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NZ election 2023: Labour out, National in – either way, neoliberalism wins again, Toby Boraman says

Public Policy / opinion
NZ election 2023: Labour out, National in – either way, neoliberalism wins again, Toby Boraman says
Luxo
Committed to cutting costs: National’s Christopher Luxon and ACT’s David Seymour on Waitangi Day, 2023. Getty Images.

By Toby Boraman*

For an election ostensibly fought over a “cost-of-living crisis”, there was a strong unspoken consensus between the two major parties: most people’s living standards needed to reduce to thwart inflation. Regardless of the election result, a form of austerity was always going to win.

Both National and Labour essentially agreed with the Reserve Bank hiking interest rates to bring down inflation – a crude market discipline likely to cause redundancies, suppress wages, and increase debt and inequality.

Such policies – classically neoliberal, specifically monetarist – are presented as if there is no alternative. Yet other countries have successfully used other measures to protect living standards, including wealth taxes, rent caps, windfall taxes on excessive profits, and major subsidies on energy payments.

While National and Labour both offered targeted support for those struggling to get by, such as tax cuts (National) or the removal of GST from fruit and vegetables (Labour), such mitigation seems paltry by comparison.

Only smaller parties, notably the Greens and Te Pāti Māori, offered policies aimed at changing fundamental economic settings.

Not radical enough? Labour leader and outgoing prime minister Chris Hipkins on election night. Getty Images.

Radical incrementalism?

Of course, there were and are important differences between Labour and National. Many contend Labour has abandoned the free-market fundamentalism associated with “Rogernomics” that it adopted in the 1980s.

Under the Labour governments led by Jacinda Ardern and then Chris Hipkins, there was an attempt to ameliorate the worst excesses of market capitalism.

Hipkins, for instance, insisted Labour’s policies were not simply about “tinkering around the edges of the neoliberal model”. He spoke of “radical incrementalism” – allowing a government to “do big change”.

In that light, the 2017-23 Labour government lifted the minimum wage, introduced fair pay agreements, built state houses, increased Working for Families wage subsidies, and intervened during a pandemic and natural disasters to support people and jobs.

Labour also reformed the Reserve Bank’s targets to include “maximum sustainable employment”, alongside the bank’s traditional goal of keeping inflation within a 1–3% band.

Beyond Aotearoa New Zealand, neoliberalism’s demise was proclaimed in the aftermath of the 2007-09 global financial crisis, as governments everywhere shored up the financial sector.

The obituaries have increased since the COVID pandemic. In the United States, Joe Biden’s preference for public investment prompted one commentator to claim the president had “declared the death of neoliberalism”.

End of neoliberalism? US president Joe Biden talking up his public investment policies in Philadelphia, October 2023. Getty Images.

The ‘third way’

Given the Labour government’s track record, then, it might seem unfair to label it a neoliberal administration. But I think such reasoning is mistaken on several counts.

A rough scholarly consensus has emerged that neoliberalism has shown a remarkable ability to evolve. Labour – and to some extent National – have rejected the harsh “vanguard neoliberalism” of the 1980s and ‘90s. Instead, they have embraced the mild neoliberalism of “third way” politics since 1999.

Sometimes called the “post-Washington consensus”, third way economics accepts the need for some government intervention in the market, something the more hardline “Washington consensus” of the late 1980s did not.

Yet under this softer form of neoliberalism, governments do not intervene to genuinely redistribute wealth. Instead, they act to temporarily support business during crises.

For example, the Labour government’s COVID business support and wage subsidy scheme was supposedly undertaken to protect workers from unemployment.

In reality, it facilitated a massive upward transfer of wealth by subsidising businesses, and boosting house prices and private savings. That wealth transfer amounted to about NZ$1 trillion, according to economic commentator Bernard Hickey.

Hickey also argued governments of both stripes have effectively cut social services such as housing, health and education in real per-capita terms, as the population has increased. For the most part, increased funding has not stayed level with inflation.

We might call this austerity by stealth, with one example being the current funding crisis in tertiary education that has resulted in many job cuts.

Intervention for the market

In this sense, the various palliative reforms made by the Ardern-Hipkins governments do not represent a fundamental swing away from neoliberalism. Crucially, both prime ministers ruled out any kind of wealth or capital gains tax, and generally kept tax levels low (despite a small increase in the highest income tax rate).

Tellingly, the US Heritage Foundation – a think tank devoted to the “principles of free enterprise, limited government [and] individual freedom” – still ranks New Zealand fifth in its global “index of economic freedom”.

