Measuring New Zealand’s Economic Activity

Report on Measuring New Zealand’s Productivity

Keywords: Growth & Innovation;

Executive Summary

The Department of Labour commissioned this study to give further consideration of the Diewart and Lawrence output series, reported in Measuring New Zealand’s Productivity (D&L (1999), called here D&L99. This exploration data base raises two issues.

Construction of the D&L Series

The first is that they have appeared to construct a data base parallel to official and semi-official ones. Initially they did this because in their tax investigations required them to use expenditure aggregates at factor prices. However there is not the same need to do so for investigating productivity changes. Typically New Zealand economists have built data bases complementary to (rather than parallel to) the official ones (although sometimes Statistics New Zealand (SNZ) develops the parallel series at a later date, so there can be an overlap). The big data bases, such as the RBNZ and the RPEP, have detailed documentation of their construction.

It is also worth noting that there is a constant process of quality assessment of SNZ series, not only within the department, but from the actions of those outside who have used the data (often for macroeconomic forecasting), and informally discussed the results with SNZ. It is these processes of quality assessment (and the professionalism of those involved) which gives some confidence in the SNZ series, although obviously there are problems, and all the series are subject to noise larger than their users would like.

With the exception of the private and public (market) consumption series, which were provided by SNZ, D&L constructed their own component series which parallel to official and semi-official data. They do not seem to have attempted any reconciliation between them, their documentation of the construction is poor, and while they are likely to have had their own internal quality checks, quality assessment has not, thus far, been nearly as comprehensive as the official series.

It should be added that D&L are to be applauded for having obtained the SNZ consumption series, which were not previously in the public domain. With hindsight it is disappointing that they did not do this for the other components of their output measure. One would urge SNZ to push back their volume expenditure series which starts in 1983/4 as far as possible, and at least to 1971/2 when the consumption series starts. However it seems likely that an authoritative volume stock series would not be available before 1977/8. In that year a new commerce inventory series was introduced, which appears to overlap badly with the previous one, making it difficult to construct a consistent series.

Reliability of the D&L Series

How reliable is the D&L series? We can compare it with the parallel SNZ series (and where they do not exist, with hybrid ones constructed using official and semi-official data). On the whole the D&L series are not too unsatisfactory, except in the following respects:
– they are much more volatile;
– the secular story they tell is of slower growth before 1982/3 and faster growth after.

These differences (defects?) arise mainly from the sheer difficulty of the construction of the stock change series (which seems to be involved in every one of the unorthodox swings in the D&L business cycle), and some problems in the GFCF deflator, especially in the early 1970s. There may be other problems but they are swamped by the two identified here.

In summary, there is no reason to assume that the D&L series are superior to the SNZ based ones, while it seems likely that it is possible to construct superior expenditure side series before 1982/3 (of which GDPM(X) is an example, although it can be improved).

The Usefulness of the D&L Series

I give no opinion about the usefulness of the D&L data base in regard to their tax work, having not assessed it for this purpose. In regard to productivity measurement, it seems to me that the D&L data base adds little to that which we already have. In particular the high volatility means it cannot be adjusted to a cyclically neutral basis. The method used on page 29 of D&L99 is embarrassingly crude. Yet, other than using a three (or longer) year moving average, there is probably no better way, given the noise in the data base.

Can its long term secular trends be trusted? They are not that different from the official trends. Insofar as they are, that appears to be a function of the oddities of the GFCF deflator and the artificial volatility of the series arising from its stock change component. In particular I would be reluctant to use this series to demonstrate there has been an acceleration in the growth of productivity. Its conclusion to this effect seems far to dependent upon the faulty GCFC deflator series. (In any case insofar as it provides evidence, any acceleration began in the early 1980s, rather than the mid 1980s or 1990s, following the reforms.)

As a final caution, the difficulties in the GFCF deflator probably also undermine the reliability of the capital input index, although I have not investigate this in any detail.

Summary Conclusion

The ultimate test is that having spent a number of weeks investigating the series, would I use the D&L series for any investigation of the long term behaviour of the New Zealand economy? My short answer is no. There are better series in existence or easily constructible. I would use the consumption components of the D&L series, since they are based on official data, and I perhaps would use the D&L series as a cross check on any preferred series I was constructing or using. With those exceptions I would be reluctant to place any great weight on the D&L series.

Summary of Individual Sections

1. The report begins by describing briefly the measurement framework that was used, and some of the key notions.

2. D&L99 compute an expenditure side estimate of GDP excluding non-market expenditures (public sector net output and the imputed rent on owner occupied housing) for the period 1971/2 to 1998/9 in value and volume terms.
The construction of the output data in the report is poorly documented.

3. A comparison between the D&L99 and the SNZ market GDP series (measured at factor cost), shows the D&L series averaging 6.3 percent lower than the SNZ series. The gap was reduced to 4.0 percent if stock changes were excluded from both series. The correlations between the series on a levels and year-by-year (percent increase) basis are highly significant for the measure without stock change, and between levels for the measures with stock change. (The year-by-year correlation is markedly lower, although still statistically significant.)
In summary the D&L nominal series corresponds broadly, but not exactly, to the official SNZ series. The most problematic match is between the stock change series.

4. D&L derive their consumption components directly from SNZ. These are not given further consideration in the study.
A comparison of the D&L price deflators for exports and imports of goods and services with the SNZ one from 1982/3 (it is not available before) and the RBNZ before that date suggests the match is satisfactory.
However a comparison of the D&L deflator for Gross Fixed Capital Formation suggests it correlates poorly with the SNZ series (available only after 1982/3), and also with the RPEP and RBNZ series which go back to an earlier date. The fit is poorest up to 1983/4, especially in the early 1970s, where the D&L deflators seem far too high, relative to their later levels. (This means the D&L deflators rise more slowly than the official ones, so their real investment expenditures rise more quickly. The effect is to give later GDP growth a boost.)
In summary, the D&L external deflators are satisfactory, but the investment deflators are not, especially in the earlier part of the period.

5. Stock change figures are problematic in New Zealand before 1977/8 (when SNZ does not even provide an inventory valuation adjustment in its nominal national accounts), while SNZ volume figures are not available before 1982/3. In any case the stock change figures are the most problematic component of any expenditure side estimate of net output.
Following a detailed analysis, the study concludes that it is not possible to have any confidence in the real stock change series reported in D&L (1999). It is not clear how it was constructed, it does not appear to be comprehensive, there is some problem with the deflators (or perhaps the fundamental construction), and the series does not correlate with any other plausible alternate series.

6. The report examines five measures of net output:
GDP(P) The SNZ volume estimate of GDP based on the production side.
GDPM(P) The net output of the market sectors of the economy (i.e. Market GDP) constructed from SNZ data.

GDPM(X) This hybrid series of net market output measured on the expenditure side consists of splicing the SNZ market output series from 1982/3 to a composition of volume expenditure components before then.
D&LC(onstructed) This series was constructed from the individual components reported in D&L(1999).
D&LR(eported) This is the output series reported and used in D&L (1999). It differs slightly from D&LC(onstructed).
The D&L series do not match well with the officially and semi officially derived series. The best match is after 1982/3. The D&L series are also more volatile (measured by the percentage deviation of the percent annual increase). The trend patterns are also different. D&L has lower trend growth rates in the 1970s and higher in the 1980s.

7. It was only possible to compare the components of the GDPM(X) with D&LC, and their consumption components are identical. Moreover, the stock change estimates were not comparable. The GFCF and external components comparisons proved reasonably satisfactory, although there were important differences in trends. A curiosity is that although the GFCF value and price series were poorly correlated, the volume series from the two sources showed a similar cyclical pattern (but a different secular one).

8. Following a consideration of years in which there are large swings suggests that the both D&L series is much more volatile than the market output GDP and the hybrid expenditure series: probably misleadingly so. The very early difficulties appear to reflect the problems D&L have with their GFCF deflator. Over the entire period the inventory cycle seems to be problematic. In no case of a business cycle does the D&L series appear to tell a better story of the period than the more officially based data.

TABLES

Table 1: Comparison of D&L and SNZ Market GDP (1984/5)

Table 2: Correlations between D&L and SNZ Nominal GDP Series

Table 3: Comparisons between D&L and SNZ External Price Series

Table 4: Correlation between D&L, SNZ, RPEP, and RBNZ GCFC Deflators

Table 5: Correlation Between D&L and RBNZ Stock Levels

Table 6: Comparisons between Various Real GDP Series
6a: 1971/2-1997/8
6b: 1982/3-1997/8
6c: 1971/2-1982/3

Table 7: Comparisons between D&LC and GDPM(X) for GFCF, Exports and Imports

Table 8: Correlation between GFCF Characteristics (1971/2-1983/4)

Table 9: Years of Major GDP Swings

GRAPHS

Graph 1: D&L and SNZ Nominal GDP Series
1a: With Stock Change
1b: Without Stock Change

Graph 2: D&L, SNZ, RBNZ, and RPEP GFCF Deflator Series

Graph 3: D&L, RBNZ, and SNA Stock Change Series.

