Don Brash responds to Garth George

Don Brash wrote a letter to the Herald regarding the serious errors about the 2025 Taskforce report that Garth George had in his column. The Herald has refused to publish it, proving once again that the repeaters and the editors of our media are seeking to control the message.

According Don has asked that I and other publish his letter. I have agreed.

GARTH GEORGE HAS IT SERIOUSLY WRONG

Garth George was way off beam in his attack on the first report of the 2025 Taskforce.

Leaving aside the personal invective, he claims that the “biggest absurdity” in the report is the proposition that New Zealand can and should catch up with Australia.  He says that “there is just no comparison between the two countries”, with Australia having five times our population, 32 times our land area, and huge resources of minerals.  Well, those are factual statements about Australia, but they ignore some important facts which he would be aware of had he read the report.

First, there is no correlation between living standards and population – if there were, India would be super-rich and Singapore would be poor.

Second, there is no correlation between living standards and land area – if there were, Russia would be super-rich and Finland would be poor.

Third, there is no correlation between living standards and mineral wealth – if there were, the Congo would be super-rich and Japan would be poor.

In any event, a recent World Bank study showed that, in per capita terms, New Zealand has more natural resources than almost any other country in the world.

For most of New Zealand’s history, our standard of living has been very similar to that in Australia – sometimes a bit ahead, sometimes a bit behind.  And the Taskforce didn’t off its own bat decide that catching Australia again by 2025 would be some good idea: the goal was set by the Government itself, and the Taskforce was set up both to advise on how best to achieve the (very challenging) goal and to monitor annually progress towards achieving it.

Too often in the past, governments have announced grandiose commitments to lift living standards – such as the last Government’s commitment to lift us into the top half of developed countries within 10 years – but then totally ignored those commitments, hoping that nobody would notice it.  It is to the Government’s credit that they made a commitment and then established a mechanism to hold them to account.

Garth George accuses the Taskforce of recommending a whole range of things which we do not recommend.  For example, he accuses us of recommending a flat personal income tax, and notes that if such a tax were established a whole range of low income people would have to pay more tax.  But whatever the merits of a flat tax, the Taskforce did not recommend such a tax.  What we did say was that, if core government spending were cut to the same fraction of GDP that it was in both 2004 and 2005 (29%), the top personal rate, the company tax rate, and the trust tax rate could comfortably be aligned at 20%.  Under such a tax structure, all those earning above $14,000 a year would pay less income tax, while nobody would pay more income tax.

Nobody seriously argues that government was vastly too small in New Zealand in 2004 and 2005 (the end of the Labour Government’s second term in office), so why the ridiculous reaction when the Taskforce suggests reducing government spending to that level?

Mr George also suggests that we recommended abolishing subsidised doctor visits, and implies that we are advocating an American approach to healthcare.  This is again utter nonsense.  We suggested targeting subsidies for doctor’s visits at those who need them, either because they have low incomes or have chronic health problems.

He suggests that we favoured removing subsidies for early childhood education.  Again, not true.  What we said was that those subsidies – which have trebled in cost from $400 million a year to $1.2 billion a year over the last five years – should be focused on those who need them.

The recommendations of the 2025 Taskforce are actually totally in line with orthodox thinking in most developed countries, and are almost entirely consistent with the recommendations of the recent OECD report on New Zealand.

Don Brash
Chairman of the 2025 Taskforce

  • caleb

    can catus kate be on the taskforce

    • mediatart

      She wouldnt waste her time . It was just an old style jobs for the boys, especially septagenarian Brash. Thats why the report was so vacuous , he hasnt kept up.
      Im no fan of Cactus, but she does a better job of economic analysis in her blog … for free

  • David Baigent

    "The Herald refused to print it, .." This is the most chilling part in this item.

  • Lucy

    If any one had any doubt that the Herald has an agenda that doubt should be gone. Disgusting but you go Mr. Brash keep up the good work.

  • caleb

    its a pity the national leadership isnt openly acknowledging the merits of these recommendations, which would be totally in line with party principle and the media which cant seem to see the long term benefit to the country.

  • http://www.kiwiwit.blogspot.com/ Kiwiwit

    The appropriate response to The Herald is to cancel your subscription. I no longer subscribe to any NZ daily newspapers and since going cold-turkey find I don’t miss them at all. There is much more, better quality news content on the Internet than in any NZ paper and you have the benefit of selecting your editorial comment rather than having exclusively left wing views foisted on you. Give it up and you’ll be better for it!

  • Sinner

    And so, the best arguments against the Brash report come from Brash himself

    What was it about Hellen? What power did she have over NZ?

    So much so that Key's policies are to continue every one of Hellen's policies from 2008

    while Brash's policies are to continue every one of Hellen's policies from 2005

    Remember what Brash himself actually advocated in 2005: a real flat tax at about 15%, capped at individual payments of $10000; all SOEs, hospitals, schools etc to be fully privatised; all benefits including the codger-bludger super to be terminated…

    Remember that Brash actually won the 2005 election with those policies! – but Labour;s gerrymander and overspending (which should have had them all jailed) meant Brash was thrown onto the scrapheap.