While Labour’s Reserve Bank reforms appeared to modify its monetary priorities to maximise sustainable employment, its governor admitted raising interest rates to control inflation was deliberately engineering a recession, with a likely rise in unemployment.

Before becoming prime minister in 2017, Ardern agreed with the view of previous National prime minister Jim Bolger that neoliberalism had failed. She said Labour accepted the need for government intervention in the market.

This might qualify as a rejection of neoliberalism if we define it only as a set of ideas or policies designed to “hollow out the state” and promote free-market, individualistic competition.

But there is another view of neoliberalism, put forward by historian Quinn Slobodian and other scholars, that it was never about rejecting big government. Rather, at its core, it is about imposing a global and state framework that favours business and private property.

To achieve this, they argue, the state restricts democracy, trade unions and community interest groups from achieving genuine improvements in ordinary people’s lives. Slobodian sees neoliberalism as involving “re-regulation” rather than deregulation.

The underlying consensus

None of this means Labour and National mirror each other. Labour is more centrist, more committed to maintaining public services. National is more business-friendly and seems poised to make deeper cuts to public services.

To differing degrees, National and its probable coalition partner ACT reject the “progressive” aspects of what feminist scholar Nancy Fraser called “progressive neoliberalism”. They aim to roll back most of Labour’s incremental reforms, and are aligned in their opposition to what they see as excessive government spending and regulation.

But beneath those apparent ideological differences there remains an underlying neoliberal consensus. Roughly speaking, this compact aims to keep taxes low, push for free trade agreements, maintain a largely deregulated business sector, enable financial speculation, and use interest rates to combat inflation.

Above all, the goal is to be “fiscally responsible” by keeping government spending tight and the debt-to-GDP ratio low. Austerity is the means by which this is achieved, whether by stealth or through more upfront cuts.

It was perhaps predictable that governments everywhere would revert to austerity to pay down debts incurred during the pandemic. But those same governments are also struggling with broader economic, climate, housing, health and education crises.

Wars and political polarisation generally have added to a sense that neoliberalism’s hegemony is fraying. There has been a trend towards more nationalist and authoritarian government – although not yet in Aotearoa New Zealand to any great extent.

Given we are now seeing living standards squeezed to combat inflation, and government austerity to pay off COVID debts, neoliberalism still seems embedded in the political and economic fabric of Aotearoa. This is especially so with the election success of parties promising to reduce government spending.The Conversation


*Toby Boraman, Lecturer in Politics, Massey University. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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64 Comments

Chris Trotter's earlier piece was bang on, I thought. Sneaky, underhanded, hidden agendas, and you were racist if you even raised your voice in question.

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Agreed - and this piece is a classic example of the failure of Academia - via siloing. 

I am aware of folk within Academia, who 'get' the Limits to Growth, and who fully understand the yawning chasm between BAU (of either hue) and where we really need to go. 

Labour will come to the conclusion that they cannot force stuff through, without a mandate. Sadly, they likely won't appraise the orders-of-magnitude change needed - and nor will the incumbents; they're all varying degrees of ideologically blind. 

And events are already overtaking the narrative.....

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IMF showdown with China in Morocco, October 12, 2023

This year’s annual IMF/World Bank meetings in Morocco are the most explicitly confrontational yet by US/NATO diplomacy toward China and its fellow BRICS+ allies. It is not really rivalry, because US neoliberal financial policy is so different from the aims that the BRICS+ countries have been developing at their own recent international meetings. At issue is not only what countries will be the major beneficiaries of future IMF and World Bank loan operations, but whether the world will back US unipolar dominance? Or will it start to move explicitly toward a multipolar philosophy of mutual support to increase living standards and prosperity? This is counter to the anti-labor austerity imposed by US demands, using these two organizations as arms of its New Cold War policy in an attempt to maintain a trade and investment system now widely seen to be dysfunctional and financially predatory. 

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"Yet other countries have successfully used other measures to protect living standards, including wealth taxes, rent caps, windfall taxes on excessive profits, and major subsidies on energy payments." - reference to the Guardian (the echo chamber must not be pierced) article that claims Spain has magically avoided inflation.

Another article from yet another ideologue, please DC... Change the record!!!  

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I'll put these links to the reality for you here.

Original Guardian article

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2023/aug/03/spain-inflation-l…

Spain's spending to get this social outcome raised its debt to GDP ratio from 98.2% in 2019 to 120.4% in 2020! Even now it is still 113%.

https://tradingeconomics.com/spain/government-debt-to-gdp

Britain's GDP ratio went from 84% in 2019 to 106% in 2020, topping out at 107.7% and now back down to 100%.

https://www.ons.gov.uk/economy/governmentpublicsectorandtaxes/publicspe…

Spain's inflation due to this socialist ideal was 10.5% in August 2022, and 5.9% at the beginning of this year.

https://tradingeconomics.com/spain/inflation-cpi#:~:text=High%20of%203….