Introduction

The Department of Labour commissioned this study to give further “consideration of the Diewart and Lawrence output series [reported in Measuring New Zealand’s Productivity (D&L (1999), called here D&L99 etc]. In particular … we were interested in the major fall in the output index between 1974 and 1975 (-12%) and the major rise between 1983 and 1984 (+14%).”1 I have interpreted the remit a little more widely, not only to evaluate the cycle and noise, but also to look at the secular usefulness of the data. 2

1. Measuring Output

By way of background, it is to be recalled that economists measure economic output by the total production of goods and services in the designated region (i.e. New Zealand) valued in transaction prices. The underlying framework is the national accounts.

The core notion is the aggregate of net output. In order to avoid double counting from the output of one firm going into the input of another, the value of the inputs are deducted from the value of gross output.

In principle there are three main ways of measuring this output:
– the expenditure method (“side”) measures what is finally purchased (or goes into inventories), deducting imports since they are inputs not produced locally;

– the production side measures the net output of firms aggregated into sectors;

– the income side measures the incomes which the production process generates, since the sum of the incomes has to equal net output.
In principle the three totals measure exactly the same thing, and should have the same quantity in each year. Practically there are measurement errors (the “statistical discrepancy”).

Historically, Statistics New Zealand (SNZ) relied upon an incomes side approach (this is called ONA – old national accounts), matching it to an incomplete expenditure side (private consumption was a residual). In the 1970s it switched over to the recently introduced UN System of National Accounts (SNA) with a focus of a production side estimate. There are “official” national accounts in SNA definitions on the income and expenditure sides going back to March year ending 1962 (the New Zealand convention is to call this the 1961/2 year). (SNZ 1997) However previous to 1971/2 these are less reliable, and less detailed. Further major improvements were introduced from the 1977/8 year, and the expenditure side becomes more elaborate from 1983/4.

A particular problem arises from changes in prices, especially given the marked inflation in the 1970s and 1980s. Typically, the components of the national accounts are estimated in value (i.e. current price) terms, and are then deflated (using a suitable price index) to volume or constant price terms. Another common terminology is the value series is called “nominal” and the volume series “real”.

The aggregates may be valued in market prices which incorporate indirect taxes and subsidies, or factor (or producer prices) which do not. The SNA data is usually in market prices, whereas D&L use factor prices (which complicate the comparison). The difference hardly matters for the real series, since the deflation adjusts for changes in indirect taxes and subsidies. 3

Official volume estimates in an SNA format go back to 1971/2 on the production side, but only 1983/4 on the expenditure side. The Research Project on Economic Planning provides volume production side estimate back to 1954/5, and there is an SNZ estimate of total volume GDP going back to that year too. Series of unofficial estimates of aggregate production (value and volume), of varying reliability, go back into the nineteenth century.

2. Constructing the Output Data Series

D&L99 do not provide an account of how its output data series were constructed but its writers say they have “updated, expanded and further improved the detailed data base first developed in Diewart and Lawrence (1994, 1998).” (p.13) These earlier studies were primarily concerned with the incidence of taxation and the resulting consequences, whereas D&L99 is concerned about the measurement of total factor productivity. It may also be that the improvements refer to the input series, a conclusion consistent with D&L99 making no further reference to changes in the output series. The output data in D&L99 appears to be the same as in D&L98, except for the addition of the 1995/6 to 1997/8 years.

Regrettably, the discussion on the data construction in D&L94 is superficial, and in D&L98 is not comprehensive. As best as I can interpret from the published sources:
– The output data covers only market production on a GDP basis. This is elaborated in a following section.
– The data is measured at producer prices, rather than the more common market prices. As already explained this distinction is not so important after deflation.
– The data refers to March year, not calendar year, even when there is no indication in the text or tabulation. 4
– The data is constructed on an expenditure side basis.
– Some data was provided by Statistics New Zealand (SNZ) (private and public consumption), the remainder seems to have been calculated by the consultants, usually from official or semi-official sources.
– There is little detail of how the less official data was calculated. For instance in D&L98 the section on exports and imports amounts to 8 lines, and there is no reference to services. Investment goods (i.e. gross capital formation) has 23 lines, but there is no reference to inventory changes. There is more discussion on the inventory in D&L94 but, as reported below, that proves problematic.
– There is no explanation of how the components of the expenditure data are aggregated to the total output index. As reported below, I have been unable to reconcile the sum of the reported component outputs with the total output index.

In summary, the construction of the output data in the report is poorly documented. Those wishing to use the data should be aware that they are very dependent upon the competence of the authors. Independent verification of the data, other than that which comes direct from SNZ sources, has not been possible.

3. The Nominal Market Output Series

Because D&L work with an output series which covers only market production and which is valued in producer prices, their series is different from the conventional GDP measure which includes some other economic activities, and taxes and subsidies. In principle the conventional nominal measure can be put on the same market basis as the D&L99 measure by deducting indirect taxes, adding subsidies, and deducting the sectoral activities they define as non-market. D&L provide no comprehensive account of the sectors they include, but their non-market sectors are probably the public sector and the imputed rent on owner occupied housing (which is a component of private consumption). On this basis the nominal D&L estimate can be compared with the nominal official estimate.

An example for the 1984/5 (mid year of the D&L series) follows:

Table 1: Comparison of D&L and SNZ Market GDP (1984/5)
$m
Official GDP (at market prices)5 39,170
less Indirect taxes -4,524
plus Subsidies 598
less Net output of public sector -3,817
less Gross Operating Surplus on Owner Occupied Dwellings -1,601
Official Market GDP (at factor prices) 30,367
Diewart and Lawrence Market GDP (at factor prices) 28,626

Thus there is a difference between the two estimates of $1,741m or 6.3 percent of the official estimate. 6 Part of the difference is explained by different estimates in changes of stocks, an issue which has its own section. If the stock change is deducted from each estimate, 7 the estimates become $29,256m and $28,552m reducing the discrepancy to $704m or 2.4 percent.

For the 27 years in total, the difference of the output with stock changes ranges from 0.0 percent to 16.0 percent, with an average of 6.3 percent. Without the stock change included, the range is 0.6 percent above to 7.4 percent below, averaging 4.0 percent. 8

I also calculated the correlation coefficients between the series. Their high levels may mislead, because there is a strong trend from inflation (and to a lesser extent volume growth), so a correlation between annual percentage changes is also shown. The lower correlations for nominal GDP including stock change indicates that inventory change is an important source of measurement volatility between the series. The high rates between the GDP excluding stock changes, especially for the increase, suggest they are basically the same series.

Table 2: Correlations between D&L and SNZ Nominal GDP Series
Correlation coefficients
Nominal GDP Levels Percentage Increase
inc Stock Change .9994 .6709
exc Stock Change .9997 .9725

In summary the D&L nominal series corresponds broadly, but not exactly, to the official SNZ series. The most problematic match in stock change.

4. Converting from Value to Volume: The Deflator Series

The standard way of converting the aggregate from a current price (value) to a constant price (volume) series is to deflate the value series by a suitable price index. 9 D&L99 report 48 components to their series:
– 18 components of private consumption on consumption;
– 1 government intermediate spending;
– 6 components of fixed investment (including government investment);
– 2 (an agricultural and nonagricultural) inventory series;
– 11 components of exports (one of which was service exports);
– 10 components of imports (one of which was service imports). 10

Data on the first 19 (consumption) series was provided by SNZ, and may be taken as consistent with the official data. The remaining series were collected largely from official sources, but were subsequently processed. This introduces a source of potential error.

Exports and Imports

The D&L external series were compared with the
i) the comparable SNA implicit deflator from 1982/3 (when it first becomes available) to 1997/8. 11
ii) the comparable RBNZ implicit deflator from 1971/2 to 1980/1. 12

I have used three simple measures to compare the series:
– the average increase over the period;
– the correlation between them, for levels and percentage increases.

