Key Notes - Dr Bollard does it again
new-zealand-national-party
Sat Jul 28 2007 12:00:00 GMT+1200 (New Zealand Standard Time)
Key Notes - Dr Bollard does it again
Saturday, 28 July 2007, 2:49 pm
Column: New Zealand National Party
Key Notes No. 15 - 27 July 2007
Dr Bollard does it again
Yesterday, the Reserve Bank raised interest rates for the fourth time in a row. They are now among the highest in the developed world, and homeowners and exporters are really starting to feel the pain.
Interest rates are so high thanks largely to eight years of Labour's economic mismanagement. When inflation was low, Labour failed to provide the right incentives for working Kiwis and our economy. As the economy grew, Labour ramped up spending. This put pressure on everything from house prices to the cost of hiring a plumber.
Last November, Dr Cullen warned his Cabinet colleagues that a Budget spend-up would put more pressure on inflation and interest rates. But in May, he signed off on spending that was 30% higher than the limit he had set. Labour has dug itself a hole it can't get out of. It has nobody to blame but itself.
Lots of people have asked me what National will do about high interest rates. There is no quick fix, and loosening the inflation target is not the answer. It may give some people short-term relief, but it will cause long-term pain.
National will get New Zealand's long-term economic policies right. We will concentrate on increasing the speed the economy can grow without causing inflation. We will rein in rampant growth in government spending and ensure it is better focused. We will provide the right environment for businesses to invest, and give Kiwis better incentives to get ahead.
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Watch my video on the interest rate hike and give your feedback here.
Breakfast on Wednesdays
This week I had my second regular appearance on TV One's Breakfast show. I'll be live every Wednesday at 7.20am.
Putting trades and industry back into our schools
On Monday, I visited Northland College in Kaikohe with John Carter MP. Due to a shortage of trades teachers and limited government funding, the college has developed an innovative trades training programme with the help of the community and local Maori. This provides hands-on training to secondary school students in hospitality, cooking, farming and carpentry.
Under the guidance of an experienced builder, year 12 and 13 boys are putting the finishing touches on a new house they have already sold. The money from the sale will go back into the trust and help train next year's carpentry class.
We also saw how teaching could work in the future. We watched students in an agriculture class receive a lesson via live streaming video from a tutor at Telford Rural Polytech in Balclutha. This is an excellent way for students to access expertise that's not available in their area.
I spoke about Northland College last month in my speech on Putting Trades and Industry back into our schools . The college is exactly the kind of innovative school-led programme that a National Government will encourage. It shows what can be achieved when business and the community get involved in their local school and help teenagers gain the skills they need to succeed.
Distorting our democracy
At the last election, Labour broke the election spending rules. It illegally spent over $800,000 of taxpayer money on its campaign. Now it wants to change the rules around election spending for its own advantage.
Last week, Labour introduced its Electoral Finance Bill. If it's passed, it will regulate free speech from January 1 in each election year. It will make it difficult for New Zealanders and New Zealand organisations to publicise their opposition to any political party's policies, and severely limit how much money they can spend criticising it.
At the same time, Labour will have almost unlimited government funds to promote its policies. Already, Labour is spending $15 million of taxpayer money promoting Working for Families, $7.4 million promoting Kiwisaver (it spent $1.2 million in June alone), and $5.1 million promoting ACC.
Labour's bill is anti-democratic, unfair, and doesn't provide the transparency that voters need.
To hear my thoughts on the bill, the Benson-Pope scandal, and the exchange rate, watch my video journal and comment here.
Benson-Pope and public sector neutrality
It's sad that Helen Clark was reduced to poring over media transcripts to determine whether David Benson-Pope was telling the truth about the removal of Madeleine Setchell, who was sacked from the Ministry of the Environment because her partner is my chief press secretary. It's also sad that Clark took so long to act.
It was clear to National that Benson-Pope's behaviour was inappropriate. It was also clear that he was misleading the Prime Minister, the media, and the country when he claimed he was not involved.
Helen Clark should have acted earlier. Unfortunately, Labour's botched handling of this incident has undermined the neutrality of the public sector, and that's a serious concern for all New Zealanders.
ends
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