Spain's inflation rate is 3.5% at the moment and Britain's is 6.4% and falling quickly.

https://www.ons.gov.uk/economy/inflationandpriceindices/timeseries/l55o…

Long story short you can spend any amount of money you want on social outcomes but the next generation will need to pick up the bill, hardly an admirable trait, making the future worse for having been here.

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 the next generation will need to pick up the bill

This is nonsense of course. Most countries these days just let their debt float at whatever... USA, Spain, France etc have not run surpluses for 20 plus years.

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If all debt was repaid, there would be no money. The debt based ponzi fiat system is a snake eating its own tail. 

 

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Exactly - also worth remembering that NZ Govt is unusual in having more financial assets (debts owed to the Govt by the private sector) than financial liabilities (debts owed by the Govt to the private sector). 

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What are debts owed to the Govt & by the Govt ?

 I'm asking in the context of our RBNZ wonderful money-in-NZ document .

debt owed by govt = bonds held by private sector.

But what about 'owed to the Govt' ?

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Yes, Govt debts are basically =  bonds held by the private sector + the balance in institutional bank settlement balances + actual cash in circulation.

But, the private sector also has liabilities to Govt - e.g. Govt owns many tens of billions of shares and equity in NZ companies, there are billions of student loans outstanding, etc.

So, we end up in the stupid position of Govt having a net positive financial worth - something that is generally reserved for countries that are major exporters (or those with sovereign wealth funds). The OECD data is here: https://data.oecd.org/gga/general-government-financial-wealth.htm

  

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By "reserved for major exporters" refer to a country % share of total global export/import trade?

Or the % of export earnings relative to the individual country economy?

If the latter, then I would have thought NZ counts as a major exporter.

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Government owning shares is not debt owed to the government, if those businesses don't make a profit then no interest is owed.The problem with debt is we have to service it, pay the interest and which takes resources away from other things. There is no such obligation on the other side, an enterprise fails to make money then its tough luck, or even worse the government may feel obliged to bail it out.

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The debt needs to be serviced, which just adds to the pile.  Austerity (mentioned in passing in the article) relates to our governments trying to be seen as "responsible" - that has real impact on our people.  Perhaps you are immune to spending cuts from your ivory tower but it is not nonsense to those on the bread-line.

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Yes, the debt increases with servicing costs. But, current average weighted interest rate on Govt Bonds is 2.5%. So what is happening to that Govt debt?

What is important to me is that Govt invests in things that make the country a better place to live and increases our resource efficiency. I doubt anyone regrets building thousands of houses, hydro, or the broadband network.

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The bill they will inherit is physical. A depleted planet. More extreme weather. Biodiversity loss. A never-bigger collection of entropy (aging infrastructure. 

That has NOTHING to do with debt/proxy - except to track the historical extraction/depletion/degradation/pollution. 

We're chosenly accounting in the wrong format; the real debts are avoided by being called 'externalities'. 

Pigeons - home - roost....

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Quite right Opinion. Socialism has failed everywhere. But academics still love it. The other thing is, Spain relies heavily on tourism. So of course there were going to be issues when CoVid hit. So to claim that the Government taxing and rent cap etc has made the difference is false. More tourists have made the difference.

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I bet you cannot define “socialism” and then apply your definition to any of the countries you mentioned, or by inference to NZ.

Give it up already - your old school Left-Right narrative is out of date and meaningless. 

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Well said.

All countries have different mixes of private / publicly services - organised for profit & rationed by price, or universally funded and free to all. I had a great time once explaining to a police officer that he worked for a socialist organisation because he provided a service to all at no cost, organised and funded centrally, etc.   

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lol you had better tell the population of the western world that live in a left vs right political spectrum.

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Believe they live in one, you mean. 

Taken there by a media which refuses to think wider.

Heck, I can shorten that: Which refuses to think. 

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Socialism has evolved a new meaning. It is now a belief in the pursuit of individual freedom, entitlement, and lack of accountability, at the expense of anyone else that can be forced by the state to carry the cost of our selfishness. Marx will be turning in his grave.

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Every successful country in the world uses a degree of socialism. The only argument is to what degree do we use it. 

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I'm not sure there is much true socilism in NZ based on common definitions.

Socialism is a populist economic and political system based on collective, common, or public ownership of the means of production. 