Table 3: Comparisons between D&L and SNZ External Price Series
1971/2-1981/2 Export prices Import Prices
D&L annual increase 14.0% p.a. 15.4% p.a.
RBNZ annual increase 14.1% p.a. 16.2% p.a.
Correlation coefficient .9995 (levels) .9997 (levels)
.9745 (increases) .9946 (increases)
1982/3-1987/8 Export prices Import Prices
D&L annual increase 3.1% p.a. 1.5% p.a.
SNZ annual increase 2.7% p.a. 1.4% p.a.
Correlation coefficient .9976 (levels) .9880 (levels)
.9914 (increases) .9816 (increases)

A curiosity of the analysis is that strictly we are comparing official and semi-official price indexes which include indirect taxes (and subsidy), with D&L indexes which exclude indirect taxes. The good correlations suggests that there is not a substantial tax element in the values. 13 The match between the series for either period is broadly satisfactory.

Gross Fixed Capital Formation

The relative capital formation deflator proved more problematic. On the three compass principle, 14 it was necessary to look at two alternative series (in addition to the SNZ one). A complication is that they are over different periods. The series that were compared were:
i) the D&L (implicit) aggregate capital formation deflator available from 1971/2 to 1997/8.
ii) the comparable SNA implicit deflator available from 1982/3.
iii) the comparable RBNZ implicit deflator available from 1971/2 to 1993/4.
iv) the comparable RPEP implicit deflator available from 1971/2 to 1996/7.

In order to simplify the presentation, we report here summary statistics between each series for as long a period as possible. They are shown below (with the number of observations in brackets):

Table 4: Correlation between D&L, SNZ, RPEP, and RBNZ GCFC Deflators
SNZ RBNZ RPEP
Trend: percentage points difference between row series relative to column series
D&L -0.3(15) -0.6(23) -0.4(26)
RPEP 0.5(15) 0.0(23)
RBNZ 0.4(12)
Correlation coefficient (levels)
D&L .992 .997 .995
RPEP .935 .998
RBNZ .996
Correlation coefficient (percentage changes)
D&L .689 .622 .605
RPEP .942 .983
RBNZ .956

While the RBNZ and RPEP series are reasonably closely aligned even on a percentage change basis, and correlate well with the SNZ series, the D&L series appears to be the odd one out. (An eyeball comparison shows that the there is a particularly poor fit in the early 1970s, with the match remaining poor until 1983/4.) The poor correlation before the official series was constructed should come as no surprise to those who have worked in this area. The gross fixed capital formation deflators have always been among the most problematic to construct, and both the RBNZ and the RPEP research groups are among New Zealand economists who have put an enormous effort into providing quality indicators. 15 Of course the two series may be constructed on largely the same data and assumptions. But they were constructed independently in two research programs, by researchers experienced with the New Zealand data and the New Zealand economy, and at least intuitively will have checked their results against other indicators of the New Zealand economy of the time. Thus D&L deflator has to be considered less reliable than either of these two.

The issues raised early of the effect on the comparisons of indirect taxation on exports and imports also applies here. The implications of the differences in deflators on the output estimates appears later. However it should be noted that unsatisfactory gross fixed capital formation deflators will also impact upon the estimates of real capital stock. Given the deflators are high in the earlier period, the effect will be to raise TFP growth in the 1970s.

In summary, the D&L external deflators are satisfactory, but the D&L investment deflators are not, especially in the earlier part of the period.

5. Stock Change

It is clear that the D&L have difficulties in regard to their stock change data, although it should be added that these are always even more problematic than the GFCF data, as the subsequent discussion will show.

The first difficulty is that the D&L series is not comprehensive. By their account they cover only livestock, and stocks of materials and commercial stocks (finished goods in manufacturing, retail stocks and the narrow definition of wholesale stocks). (D&L94:101-2) A major exclusion is forestry stocks (which fortunately grow fairly steadily), but there are also some minor stocks omitted. In addition SNZ makes adjustments between its stocks and other expenditure, most notoriously in regard to exports, because goods which cross the wharves (and are measured at this point as doing so) are not deemed exported until they are sold. I the interim they are transferred from exports to stock changes. Thus a number of items in the SNA definition of inventories are omitted.

The price deflator reportedly used to deflate the commercial stocks was the price index for all New Zealand industry inputs (excluding labour), implying there was no disaggregation. In any case the price index does not match the actual content of the stocks well, increasing too quickly, and thereby depressing real stock levels at the end of the period, and stock growth through it. Indeed the D&L series shows a decrease in aggregate stock levels between 1971/2 and 1990/1, which seems most unlikely (and is not replicated in any other available series).

The second difficulty is that while the D&L nominal stock change in the 1971/2 year is reported as $95m for their agricultural (livestock?) stock change and -$57m for their nonagricultural stock change, the value in 1971/2 prices is reported as $79m and -$61m respectively. Although as explained below, price deflators for stock change are problematic, they should be at unity in the base year. Here they are not.

Third, the data reported in D&L99 does not appear to be consistent with that in D&L94, but there is no further comment on data construction thereafter, so further investigation is not possible.

To understand the difficulties with the stock change, consider a simple inventory with a well defined price. Suppose its value is St at the beginning of period t, when the price level is Pt. The apparent increase in the value of stocks in the period t is given by

St+1– St

.
However, for national accounts purposes, which focuses on the growth of production, the effect of inflation in the increase in the value of the stocks is not a part of production. Assuming that the stocks are valued in current prices, than the increase in stocks from additional production is

St+1/(Pt+1/Pt) – St

at the beginning of the period prices. The difference between the two,

St+1(1-Pt/Pt+1),

is called the “inventory valuation adjustment”.16 Until 1977/8, the SNZ national accounts did not have an IVA.

To calculate the real increase in stocks, we divide the nominal value of each stock level by the price level (assuming that the base price level is set at 1.0). 17 The difference between them is the real increase, or in period t

St+1/Pt+1 – St/Pt,
or
{St+1/(Pt+1/Pt) -St}/Pt.

Thus the real increase is the SNA nominal increase divided by the price index at the beginning of the period.

However, once aggregation occurs, with the procedure being applied to a number of types of stocks each with their own price index, the simplicity of these formula disappears following aggregation. In principle this also happens for any other aggregation, but providing the price changes are all the same sign, and their increases of similar magnitude, the situation does not usually cause problems. However, because typically the components of the aggregate stocks series are both rising and falling, the aggregate nominal and real series do not follow one another well. For instance the nominal increase may be positive but the real increase negative, so the apparent implicit price deflator is negative.18

This meaningless of the aggregate implicit price deflator, means that we cannot compare the price deflators for aggregate stock change. Instead I have made a direct comparison of four estimates of the real stock change:
– SNZ: the official SNA series. (1982/3-1997/8);
– RBNZ: the series from the RBNZ data base. (1971/2-1994/5);19
– D&L94: I constructed this series from the data reported in D&L94. (1972/3-1990/1);20
– D&L99: as reported in D&L99.

Because we cannot standardise them to the same price base (other than by disaggregating into components, which is not possible given the lack of data), the best way of comparing the series is by correlation. The results are tabulated below with the number of observations next to the correlation coefficient.

Table 5: Correlation Between D&L and RBNZ Stock Levels
RBNZ D&L94 D&L99
SNZ .088 (14) .320 (9) .079 (7)
RBNZ .735 (19) .143 (20)
D&L94 .213 (19).

The only statistically significant correlation is between RBNZ and D&L94, probably because they are both dominated by commerce stocks. None of the unofficial series correlate well with the official ones, and the two D&L series do not correlate significantly either.

A weakness of the correlation approach is that it does not assess secular trends. Thus the correlation between the RBNZ and the D&L94 series is partly misleading because they have quite different long run properties. In particular, the RBNZ inventory stock measured in 1971/2 prices rises 68.9 percent between end March 1972 and end March 1991, whereas D&L94 falls 5.6 percent over the same period. The latter pattern seems unlikely, and probably reflects a faulty deflator for the commerce stocks.

In conclusion, it is not possible to have any confidence in the real stock change series reported in D&L99. It is not clear how it was constructed, it does not appear to be comprehensive, there is some problem with the deflators (or perhaps the fundamental construction), and the series does not correlate with any other plausible alternate series. (We will see its weaknesses playing a key role in later problems with the aggregate D&L output series.)

6. Comparing and Constructing the D&L Output Series

This report compares five series:

1. GDP(P)
This is the SNZ volume estimate of GDP based on the production side. It is the most used measure of changes in economic activity. We would expect this to be less volatile/cyclical than the market concept that D&L use, because the non-market sector is less cyclical.

2. GDPM(P)
This consists of the net output of the market sectors of the economy (i.e. Market GDP). It was constructed by subtracting the net outputs of the general government and owner occupied housing sectors from GDP(P). This series is the production side estimate of the market output concept used by D&L.

