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National and ACT pour scorn on Grant Robertson’s $1 billion-a-year savings

Author
RNZ,
Publish Date
Thu, 11 May 2023, 12:29pm
 Photo / 九一星空无限
Photo / 九一星空无限

National and ACT pour scorn on Grant Robertson’s $1 billion-a-year savings

Author
RNZ,
Publish Date
Thu, 11 May 2023, 12:29pm

By Russell Palmer of聽

Opposition parties are rubbishing Finance Minister, saying $1 billion a year is nothing in the context of how much extra the Government is spending.

Robertson made his traditional pre-Budget speech to Wellington鈥檚 Chamber of Commerce this morning, announcing next week鈥檚 Budget would contain $4b in savings and reprioritisations over the next four years.

National鈥檚 finance spokeswoman Nicola Willis told reporters at Parliament this morning that needed to be put into context.

鈥淕rant Robertson is expecting people to be grateful that he has found a billion dollars worth of savings. We have to put that number into context, this is a government that is spending a billion dollars more every week compared to when it came to office.

鈥淲hat he should be doing in this Budget is finding the savings needed to ensure New Zealanders can keep more of their own money.鈥

She said his speech read like a resignation letter from a finance minister resigned to the fact he did not have what it took to restore discipline to government spending.

鈥淲hat he鈥檚 saying is 鈥業 don鈥檛 have what it takes to say no to the bureaucracy, I don鈥檛 have what it takes to say no to ministers and put lines through their pet projects鈥. Look, invite me in, and I鈥檒l do the job, and I know what鈥檚 required.

鈥淔irst, we have to say to every minister - look me in the eye and tell me that every dollar you鈥檙e spending is being spent as well as a struggling New Zealander would spend it in their family right now. Two, show me the spending that鈥檚 not getting the impact you promised it would - we have to do better. And three, let鈥檚 make sure we鈥檙e not wasting money on consultants, advertising and communications advice.鈥

National Party Finance spokesperson Nicola Willis. Photo / 九一星空无限

National Party Finance spokesperson Nicola Willis. Photo / 九一星空无限

She said National would have what it takes to say no to the things that are wasteful, but was reluctant to outline exactly how much National could cut.

鈥淲e would want to do enough to deliver the package of tax reduction that we have put forward, which would adjust income tax thresholds for inflation. We would want to do that in a way that didn鈥檛 add to inflation so that means finding the savings to fund that package.

鈥淲e鈥檇 also want to ensure there is more funding going into frontline health and education services - and that will require reprioritisation of some things that are lower priority, be that consultancy spending, be that money going into government advertising.

鈥淭his is a government spending 1.7b a year on consultancy fees alone. I am confident that if we really want to let New Zealanders keep more of what they earn we will find the savings.鈥

She said the Government was also telling businesses to cut their emissions but then writing those businesses large cheques to do so.

鈥淣ational won鈥檛 write those cheques. We will expect businesses to cut their climate change emissions without using taxpayer dollars to do so.鈥

In a statement, ACT leader David Seymour said Robertson鈥檚 savings accounted for just 0.7 per cent of the total spend, and just 2 per cent of the amount Labour had increased spending by since 2018.

鈥淚n other words, Grant Robertson is standing by 99 per cent of his spending. When you consider the utter waste that has taken place over the last six years, that is an extraordinary statement.鈥

ACT leader David Seymour. Photo / 九一星空无限

ACT leader David Seymour. Photo / 九一星空无限

He said New Zealand was in decline, its status as a first-world country was at risk, and a change of course was needed.

鈥淲e鈥檝e been poorly served by two major political parties who each say the other is ruining the country but will run it the same way if it gets them into office. They sound so similar that voters struggle to tell them apart.鈥

He promised ACT鈥檚 own alternative Budget - set to be released on Monday - would take on 鈥減olitically difficult issues that others avoid, to secure our country鈥檚 status as a first world country. It deals with the size of government and its debt, and the structure of our tax system鈥.

聽鈥淜iwis need lower, flatter taxes, paid for by reducing wasteful spending. We need to scrap government departments that don鈥檛 add value. We need less red tape on hardworking New Zealanders.鈥

Willis, however, said it would be irresponsible for her to commit details of National鈥檚 fully costed fiscal plan before the Treasury鈥檚 pre-election fiscal updates.

鈥淲ithout first knowing what the growth projections are, what the inflation projections are, what the interest rate projections are. All of that data needs to be brought to bear on our plan.鈥

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