What labour espouses is welfare state capitalism and National Corporate Capitalism.

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What labour espouses is welfare state capitalism

That's what our entire political spectrum endorses, the parties merely have some different favourite recipients.

ACT wants taxpayer handouts for businesses, NACT both expect handouts for property and businesses in times of flood or drought or pestilence, and both also expect universal basic income for their voters.

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Boraman must be grieving.  He's certainly showing his left wing idealogical leanings with this nonsense.  His piece is very selective, ignoring cause & effect.  The issue isn't government debt, it's inflation, which hurts the poor and the middle classes.  Our current inflation was caused by a boost in money supply and Government spending, which was, of course, enabled by borrowing.  But Orr warned the Government and when the hangover arrived he had to use the tools that were available to him.  Yes he was explicit about the risk of a recession, but what other options were available?  Arguably, the Government went overboard with its reckless spending because it didn't pull back when it was clear it was prudent to do so.  Covid wage subsidies, for example, have only very recently stopped. 

Had he not done so, we could be in the same state as Turkey or Argentina.

As soon as a commentator starts banging on about neoliberalism, they reveal their own idealogical blindness and that they lack any understanding of the real world and real problems.    If that wasn't enough, his favoured interventions such as rent controls, capital gains taxes and wealth taxes have been roundly rejected by the electorate.  Referencing these, he, again shows, an intellectual disconnect between government spending and taxes.  When the Reserve Bank is on a QE programme AND Government is spending like a drunken sailor, ramping up taxes won't do anything to manage inflation.  I'd go further -it actually works against the productive parts of the economy.  

 

 

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Covid wage subsidies, for example, have only very recently stopped.

When did the wage subsidy stop?

I guess initially all were content, locked down at home and getting free-ish wages. Once they got out of home and learned about how much other people were paid 'undeservedly' , they started complaining. It's not just jealous, but free-market's competitiveness. 

Regarding inflation,  I see it's caused by multiple factors - govt spending, supply disruption, and profit by big price setter companies. 

 

 

 

 

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Just another label , what matters more are the policies and actions. Or inaction , as we sell our Grandkids for a bit more gas guzzling and castle building.. 

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Another academic proposing socialism. No surprises there I guess. Government control, keep the size of the pie the same and divide it up into ever smaller, but equal, pieces. At least the misery will be shared equally.

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Why do we always feel better when we can't actually see poor old Joe's eyes?

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Maybe after 6 years of ever increasing government controls and its associated failings, it's natural that people voted for a more neo-liberalist government.

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As opposed to 50 years of failed neoliberal ideology that has seen most western countries outsource their industrial base, rack up huge public debts and suffer wage stagnation.

But of course you can’t admit that because you were a beneficiary of the entire period.

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Well, yes, donations have spoken loudly and many have voted for welfarism for different figures in society: property speculators and owners, those dependent on cheap labour, and the older voters. Living beyond their means by passing the cost to following generations.

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Complete tosh, but tosh one has come to expect from academia.

Mr Boraman lives comfortably on taxes paid (I would expect him to say, largely by the poorer segment of society) as he pushes out his "research" promoting the virtues of Marxism.

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There's 16,000 more civil servants now than there was 6 years ago. Have you noticed any improvement in service? Hopefully National and ACT will take the knife to such squandering of public funds. 

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Improvement in service? Best ask the departing government as they  were there to buffer them from reality, tell them how good they were but most importantly tell them what to do because they didn’t otherwise have a clue themselves.

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I'd be more worried about the 150,000 additional pensioners collecting superann than there were 6 years ago.

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There's probably also 10% more people in NZ than 6 years ago. A better metric would be civil servants/population. You also need to adjust for the work that needs to be done. For example, 6 years ago, there was hardly anyone working on Climate Change.

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Where I live the climate hasn't changed at all except we've had more rain this year than last year and it's been colder. The global warming racket has to be one of the biggest sleight-of-hand tricks in history. 

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It seems some have no idea they are the victim in one of the "biggest slight-of-hand tricks in history".

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I've seen it all before.

Oil running out, acid rain, the ozone layer disappearing, the ice caps melting, running out of water. They reckon there's one born every minute. 

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This will be a term of "socioliberalism";

To utilise socialised policy to pump the "free" market.

To suggest this government is neoliberal is false, as they tinker with policy of influence while keeping the main socialised subsidies which act to inflate a pretend market.

Here are a few examples:
Kiwisaver withdrawal of government contribution
First home grant
First home loan
Accommodation supplement
Income related rents
Emergency housing fund
Insurance bail outs

What free market??