3. GDPM(X) (a.k.a the “hybrid” series)
This series, which is an expenditure side estimate of market GDP based on New Zealand sourced data, consists of splicing two series together. The more recent series was the SNZ economy wide output series on the expenditure side less the expenditures on (which are also the outputs of) general government and owner occupier housing, again converting the aggregate into a measure of market output. However this series goes back only to 1982/3.

Before then, back to 1971/2, I constructed a market output series from the expenditure side as follows.
– private and public consumption: The SNZ data provided to D&L;
– gross fixed capital formation: SNZ nominal GFCF deflated by a geometric average of the RBNZ and RPEP GFCF deflators;
– stock change: annual changes in the volume RBNZ inventory stock series (scaled to the 1982/3 SNZ estimate).21
– exports: the SNZ series of the total export volume index the reported in SNZ(1986/7). However this only covers goods. A comparison of the volume exports goods and volume export services series for the 1982/3 to 1997/8 period suggests they remained in a relatively fixed proportion, and that was assumed before 1982/3.22
– imports: the SNZ series of the total import volume index the reported in SNZ(1986/7). However this only covers goods, so the trended ratio between goods and services was projected back before 1982/3.23

The resulting series is of a rather mixed ancestry.24 Note that it and the next two have considerable commonality in that the consumption data comes from the same SNZ source.

4. D&LC(onstructed)
This series was constructed by adding the volume expenditure components (subtracting of imports) from Table 38a of D&L99.

5. D&LR(eported)
D&L99 report a (market) output series in their Table 3.1. One might expect it to be exactly the same as the D&LC(onstructed) but it is not. No explanation is given why they are different (although they are obviously closely statistically related).

1971/2-1997/8

Measures for comparing the series over the 1971/72 to 1997/8 period are given in the following table. (The standard deviation of the percentage increase, essentially a measure of a variation about the series trend, will be used in a later section).

Table 6a: Comparisons between Various Real GDP Series (1971/2-1997/8)
GDP(P) GDPM(P) GDPM(X) D&LC D&LR
Trend: percent p.a. annual increase
2.1 2.3 2.4 2.1 2.3
Standard Deviation of Percent Annual Increase
2.4 2.8 3.5 5.9 6.0
Correlation coefficient (levels)
GDP(P) 1.000 0.998 0.980 0.963 0.967
GDPM(P) 0.998 1.000 0.988 0.972 0.975
GDPM(X) 0.980 0.988 1.000 0.985 0.991
D&LC 0.963 0.972 0.985 1.000 0.998
D&LR 0.967 0.975 0.991 0.998 1.000
Correlation coefficient (percentage changes)
GDP(P) 1.000 0.983 0.602 0.175 0.126
GDPM(P) 0.983 1.000 0.670 0.260 0.215
GDPM(X) 0.602 0.670 1.000 0.639 0.637
D&LC 0.175 0.260 0.639 1.000 0.989
D&LR 0.126 0.215 0.637 0.989 1.000

Focusing on the percentage change correlations, we can see that the two production side series (GDP(P), GDPM(P)) are closely related,25> as are the two D&L series (D&LC, D&LR). This is not surprising, given their construction. The hybrid expenditure side series, GDPM(X), appears to correlate reasonably well with both groupings.26

Recalling that the hybrid series was constructed quite differently before and after 1982/3, and that generally the quality of the data base is superior after that date, the two sub-periods were checked separately. First consider the later series (form 1982/3), with its better quality data.

1982/3-1997/8

The measures for comparing the series over the 1982/3 to 1997/8 period are given in the following table

Table 6b: Comparisons between Various Real GDP Series (1982/3-1997/8)
GDP(P) GDPM(P) GDPM(X) D&LC D&LR
Trend: percent p.a. annual increase
1.9 2.4 2.8 2.5 2.8
Standard Deviation of Percent Annual Increase
2.8 3.0 3.7 7.8 7.8
Correlation coefficient (levels)
GDP(P) 1.000 0.999 0.994 0.977 0.984
GDPM(P) 0.999 1.000 0.994 0.979 0.986
GDPM(X) 0.994 0.948 1.000 0.977 0.990
D&LC 0.977 0.979 0.977 1.000 0.994
D&LR 0.984 0.986 0.990 0.994 1.000
Correlation coefficient (percentage changes)
GDP(P) 1.000 0.984 0.920 0.566 0.510
GDPM(P) 0.984 1.000 0.936 0.631 0.577
GDPM(X) 0.920 0.936 1.000 0.690 0.675
D&LC 0.566 0.631 0.690 1.000 0.983
D&LR 0.510 0.577 0.675 0.983 1.000

The separate grouping of the two production side and the two D&L series remains, although now even their increases correlate significantly.27 The GDPM(X) series joins the production side group (satisfyingly because they are all, in effect, official SNZ series).

1971/2-1982/3

The measures for comparing the series over the 1971/72 to 1997/8 period are given in the following table.

Table 6c: Comparisons between Various Real GDP Series (1971/2-1982/3)
GDP(P) GDPM(P) GDPM(X) D&LC D&LR
Trend: percent p.a. annual increase
2.0 1.9 1.5 1.3 1.3
Standard Deviation of Percent Annual Increase
2.8 3.0 3.7 4.4 4.4
Correlation coefficient (levels)
GDP(P) 1.000 0.996 0.790 0.420 0.444
GDPM(P) 0.996 1.000 0.812 0.426 0.440
GDPM(X) 0.790 0.812 1.000 0.673 0.678
D&LC 0.420 0.426 0.673 1.000 0.985
D&LR 0.444 0.440 0.678 0.985 1.000
Correlation coefficient (percentage changes)
GDP(P) 1.000 0.994 0.302 -.067 -.109
GDPM(P) 0.994 1.000 0.365 0.003 -.039
GDPM(X) 0.302 0.365 1.000 0.631 0.633
D&LC -.067 0.003 0.631 1.000 0.989
D&LR -.109 -.039 0.633 0.989 1.000

The grouping of GDP(P) and GDPM(P) and of D&LC and D&LR are again maintained, but on the basis of the correlation between their increases they are different series measuring quite different phenomenon. This time GDPM(X) appears to have more in common with the D&L series and little with the production side estimates.28 This is not so surprising in that the D&L and GDPM(X) series have their consumption components in common. However it is disappointing that GDP(M) appears to have little short run relation to the production side estimates. One suspects that a better estimate may be possible.29

(Note the different stories the series are telling about the patterns of secular trends. The production side estimate of market GDP has it growing 1.9 percent p.a. in the earlier period, and 2.4 percent p.a. in the later period, a rise of .5 percentage points The expenditure side estimates have lower growth in the earlier period (1.3-1.5 percent p.a.), and a higher one in the later period (2.5-2.8 percent p.a.) giving an increase of 1.2 to 1.5 percentage points, or more than double the production side change. Thus the story one may tell can be varied by suitable choice of the data series.)

The D&L series do not match well with the officially and semi officially derived series. The best match is after 1982/3. The D&L series are also more volatile (measures by the percentage deviation of the percent annual increase). The trend patterns are also different. D&L has lower trend growth rates in the 1970s and higher in the 1980s.

7. Comparing the Year to Year Changes by Components

It is only possible to compare the components of GDPM(X) with D&LC, since there is no expenditure side aggregation available for any of the other series. Moreover, two of the components, private and public (market) consumption are identical, while it is simply not possible to compare the stock change series.30 Again I have used the mean changes and correlation of levels and percentage increase method.

Table 7: Comparisons between D&LC and GDPM(X) for GFCF, Exports and Imports
Gross Fixed Capital Formation Exports Imports
1971/2-1997/8
Average increases (percent p.a.)
GDPM(X) 2.3 4.0 3.7
D&LC 3.0 4.0 4.7
Correlation coefficient
Levels .902 .998 .985
% Increase .939 .919 .980
1971/2-1982/3
Average increases (percent p.a.)
GDPM(X) 1.6 3.2 1.7
D&LC 3.8 3.7 3.9
Correlation coefficient
Levels .401 .978 .808
% Increase .947 .951 .993
1982/3-1997/8
Average increases (percent p.a.)
GDPM(X) 2.7 4.4 4.9
D&LC 2.5 3.9 4.9
Correlation coefficient
Levels .995 .996 .998
% Increase .974 .932 .970

The two export series show a close similarity over the whole period (although there is a different pattern between the sub periods, which may be an endpoint problem). The two import series are very similar in the post 1982/3 period, but a substantial trend divergence before (which is also reflected in the correlation coefficients).

