a process by which people can have hope and faith in their country, and their future. This legislation gives hope and direction to young New Zealanders who want to make a better, brighter future in this country. They need not go overseas to take advantage of their future and their careers. They can stay in New Zealand and take advantage, because we will give them the reward for their hard work, the reward for their education, and the reward for their diligence and dedication to their job.

That is an important signal for any Government to send. It is important that we as a Parliament send that signal, especially at this time when we need young people in our country, when we need people to feel that they have direction and motivation, and that there is a way forward. National has provided that direction. We have provided the way forward. We are providing that brighter future. It is great legislation; its tax credits for independent earners will go down as something that will be one of the major steps, and one of the first steps, in providing a brighter future for all New Zealanders as we go forward.

Hon RUTH DYSON (Labour—Port Hills) : It is clear that when that member, David Bennett, makes his contribution in the House, he has a soundtrack to a movie playing in his head. There could not have been more clichés packed into a 5-minute contribution than that member just demonstrated. I am assured that every National Party MP has been offered a dollar for every time he or she says “a brighter future” in the House. David Bennett will retire rich. That was an awful contribution, if I may say so, even by comparison with previous ones.

I would like to make two points during my contribution to debate on Part 3 of the Taxation (Urgent Measures and Annual Rates) Bill. The first is to ask the Minister sitting in the chair some specific questions about what is clearly a misunderstanding on the bill. I was able to pose these questions to the Minister of Finance earlier. Unfortunately, he was called away from the Chamber on urgent matters of public affair; he had to leave, and was not able to give me an answer. So I ask the Minister in the chair, the Hon Dr Jonathan Coleman, to provide on public record the answers to these questions. His colleagues clearly do not know.

Over the dinner break I witnessed another one of the new bewildered backbenchers of the National Government asking a senior colleague whether what Labour was saying was true; whether it was true that we are increasing taxes for low-income earners. That bewildered backbencher was told to just ignore what Labour is saying. [Interruption] In my view, that is a totally dishonest way of proceeding with any legislation, let alone legislation that is being rammed through under urgency without any public input, let alone public scrutiny.

I ask the Minister in the chair what is—under existing law—the 20/11 marginal tax rate for a person who is earning between $14,000 and $20,000 a year? Does the Minister know the answer to that question; if so, is he prepared to answer by interjection? Right. He probably does not know; I will help him. The answer is 12.5c. That is the current 20/11 marginal tax rate for a person earning between $14,000 and $20,000 a year. Under the bill that we are debating under urgency tonight, what will be that same person’s marginal tax rate? The answer is 21c. I ask the Minister what is higher—21c or 12.5c? In my view, increasing a person’s marginal tax rate from 12.5 percent to 21 percent is raising his or her tax rate. A person earning between $14,000 and $20,000 a year does not have excessive amounts of money to splash around. There is not much left over every week. So the Minister needs to say that either it is a typing or drafting mistake—and that is possible as it may well have been put together in a bit of a hurry—or that what Labour is saying is right, and that what the Minister of Finance and his Acting Minister is saying is incorrect. This bill increases the tax rate for the lowest-income earners in our country, and every member of the National Party who said that they would cut taxes for every single New Zealander, should go back to where he or she campaigned and apologise to the public of New Zealand.

If National members do not do that, we will make sure that every single person who heard that dishonest commitment knows what actually happened during the process of this bill. It is just plain dishonest to say prior to the election that every single working New Zealander will benefit from tax cuts, to make that commitment to the country, and then come into this House and raise the tax rate of the most vulnerable people in our community.

The second point I want to raise is in regard to the amendment that has been presented by Michael Cullen, an amendment to insert a new clause 30A. The point of this amendment is quite simple, and is explained as is appropriate in the explanatory note. It says that this amendment “will ensure nobody is made worse off as a result of the new rate and threshold changes.” It could not be more straightforward as outlined in that explanatory note. This “will ensure nobody is made worse off as a result of the new rate and threshold changes.” What National member would disagree with that? What National member would say that this only confirms what John Key said all through the campaign? It only confirms what Bill English said all through the campaign—“Nobody will be worse off, in fact everybody will be better off.” In fact, this amendment should confirm National’s commitment. But what has happened to it? What has happened to this amendment?

I will leave the answer to that question for just a little moment, because I want to quote what the Minister of Finance said during one of his earlier contributions in this debate tonight. On record in the House—recorded extraordinarily accurately by the Hansard stenographer and the tape—he specifically said: “There are no losers under this bill.” That, to my mind, means that nobody will be worse off. They may not be better off—I will accept that. But “no losers” means they cannot be worse off. He said: “There are no losers under this bill.” So if that is true, if what the Minister of Finance said in this very debate in the Committee is true, this amendment would get the total agreement of Parliament. [Interruption] Sorry; with the exception of ACT members, who may vote differently just because they are so inclined, every thinking member of Parliament would support this amendment because it does nothing more than confirm what the Minister of Finance said. He said there were no losers, so if this amendment confirms specifically in the legislation that there are no losers, then it must be at no cost, because the Minister of Finance has already confirmed it. Yet that same Minister of Finance has used an extraordinary process, a financial veto on this amendment, saying that it would cost $730 million over 5 years. Now, how does that figure? I think even David Bennett might be able to work out that if there are no losers, then an