    But why oh why is Brash advocated Hellen's policies himself now?

    • mediatart

      Gerrymander?. Are you nutts. Its was the overall total of votes for the whole country that was higher for Labour. That is the reverse of a gerrymander.
      How easily you forget about the illegal spending of broadcast money by National in the last week of the campaign. If they complied with the law they would have had no ads in the last week, and probably lost even more.

      Once again the kiwi right loves coming second , calling themselves winners!!. Because they lost. And if Brash was such a champion how come he booted out within a year ( one reason he broke a promise to resign if he lost) but there was the little problem of the former Remuera Doctors receptionist/divorcee

      • Sinner

        Labour got in because the Maori vote put the parliament into overhang.

        That's called the Maorimander. Then Labour vastly overspent using taxpayer dollars (taxpayers who overwhelmingly vote National and ACT, mind you!)

        Without Maori seats – or overhang – Brash & ACT would have won in 2005 and you can bet his policies would have been far far more reforming that the pathetic suggestions from his taskforce!

      • http://intensedebate.com/people/Whaleoil Whaleoil

        Convenient that you missed out the theft of $840,000 by Labour. A theft that was so bad that Labour retrospectively changed the law to make their illegal act disappear.

        • sonic

          Speaking of fraud how much did you rip off your insurance company for agin, $400K?

          • http://intensedebate.com/people/Whaleoil Whaleoil

            Sonic that is a lie pure and simple, it is also defamation.

            However you seem to be a coward and will not say that in the open with your real name. So you are fucking banned for ever.

  • mediatart

    And why does Western Australia have much higher wages than the similar South Australia- its the minerals stupid

    • noodle

      WA is basic supply and demand. No one wants to live there, but there are companies there that make significant amounts of money through mining – so the wages are high to attract people. If there was similar sized operation going on in the Coromandel or Bay of Islands, there is no way the wages would be that high, as people would be WANT to live there. Not much lifestyle around the WA mines.

  • moondoggy

    http://www.nzherald.co.nz/opinion/news/article.cf…

    Here's Garth George's opinion piece if you want to read it.

    He ought to be ashamed of himself, it must have been all those years on the bottle (which he seems to mention in every second column)

  • Hagues

    Got to wonder what got into Garth's cornflakes this week, he either hasn't read the report or can't comprehend simple English. Either way he looks stupid.

  • Peter

    Duplicity in action – The Herald published Dr John Salinger’s (far less than polite) letter in response to Jim Hopkin’s column “Dodgy science gets us all off the hook” http://www.nzherald.co.nz/opinion/news/article.cfm?c_id=466&objectid=10611930

  • Marybelle

    A couple of weeks ago someone called up NewstalkZB's Leighton Smith and said that the Editor of the NZ Herald told him that his opinion letter to the Editor against man made global warming cimate change would not be printed by the N Z Herald and any others that had a similar sentiment would also not be printed. After reading today's splurge on Copenhagen by Eloise Gibson you can see that this is true and shows that Eloise Gibson is a pro man made global warming journalist. (And we are going to have to put up with more of the same lies being told for the next few weeks). If Eloise wants to show that she is balanced then she had better interview Lord Christopher Monckton while in Copenhagen and give him and others like him just as many pages in the N Z Herald. As far as I know the NZ Herald has also not yet apologised to Christine Rankin for telling a front page lie about her. Now with what they have done to Don Brash, the NZ Herald's credibility must be questioned.

  • Doug

    We are lucky we live in the age of the internet, in the days before the internet I wonder if the news was censored by editors as much as it is now. In a lot of instances it appears as though reporters interview their own keyboard and report it as News.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/The_Grizz The_Grizz

      This is why I like reading blogs. It gives insight into the news behind the news so the real truth can be uncovered. I hate being dumbed down by people who control the media. While I do not always agree with bloggers like WOBH, I at least am able to form a better informed opinion.

  • Lucy

    The NZ Herald is fast losing credibility amongst people I speak to as a trashy left wing media source. The quality of journalist is fast declining and it is a sad indictment on society that people actually form opinions from the diatribe they write. I certainly don't buy it anymore.

  • Flashman

    Once upon a time I used to compare newspaper, radio and television news with blognews. Today I compare blognews with what appears in these traditional media – quite a change in perspective and habit!

    On reflection I feel better informed and, above all, empowered through this migration.

  • Manic

    Why can't a complant be made to the Press Association over the inaccuracies?
    Surely they can be forced to print a correction.

  • Caleb

    i want to watch the tv news or read the print paper but i just see poor journalism, crap analysis and socialist agenda. are they trying to dumb us..

  • Bok

    I know that Nat blogs have to support National incentives and ex leader of the party, but the non stop platering and promoting of this letter by Brash over at Kiwiblog is just unseemly.

  • Falafulu Fisi

    Garth George, should stick to singing the hymn, what a friend we have in Jesus, rather than trying to criticize an economic report/recommendation that he has no knowledge about or illiterate on the subject.