However the relationship between the Gross Fixed Capital Formation series is odd. Again the post 1982/3 fit is good, but in the earlier period shows a substantial divergence in trend, together with a statistically insignificant (at the 5 percent level) correlation between levels. However there is a strong correlation between the increases. An examination of the value and price data shows the following:

Table 8: Correlation between GFCF Characteristics (1971/2-1983/4)
Levels % Increases (Average Difference*)
Value .999 .867 1.4
Price Index .985 .255 -1.0
Volume .401 .947 2.2
* between % increase of D&LC vs GDPM(X)

It appears that the while the value and price indexes correlate well at the series levels, their ratio does not. However, while they correlate poorly as percentage increases, their ratio the series increases correlate exceptionally well. The D&L description of how they constructed their investment goods data is brief. But D&L98 mentions that much of the data came from The Treasury. It is possible that the Treasury data came from the sources we used to construct the GDP(M) (volume) series. However, without examining the D&L worksheets it is not possible to explain why the underlying series diverge so greatly, why there is substantial differences in the trends of the volumes series, and yet why their cyclical patterns are reasonably close.31

It was only possible to compare the components of the GDPM(X) with D&LC, and their consumption components are identical. Moreover, the stock change estimates were not comparable. The GFCF and external components comparisons proved reasonably satisfactory, although there were important differences in trends. A curiosity was that while the GFCF value and price series were poorly correlated, the volume series from the two sources showed a similar cyclical pattern (but a different secular one).

8. Cyclical Swings and Errors

The terms of reference specifically asked to look at some of the sharp annual swings that occurred in the D&L series. However the New Zealand economy is subject to actual cycles, which is one of the sources of GDP growth swings. In order to accommodate this we have examined only the extreme annual percentage changes which were identified as follows. The four series of section 6 (excluding GDP) was separated into the two sub periods, and detrended. The GDPM(P) series, probably the most accurate, experienced a standard deviation about its trend of 3.0 percentage in the pre 1982/3 period and 2.6 percentage points after 1982/3. Swings from the trend which were greater than 6.0 percent in the earlier period and 5.2 percent in the second are listed as follows (the percentage increase being shown – brackets indicates it was inside the range):

Table 9: Years of Major GDP Swings
Year GDPM(P) GDPM(X) D&LC D&LR
1971/2-1972/3 (4.1) 8.1 10.8 9.9
1972/3-1973/4 6.8 (1.0) (3.5) (1.6)
1973/4-1974/5 (2.9) (-1.2) -14.0 -12.8
1974/5-1975/6 (0.5) (0.6) 9.0 8.9
1978/9-1979/80 (1.0) (-4.6) -10.0 -11.1
1979/80-1980/1 (-1.0) (3.2) 7.9 9.6
1982/3-1983/4 (2.6) 5.7 11.5 13.2
1983/4-1984/5 (4.5) 6.1 (-0.3) (-0.7)
1988/9-1989/90 (-0.1) (-1.7) (-6.2) (-5.4)
1992/3-1993/4 5.7 7.1 6.9 6.4
1993/4-1994/5 (4.6) 5.5 (5.0) (4.7)

In total this identifies 11 of the 26 possible years.

However we may dismiss the 1993/4-1995/6 period as the series are telling the same story. It was an exceptional boom.

One might be inclined to dismiss the first four year period, 1971/2-1975/6 on a similar basis. It is certainly true that all series show a strong expansion in the first couple of years, although GDPM(P) locates the peak a little later than the expenditure side series. However in the second two years of the period the D&L series tell quite a different story, of a wild downswing in 1974/5 followed by an almost as spectacular recovery. This is not evident in the other two series, in other indicators, nor in contemporary commentary. This is not merely a matter of timing, because the D&L series appear to be growing faster over the period. Inspection suggests that the faulty GFCF price deflators is interacting badly with the also fluctuating level of investment. (There may also be inventory problems, a caveat always with the D&L series.) In summary, it seems unlikely that the D&L series are well representing either the cycle or the trend over this period.

The D&L series have a mini bust and boom in the 1978/9-1980/1, again not evident in the other series, in other indicators, or in contemporary comment. The difference appears to be in contrary stock cycles between GDPM(X) and D&LC. Given the difficulties with inventory measurement there is little more to be said.

The 1982/3-1984/5 period also has different profiles of a cyclical between the GDPM and D&L series. Again the latter do not seem to conform to other indicators or the conventional wisdom, and again the inventory cycles between GDPM(X) and D&LC are quite different. However this time the GDPM(X) stock change data is based on the official (and very detailed) estimates, and may be taken as more authoritative.

Undoubtedly there was some contraction in the 1988/90 year. However The D&L contraction seems far too strong, and again the profiles in the stock cycle are quite different.

In summary, the D&L series is much more volatile than the other two series – probably misleadingly so. The very early difficulties appear to reflect the problems D&L have with their GFCF deflator. Over the entire period the inventory cycle seems to be problematic. In no case does the D&L series appear to tell a better story of the period than the more officially based data. 32

Conclusion
The detailed conclusion is in the executive summary. In summary:

The ultimate test is that having spent a number of weeks investigating the series, would I use the D&L series for any investigation of the long term behaviour of the New Zealand economy? My short answer is no. There are better series in existence or easily constructible. I would use the consumption components of the D&L series, since they are based on official data, and I perhaps would use the D&L series as a cross check on any preferred series I was constructing or using, but with those exceptions I would be reluctant to place any great weight on the D&L series.

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Bibliography
Diewert, E. & D. Lawrence (1994) The Marginal Costs of Taxation in New Zealand, Swan Consultants, Canberra (prepared for the New Zealand Business Roundtable). a.k.a. D&L94.
Diewart, E. & D. Lawrence (1998) The Effects of Capital Taxation in New Zealand, Tasman Asia Pty Ltd, Canberra (prepared for the Institute of Policy Studies). a.k.a. D&L98.
Diewart, E. & D. Lawrence (1999) Measuring New Zealand’s Productivity, Diewart Enterprises Ltd (prepared for Department of Labour, Reserve Bank of New Zealand, and The Treasury). a.k.a. D&L99.
Easton, B.H. (1997) In Stormy Seas: The Post-War New Zealand Economy, Otago University Press, Dunedin.
Easton, B.H. (1999) Commentary on “Measuring New Zealand’s Productivity” paper for Seminar on New Zealand Productivity, March 25, 1999, Economic And Social Trust on New Zealand paper 99.9, Wellington.
Philpott, B.P. (1999) Deficiencies in Diewart-Lawrence Capital Stock Estimates, RPEP Paper 294.
Statistics New Zealand (1999) Chain Volume Measures in the New Zealand National Accounts, Wellington. (This is the latest relevant publication. Various other SNZ sources were used to supplement it.)