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Welfarism for older property speculators.

Own two feet for the younger and poorer.

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Yet other countries have successfully used other measures to protect living standards, including wealth taxes, rent caps, windfall taxes on excessive profits, and major subsidies on energy payments.

if a country is a company, the wealth tax, rent cap and windfall taxes are by nature eating into the companies capitals to fund today's living standards. It would of course support todays living standards if you eat into your capitals, and eat tomorrow's lunch today.

this is why communism never have worked by the way. 

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No, the rich use capital unproductively buying luxury yachts and paintings rather than putting the capital to use productively to grow NZ.

The subsidies need to stop and the tax system favour productive capital use.

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What's "productive capital use"? You sound like a real red fed, determined to empty out anyone audacious enough to make something of themselves. 

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Productive use of capital is that employed by businesses that help grow NZ.

Not lazy tax breaks for free capital gains that require no effort.

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Countries aren't companies, as Luxon is about to find out.

You can't just fire people who don't fit your agenda, you have to deal with them.

Do you even know what Communism is?

 

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It’s not about intervening in the market but removing all the subsidies the rich enjoy - monopolies, oligopolies, no capital gains tax or land tax, no inheritance tax.

Easy subsidised money for the rich to grow richer while everyone else struggles to stay above zero.

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But even that is temporary - and that is what the rich, mostly, choose not to understand. 

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Why should I pay an inheritance, wealth, CGT or death tax? It's my money, I earned it. 

I've done what the govt would like me to do. Lead a useful, crime-free life, work, pay (lots of) taxes, employ people and build things. There's not many people in this country would have paid as much in taxes as me. 

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Because you would pay less income tax.

The current settings aren’t fair and allow some people to gain free income.

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How would I pay less income tax? I've heard that one before. I'd sooner pack up and move overseas before I let the government gouge me. 

We've had some of those taxes before, and they didn't work, because wealthy kiwis rebelled and moved offshore. 

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We've had some of those taxes before, and they didn't work, because wealthy kiwis rebelled and moved offshore. 

Pray tell how the government previously funded free tertiary education for the baby boomers, mass state housing builds in the 50's as they were the ones implementing this. Many of them took advantage of the free education and became highly specialised, skilled and paid members of the workforce instead of all 'going overseas'. Doctors, lawyers, engineers, surgeons etc etc. Now enter the great shortage looming of these roles. I would have to argue that having a high tax bracket helped fund crucial social services which helped lift NZ's living standards much higher.
 

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"why should I pay an inheritance tax"

I earned it !

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You don’t pay it.

whoever inherits the money as income does

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I'm well aware of that, and if I thought my estate was going to be ripped off by death taxes, I'd take care of that, one way or another. We've already had death taxes in NZ, and they cost more to collect than they yielded. It's my money, dead or not. 

In the 1980's when NZ had death taxes, wealthy kiwis were encouraged to move to QLD by the then Premier, and take their money with them. 

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The issue can be dealt with.

if you hold a NZ passport you are taxed on your global income.

If you die with a NZ passport and an inheritor doesnt have a NZ passport you pay a death tax.

If an inheritor has a NZ passport they pay inheritance tax.

If you give up your NZ passport at anytime you pay a wealth tax equivalent to what the inheritance tax would have been.

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Well that's all quite a laugh, coming up with extreme  examples off how you're going to outsmart the rich. 

Are you sure you're not Josef Stalin reincarnated?

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No, I’m for a fair and equal tax system.

Not one where some people get to not pay tax on income.

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If it's so easy why aren't you on board and getting filthy rich ?

Even Comrade Ardern's finally figured it out, she's in bed with BlackRock, the world's biggest capitalists. 

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Good luck with that, they can't even get people to pay student loans who left. Let alone large corporations.

Try doing it to someone truly rich who has a bunch of lawyers and accountants.

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"why should I pay an inheritance tax"

I earned it !

Classic!

Also, amazing folk think they earned capital gains that society handed to them.

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Labour had no clue, no intention of looking after New Zealanders.  Happy to tolerate the cartels sucking the lifeblood, including central and local government employed.

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I think that targeted support is one of the ultimate Neoliberal tools.  It is the base line to which they can push every body down to.  When all workers are constrained under targeted support poverty trap, the job of Neoliberalism will be nearly done.  Anther major objective is that all houses will be owned by landlords.

Labor is really no different, so as I keep repeating, there is no hope for average Kiwis remaining in NZ. 

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Neolibs want everything as-a-service (including housing) so the workers need to keep working and paying each month to line their pockets.

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