Off the tracksNational is also struggling with an ongoing recession caused by the Reserve Bank’s monetary policy, responding to the high inflation of the Covid era. During last year's election campaign Luxon talked about the country “losing its mojo” and promised to “get New Zealand back on track”. But so far, the economic and financial measures adopted under Luxon’s government amount to little more than tinkering.
Robert MacCulloch, a professor of economics at Auckland university summarised the very bleak prospects for the economy as revealed in Treasury’s recent Half-Yearly Economic & Fiscal Update:
“On both Real GDP and GDP per capita bases, our actual performance is now 7% lower than where NZ was expected to be, before the pandemic. Treasury predict we will keep underperforming at that level for the foreseeable future. To put numbers on these amounts, we're talking $28 billion per year in lost output. Should it go on indefinitely, it will add up to a $560 billion total loss (=28/0.05, with a 5% discount rate used). In terms of personal incomes, we're losing $4,000 per year, compared to where we should be tracking. The bottom has fallen out of NZ's economy.”
This was confirmed by a recent report by the Economist magazine contrasting the economic performance of 37 wealthy countries in 2024, using standard metrics like inflation, growth, deficits and unemployment. New Zealand came 33rd, and the only nations lower on the list were proximate to wars, political instability and/or an energy crisis: Turkey, Estonia, Finland and Latvia.
The number of corporate insolvencies has soared. This number is now higher than the depths of the global financial crisis. The Prime Minister and Finance Minister Nicola Willis have made much of recent reductions in interest rates, which they hope will drive economic growth, but both Treasury and the Reserve Bank are warning that the recovery will be muted.
Luxon and Willis protest that they’ve inherited a mess from the previous government. They’re not wrong – but their promise during the campaign was that they’d fix the mess. They’d get the country back on track.
There’s no evidence that this is happening, or that there’s any plan equal to the challenge the Government now faces. Treasury are indicating that balancing the nation’s books will require both tax increases and significant spending cuts.
National’s challenge here is both political and economic. The party is ideologically opposed to tax increases, and if it reduces spending it risks slowing the economy even further. And even if it were inclined towards either of these options, Act will oppose additional taxes, and New Zealand First will not support an austerity budget. National is trapped between two very capable coalition partners.
To make matters much worse, there’s an increasingly popular narrative that the Government has been captured by vested interests, driven more by corporate lobbyists than by the public interest. It’s doing the bidding of wealthy individuals and entities, while poorer New Zealanders and the natural environment are the victims. If it is to turn around its 2024 decline, in 2025, National will need to convince New Zealand that the party is actually the opponent of “tribal politics” and stands for the “national interest” instead.
The Sick health system
In their recent survey of ministerial performance, The Post’s political team ranked Health Minister Shane Reti at 3 out of 10. It reflects a terrible year across this portfolio.
The Government broke its promise to fund cancer drugs in the budget and scrambled to compensate, costing it an extra $600 million dollars it could not afford to spend.
Much of Reti’s job appears to have been outsourced to the newly appointed Health Commissioner Lester Levy. There’s considerable uncertainty about the veracity of the Government’s claims about the financial state of the health service, and whether the cost-cutting is impacting core services. As with the economy, the Government does not appear to have a coherent plan to address problems in this sector.<
Health was the domain of two broken election promises. The first was the failure to fund a number of cancer drugs that were promised during the election campaign in the budget. The decision was reversed after intense criticism, and the Government then announced $600 million over four years in additional funding to Pharmac. This is a significant cost, given how tight the Government’s operating allowance will be during this period.
The second broken promise has not been reversed. In 2017, Jacinda Ardern promised to commence the rebuilding of Dunedin Hospital before 2020 and complete it before 2027. Labour failed to begin by 2020 and made a number of cuts to the project, as well as pushing the timeline out to 2029. Shane Reti promised to deliver a full rebuild during the 2023 campaign, but in late September Reti and Infrastructure Minister Chris Bishop announced that they were scaling back the project to reduce costs. Now Chris Hipkins has promised that if Labour are re-elected, they’ll complete the build.
All of this happened against a backdrop of reports about patients dying after being sent home from emergency departments, provincial hospitals closing overnight due to lack of staff, recurring cutbacks at HealthNZ and an expanding deficit. In October, RNZ reported that Health NZ was projected to overspend by about $147 million a month, adding up to $1.6 billion a year.
That same month the polling company Ipsos reported that Health had become the second most important issue for voters, and that voters were significantly more likely to trust Labour to manage the sector. The most important issue remained inflation/cost of living: National remains slightly ahead of Labour but continues to decline.
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