Endnotes
1. Letter from S. Chapple, 9 April 1999.
2. Philpott (1999) has evaluated some aspects of the D&L capital series.
3. There is a very small divergence arising from the base shares differing, insofar as the taxes and subsidies are in different proportions on different components. this rarely affects aggregate indexes calculated by the overall results by a significant amount.
4. See D&L98 which, however, includes the mysterious statement “[r]ecently there has been a move to present New Zealand data more consistently (sic) on a June year basis.” (p.71)
5. This is the expenditure side estimate.
6. D&L do not actually give their GDP figure. This is calculated by adding together their figures for the components of consumption (including intermediate government consumption), stock changes, investment goods, exports less imports.
7. There is a slight double counting since taxes and subsidies are attributed to stock change.
8. The SNZ series grow on average 9.8 and 10.0 percent p.a. respectively, while the D&L99 series grow 10.1 and 10.2 percent p.a. This small difference on a year to year basis amounts to up to 8.5 percentage points over the 27 years. Even such a small difference can matter on an annual basis when productivity comparisons are being made.
9. There are a number of detailed options in the application of this approach, which are unlikely to affect the outcomes markedly and are not pursued here.
10. There are three more than D&L98 because of government investment, and other exports and imports being split into services and other goods.
11. The source for this and other data is Statistics New Zealand (1998), which is a chain volume implicit price index.
12. I did not compare with the SNZ deflators for they are for goods only and do not include services.
13. An issue which needs to be worked through is the impact of GST which was imposed on GFCF and imports (which are usually measured at the border exclusive of the GST they incur). I propose to check how SNZ dealt with this when I next talk to them. D&L make no mention of the issue.Endnote 2 may be relevant here.
14. Planes carry three compasses, because when there are only two, one cannot tell which is wrong.
15. Des O’Dea is another who promptly comes to mind.
16. On the incomes side, the IVA is deducted from operating surplus.
17. If the base period is 1, the base price is not P1 in this definition, because that is the price at the end of (not during) the period. A better estimate is usually (P0 + P1)/2, the average of the prices at the beginning and the end of the period.
18. Suppose there were just two stocks, where the nominal increase in the first was $100m and the nominal decrease in the second was $99m, so that the net nominal increase was $1m. Suppose the relevant price deflator for the first stock was 1.02 and for the second was 1.00. In this case the real increase would be 100/1.02 -99/1.00, or -$1m. So the implicit price deflator would appear to be -1.00! This phenomenon occurs in practice, and is one of the reasons that SNZ does not publish an implicit stock change deflator.
19. In fact the data goes back to 1961/2. It is provided as real stock levels, the difference being the real stock change. Note the series, which is primarily used for modelling, does not pretend to be comprehensive.
20. The inventory stock series are described as “March Year”. I have assumed that they are March ended. (D&L94, Tables A.14-17).
21. Given the inherent problems in all stock change series, I may well have been adding noise to the data.
22. The export and import service volume series could be improved with further work. For instance were I constructing my best possible market GDP on the expenditure side I would consider using the D&L service volume series before 1982/3.
23. A comparison of the volume imports goods and volume import services series for the 1982/3 to 1997/8 period showed a reasonably consistent pattern of decline in the proportion (so import services appeared to be growing at .9 percentage points p.a. less than import goods).
24. Because they could be improved, I have not provided a table of the individual components. They are available from the author.
25. I express some satisfaction that the expenditure side series trend a little higher, say .2 percentage points p.a., than the production side series. I argued this was true in Easton (1997) because the expenditure side deflators are likely to better adjust for quality. The observed difference here is of a similar order of magnitude.
25. The critical value for a correlation coefficient at 25 degrees of freedom is .381 at a 5 percent level of significance, and .597 at a 0.1 percent level of significance.
26. The critical value for a correlation coefficient at 14 degrees of freedom is .497 at a 5 percent level of significance, and .623 at a 1 percent level of significance.
27. The critical value for a correlation coefficient at 10 degrees of freedom is .576 at a 5 percent level of significance, and .708 at a 1 percent level of significance.
28. For instance, improving the external services components, and it should be possible to get reasonable estimates of volume stock changes back to 1977/8.
29. I tried a number of ingenious ways, but the underlying problem of the lack of a sensible aggregate deflator series, plus the lack of detail in the data, defeated me.
30. See Section 4 for further discussion on the gross capital formation deflator.
31. One of the Department of Labour commentators provided a very detailed comparison with the QSBO data. It concludes that “examination of the QSBO data does not seem to shake the soundness of the conclusions” drawn here. A copy of this note is available from the author.

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Electric Rhetoric: Sneering Instead Of Thinking

Listener 17 July 1999

Keywords: Business & Finance; Regulation & Taxation;

Concerned with what he thought was the excessive influence of women in New Zealand poetry, Rex Fairburn, writing to Denis Glover in 1934, described them as the “menstrual school.” It was a silly gibe – an adolescent using words not then mentioned in polite company. The rhetoric was unforgivable, if far too typical of the New Zealand vice of pigeon-holing one’s opponents with a superficial personalised witticism, rather than cogently facing the issue being debated. That is exactly what a recent editorial of The Dominion did when it accused minister of energy, Max Bradford, of a “Return to Muldoonism”.

For those who came in late – most of us – the electricity distribution reforms began about a decade ago. First, the publicly owned local supply companies were corporatised, followed by mergers and widespread privatisation, often to foreign owners. The government reduced its involvement in the electricity supply by selling off some of its generating capacity and splitting Electricorp into two, saying it would not sell off the smaller Contact. Later it split the residual Electricorp into three, saying it has no plans to sell them, and privatised Contact instead.

Meanwhile, for the story is a messy one, the government at last noticed that owners of the lines to most homes and businesses had a natural monopoly which could be used to give a competitive advantage in the supply of energy. Legislation was passed which restricted the companies to either lines or energy. The line companies remained a monopoly, so Bradford has legislation before parliament which would give the Commerce Commission the ability to control the line companies’ prices. In particular the Commission is likely to impose a “CPI-X” regime, in which prices are permitted to increase in line with inflation less an amount of X, forcing the line companies to seek productivity improvements of at least that rate. It may be a form of price control, but it is not the old “cost-plus” formula.

I have left out complications out (such as an oversight in the treatment of home electricity meters), for there is a more salutary lesson. Suppose a decade ago, Bradford, knowing what he knows now, had embarked upon the reforms. He may well have chosen the same final destination, but he would certainly have taken a different path from his predecessors. Even at the time, the reforms seemed driven more by ideology than by an understanding of how markets really work. Ministers before Bradford, then a backbencher, blitzkrieged the changes through parliament and ended up with the shambles that Bradford has been trying to clear up. (The perpetrators of the faulty path were his own government, so Shipley’s new-look ministers cannot blame the old-look ones for their messes. No wonder any eight year old government looks exhausted.)

Into this complexity strode The Dominion, strong on the ideology which got the distribution industry into a mess, but weak on economics. (The editorial does not even mention “natural monopoly” or related concepts such as “common carrier”.) It thundered “Muldoonism”, its bombast missing the real issues.

Rhetoric such as Fairburn’s tore Robin Hyde between her solidarity with the other women poets, and the insistent demands of her muse. Perhaps a less divisive and more supportive environment might have prevented her untimely death by suicide (in 1939 when she was 33). Her just published long (and long lost) prose poem, The Book of Nadath, demonstrates what an extraordinarily innovative and (yes) great poet she was. Had she survived, she might have modified the course of New Zealand literature. But the New Zealand practice of adolescent abuse instead of analysis did not encourage her talent.

Max Bradford is not a Muldoonist. Anyone who has followed his career, and his generation, knows that is an inane claim. It is all the more mindless when it is realised that “CPI-X” regulation of natural monopolies is considered internationally the state of the art, used widely overseas, and was first used systematically in Britain in the 1980s. If The Dominion were consistent it would apply the term “Muldoonism” to Margaret Thatcher.

Note: The family of Rex Fairburn wrote in a letter in The Listener (14 August, 199) that they thought I had been unfair to the poet.

Rethinking Economic Policy: The Washington Consensus Turns to Custard

Listener 3 July, 1999.

Keywords: Growth & Innovation;

Half a decade ago, capitalism appeared to have triumphed over communism (if one is allowed the crudity of these descriptors). When the Berlin Wall fell in 1989, the Eastern European nations of the COMECON pact left the Soviet fold, looking to the West as they transformed their economies and ways of political life. The rest of the Russian Empire broke up in 1993, and they went west too. No longer is a “spectre … haunting Europe – the spectre of communism” (as Karl Marx wrote in 1848).

The path these transition economies took is popularly captured by what is known as the “Washington Consensus”, although some countries were less enthusiastic than others. The city of Washington is the home of the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, and the US Treasury, although the articulation of the ten key notions occurred at a think-tank conference held in that city in 1990. They are summarised as
– fiscal discipline;
– public expenditure priorities in health and education;
– tax reforms;
– positive but moderate market determined interest rates;
– competitive exchange rate;
– liberal trade policies;
– openness to foreign direct investment;
– privatisation;
– deregulation;
– protection of private property right.

Broadly they represent the direction of New Zealand economic policy in the last 15 years (although we often took a more extreme stance). The policies were not only seized upon by the transition economies, but also by the Western and Asian capitalists, enthusiastically greedy for the profitable opportunities they offered.

The transitions were always going to be difficult, but there was an alternative to the Washington Consensus, which has led to a far more successful economic performance. If Marx’s spectre no longer haunts Europe, China has continued along its own distinctive cautious liberalisation towards a more market, more capitalist economy (with continued political control). While the Russian Gross Domestic Product has fallen by about half since 1989, the Chinese GDP has more than doubled. By being more selective in its response to liberalisation than the Russians, the Chinese economy seems to be succeeding.

So the Washington Consensus is crumbling, if not already turning to custard. Leading the charge has been the World Bank, with the Fund and the US Treasury more reluctantly following. The chief critic is Joe Stiglitz, senior vice-president and chief economist of the Bank, a fine economist whose theoretical contributions are likely to receive a “Nobel Prize” in economics (deservedly, unlike some others so awarded). His criticism is summarised by “the failures of the reforms … go far deeper – to a misunderstanding of the very foundations of a market economy, as well as a failure to grasp the fundamentals of the reform processes. … at least part of the problem was an excessive reliance on textbook models of economics.” Later he says “the Washington Consensus doctrines of transition failed in their understandings of the core elements of a market economy”. At the heart of Stiglitz’s critique is that there has been the neglect of the social institutions which underpin an economy. Of the ten key policies, only the one about property rights mentions them.

In his paper to the Bank’s annual conference on development economics in April, Stiglitz is scathing about the “shock therapy” approach (he also calls it “blitzkrieg”) to the reforms. He argues for “continuous change – trying to preserve social capital that cannot be easily reconstructed.” Attitudes towards the recent reforms, he says, were like those of the bolsheviks (yes, he acknowledges the irony) who were intent on destroying the social institutions of the Russia they took over in 1918. But the Chinese seem to have learned from the failures of the Great Leap Forward and the Cultural Revolution. “They chose the path of incrementalism (`crossing the river by groping for the stones at one at a time’) and non-ideological pragmatism (`the question is not whether the cat is black or white, but whether or not it catches the mice’). They had the wisdom to `know they didn’t know what they were doing’ so they didn’t jump of the cliff after being assured by experts that they would be jumping over the chasm in just one more great leap forward.”

While Stiglitz seems unaware of the New Zealand experience (he visited here in 1968), the relevance of his analysis to the New Zealand experience is extraordinary. My book, The Commercialisation of New Zealand, argues along very similar lines, and its successor, The Whimpering of the State: Policy after MMP, due out this month, provides much detail about the way that social institutions have been damaged by our reforms.

Stiglitz, and his associates, are not arguing for an anti-market stance. His theoretical works (and textbook) show a tremendous respect for (and insight to) the power of the market system, and he would certainly support an open economy based on private property. But his account also recognizes the importance of society, with the government playing a positive role. His paper ends with “The [transition] countries – and their advisors – will have learned from the many bitter and disappointing failures – and the few successes – of the past decade.” Thoughtful New Zealanders will say “Amen”.

Institutional Economics

Extract from The Whimpering of the State. p.123-124.

Keynotes: History of Ideas, Methodology & Philosophy;

In 1931, at the age of 24 [Sutch] went to the Department of Economics at Columbia, at the time the most important in the United States, where it taught the dominant economic paradigm of the times ‘institutionalism’.(1) The neoclassical synthesis (often abbreviated to ‘neoclassical’) a combination of the macroeconomics that Keynes pioneered and the modern theory of markets (including a welfare economics which emphasises their beneficial outcomes), strongly laced with mathematical techniques only becomes important after the Second World War. Institutionalists trace their origin to Thorstein Veblin. Among the best-known are Gunnar Myrdal and John Kenneth Galbraith and Maurice Clarke, who lead inter-war Columbian economics.

Yuval Yonay summarises ‘the trademarks of institutionalism [are] empirical research, suspicion towards deductive theory, emphasis on the changing nature of economic institutions, habits, and norms, special attention to the divergence of market values (prices) from social values, and the belief in the reality of informed concerted action to improve human welfare.’(2) The (largely valid) implication of this definition is that the neoclassical economics which followed it is less empirical and more deductive. It tends to assume that institutions, habits and norms are irrelevant (but often the implicit assumption is the norms of an idealised white middle class US males). It thinks market prices normally match social prices, and while collective actions rarely improve human welfare, but individual ones usually do.

Readers may be a little dismayed to see such disagreement between the two economic paradigms, and may not even be reassured by Paul Samuelson, the key neoclassical innovator and doyen of MIT economics which replaced Columbia’s supremacy after the war, who said in 1999 ‘I do not come today to bury institutionalism nor to dispraise it. I believe it lives on as a lively element inside today’s mainstream economics, … American institutional economics [is] a force that will endure and flower in the next century to come.’(3) The eclectic economist has a toolkit, in which both institutionalist and neoclassical paradigms (and others) reside. Faced with a particular problem, the economist uses the tool (or tools) which best tackles the job.

American institutionalism was greatly influenced by nineteenth century German philosophy, as was Marxism. Both thought planning was an important part of economic policy, but for different reasons.

Endnotes
1. The next few paragraphs are informed by Y.Younay, The Struggle over the Soul of Economics: Institutionalist and Neoclassical Economics Between the Wars, Princeton.
2. Op. cit., p.52.
3. P.A. Samueslon, ‘The Golden Virtue of Eclecticism Economics’, The American Economist, Vol.44, No. 1 (Spring 2000), p.4.

The Politics Of Retirement Incomes

Chapter 5 of The Whimpering of the State: Politics After MMP. Does not contain diagrams or endtnotes.

Keywords: Social Policy;

It was not macroeconomic policy that proved politically disastrous for Winston Peters. NZF’s economic policy unravelled over retirement policy.

Retirement provision is not actually about transferring resources (or income) through time – from when a person works to when a person is retired. It is about the allocation of production at a point in time. An economy has a certain amount of goods and services available for consumption. Some is consumed by its workers and their children, and some is consumed by the retired. The more the retired consume (be it by their having higher relative incomes or a bigger relative share of the population), the less for workers and their children. Whether the elderly obtain the means to finance their consumption by a public transfer funded by tax, or by a private transfer funded by the return on capital, the material standard of living of the younger generation still suffers. If all the elderly were to die one night, the remaining population would be materially – but not necessarily spiritually – better off. They would pay less tax since New Zealand Superannuation would not have to be funded, and they would inherit the private savings of the elderly, and receive the unearned income. On the other hand, were the labour force to disappear, the elderly would be worse off.

But while retirement provision is not about transferring real income through time, it is about transferring social obligations between generations, which makes it a very political issue.

Tiers and piers

New Zealand has generally had a tier approach to retirement provision, the expression arising because the components are layered as shown in Figure 5.1.

[Figure 5.1 omitted. Basically it shows three layers on top of one another – the three tiers below]

First tier (state) provision is a flat-rate payment by the state out of general taxation. Since 1993 this has been known as ‘New Zealand Superannuation’ (NZS). (Previously it was called ‘National Superannuation’. Before 1976 it was a combination of the Age Benefit, introduced as the Aged Pension in 1898, and Universal Superannuation, introduced in 1938.) [1] If the first tier is taxed, then everyone in the eligible age category will receive some additional income, with those on higher other incomes (and hence paying higher marginal income tax rates) receiving less than those on lower incomes. If the first tier is abated, then there will be some who will be eligible in principle, but will receive no additional income because their high other income will mean that the entirety of the tier is abated to zero. From 1984 to 1997 National Superannuation was abated by a politically contentious ‘superannuation surcharge’.

Second tier (occupational) provision involves workers making earnings-related payments (often deducted directly from their pay and often with an employer contribution), which are invested into a fund which pays an actuarially based annuity on retirement. (Typically any second-tier income is taxed as ordinary income, and so is never fully abated out.) The schemes may either be compulsory, as the result of state legislation, or voluntary by individual choice (or as a part of employment conditions). Because the contributions are earnings-related, the pension will also be earnings-related, and so the retirement benefits will be higher for well-paid contributors than for poorly paid ones or those without work.

Third tier (private) provision covers a miscellany of savings activities including house purchase, life assurance, and investment in financial instruments such as bonds and equities. There may be government support and subsidies for all or some of these activities.

Many retirees – typically most women and many low-paid men – do not have a substantial enough work and income record to have contributed to second and third tier schemes enough for an adequate retirement income. This means that any comprehensive system has to have some first-level provision, even though it may be a primitive one.

An alternative is a pier system (Figure 5.2).

[Figure 5.2 omitted. Basically it shows two legs (piers) holding up a the third layer,. Like a table.]

One pier is typically a state-provided one, not unlike the first tier of the New Zealand system, but of a minimalist nature. The second pier is a compulsory contributory occupational scheme (not unlike the second tier). In principle, a person is only eligible for one of the two piers, but since many workers end up with an inadequate second-pier provision, they usually get some state first-pier supplement (which typically involves very high abatement rates). One might think of such people as falling between the two piers. A third tier of private provision remains on top of the two piers.

A brief history of recent public policy on retirement provision[2]

Royal Commission on Social Security (RCSS)
* The 1972 Royal Commission on Social Security recommended a two-part first tier, similar to the existing arrangements, simplified to
Either: From age 60: An abated first tier (called the ‘Aged Benefit’), advantageous to those on low market incomes.
Or: From age 65: A taxed first tier (called ‘Universal Superannuation’) of benefit to the rest.

Individuals could make their own second-tier and third-tier provisions (house ownership being very important for the latter). There were some tax subsidies on savings. [3]

The Third Labour Government (New Zealand Superannuation 1974)
* From age 60 to 65: An abated first tier, for those on low market incomes.
From age 65: A first tier, and a compulsory second tier (both taxed).

When in opposition in the late 1960s, the Labour Party had looked at the European retirement provision schemes of the two-pier type. A major consideration was the substantial investment funds that would be invested in New Zealand. Once in office, the Third Labour Government initially wanted to abandon the existing first tier (of the RCSS scheme above), but following official advice its scheme was changed to a second compulsory tier called the ‘New Zealand Superannuation Scheme’, which was on top of the first-tier universal superannuation from age 65.[4] The officials had probably calculated that the required contributions for Labour’s original scheme would be too high, while the transition problems between the existing and proposed schemes would be complicated. They also probably recognised the likelihood that at some stage the government would find itself supplementing the private contributions when the return on the investment of the funds was lower than promised.

National Superannuation
* A taxed first tier (i.e. universal) from age 60.

In 1976 the Muldoon government replaced the Third Labour Government’s scheme with ‘National Superannuation’, which (ironically) had been the scheme promised by Labour in 1935, but found to be too expensive. Note that it is, in effect, the second part of the RCSS scheme except that it commenced at 60 rather than 65, and had to be at a higher level in order to be beneficial to those already receiving the abated first tier.[5] The assumption remained that individuals would voluntarily pursue second-tier and third-tier provision, with the tax exemptions on savings remaining but diminishing in real value because of inflation. (The exemptions were revoked in 1988.)

The Fourth Labour Government introduced an income-tax-based abatement, called the ‘superannuation surcharge’ in 1985. (National tightened it in 1992.) On each occasion, there was much genuine political outrage, for when in opposition each party had promised not to impose a surcharge. In government each broke their promise, claiming fiscal necessity.

The Accord: New Zealand Superannuation (1990s)
* A first-tier provision with age eligibility raised progressively to 65 by 2001, abated with a superannuation surcharge.[6] The married couple rate was set at between 65 and 72.5 percent of average wage (all measured net). Within this range, the rate would be increased by the consumer price index annually. Those below the age of eligibility were still entitled to an unemployment, sickness, or invalid benefit, and there was also transitional retirement benefit.

In 1993, all parliamentary parties except NZF agreed to the ‘Superannuation Accord’, renaming the state support NZS.[7] Again the arrangement had parallels with the RCSS proposal, but the over-65 arrangements were better integrated with lower effective tax rates, although the scheme was more costly.

The Accord did not endure past the 1996 election campaign, for Labour – but not National – announced they no longer supported the superannuation surcharge. It was abolished by the NZF/National government as a consequence of the coalition agreement. (NZF had never agreed to the surcharge, and had stayed outside the Accord.)

The Act Scheme: Commercialisation by Two Piers
* The proposal is for a compulsory occupational scheme, with an opt-out once an individual’s fund reached a level that would generate a particular annuity. There would be a minimalist abated first-tier scheme for those who did not generate sufficient contributions to reach the annuity.
The Act proposal came from the radically different two-pier tradition. In some ways it was a return to the pre-1973 Labour scheme, resurrected by Roger Douglas, who had been a major supporter of it. The proposal became the basis of Act policy. But Act found its compulsion unsatisfactory, and modified it so that an individual only had to contribute up to the point where the individual’s fund could pay an annuity equal to the current level of NZS, at which point the individual could opt out. Given that individuals would be closely involved in managing their own funds, and that the funds would have a private corporate management, the Act proposal amounted to a substantial government withdrawal from involvement in retirement provision, a commercialisation of state superannuation.

In order to make the Act scheme appear attractive, it was presented as a benefit-determined scheme (where the retirement income is set independently of the contribution – if any), even though it was designed as a contribution-determined scheme (that is, one where the retirement income is determined by the contribution plus returns on investments, annuitised over the expected life of the retiree). First-tier provision is necessarily benefit-determined, for there is no personal contribution, and the state promises a particular level of income. Third-tier provision is necessarily contribution-determined, since the contributions plus the return on investment determine the eventual income to the retiree. In principle, second-tier provision is contribution-determined, but it is often misleadingly presented as benefit-determined – that is, contributors are assured that if they join this scheme they will receive a particular income (benefit) level at retirement. It is possible to make a second-tier scheme benefit-determined, but that requires a guarantee from an external agency – typically, the government [8] – since no market investment can ensure the return to give the required benefit level. [9]

To make the scheme appear even more attractive, the advocates project exceptionally high returns on the funds (without mentioning that workers would have to pay higher interest on their house mortgages). They use the average adult wage as the benchmark, although almost three quarters of working-age adults have an income less than the average wage. [10] Thus many people would still need first-pier state support, so that it is a two-pier scheme. Fully implemented, the scheme would favour the rich (Act’s main constituency) by lowering their taxes (since the first pier would cost less than a first tier), while the poor and middle-income groups would be worse off.[11]

The New Zealand First schemes

NZF’s proposal for retirement came from two different sources. One was Winston Peters’ promise to repeal the superannuation surcharge, imposed in 1985 and increased in 1991. Second, NZF’s economic nationalism included concerns with the purchase and increasing ownership of New Zealand productive assets by foreigners. To restrain or reverse this, it was necessary to increase domestic savings.

Initially the party considered a compulsory contributory earnings-related provision not unlike the pre-1973 election Labour scheme. However the proposal proved unattractive, for the same reasons that the Labour scheme was abandoned: it required high rates of returns, did not give a guaranteed minimum, and the transition problems were horrendous. So while in opposition, NZF shifted support to a scheme similar to the 1974 Third Labour Government’s scheme, in which there would be a universal first-tier scheme on top of which there would a second tier of a compulsory contributory earnings-related scheme (both being taxed but not abated). Anybody familiar with this NZF two-tier scheme would be well aware that it was deliberately designed to be very different from the Act two-pier proposal.

Peters stated that he saw this scheme as a defining characteristic of the party. During coalition negotiations both National and Labour separately agreed that a contributory retirement scheme would be put to a referendum in 1997. However, the ‘Retirement Superannuation Scheme’ (RSS) announced for the referendum was not the NZF proposal but the Act one. Of course it had greater detail than Act had proposed, but basically it was a two-pier scheme in which individuals could opt out of the contributory scheme once their fund achieved the target annuity. How did this come about?

I have read the officials’ papers that went to the Treasurer. They do not distinguish the various alternatives – say, between piers and tiers – and the reader of the official papers could well have been confused by the presentation. One is left with the impression that the designers had their own vision for retirement provision. One might understand how the right wing in the National–NZF cabinet might have been attracted to the Act-type scheme, but it is a puzzle why Peters dumped the NZF scheme in favour of the Act one. Given a common policy framework of commercialisation, it is conceivable that the Treasury had a parallel proposal to the Act one at the time of the 1996 election. Moreover, the RSS scheme was consistent with the general Treasury approach to reduce taxation and reduce its (i.e. the government’s) exposure to future risk. The RSS scheme shifts responsibility for retirement provision from the state (via NZS) to individuals (via their compulsory contributions). Given that the transfers involved in NZS are large (about 8 percent of GDP), the Treasury might be expected to find attractive a proposal to shift to a scheme in which it had less involvement. However, I am informed that the Treasury preference was quite different. The origins of the RSS are a mystery.

The RSS referendum and its political consequences

Attractive though the scheme was to the commercialisers, it was unattractive to the public – exceptionally unattractive. In summary, the RSS scheme meant that over half of the population (including most women) would not be beneficiaries, since their second-pier lifetime contribution would be insufficient to provide the target annuity (equal to the current NZS level). They would get a top-up from the government to give them the target annuity, so that their lifetime contributions would be of no value whatsoever, because irrespective of how much they contributed they would get the same retirement income. Moreover, the paid superannuation was to increase with prices but not with wages. Historically wages have grown at about 1.5 percent p.a. faster than prices, and so as people aged their relative income would fall under the RSS. Only the very wealthy would benefit from the scheme, because of the lower taxes. On average individuals would pay higher taxes (including their contribution to the fund) up to the year 2030.[12]

After a lacklustre campaign, for the outcome was seen to be a foregone conclusion, the referendum was lost by 91.8 percent to 8.2 percent, on an 80.3 percent turnout. It was a devastating defeat of the Act scheme, although it was NZF, rather than Act, which suffered the ignominy. The distinct economic policy component that NZF appeared to offer had been decisively rejected. What positive and progressive policies did NZF now stand for? It was left as a party of grievances in opposition, which might – or might not – remedy them in government. Arguably the RSS referendum was the point where NZF lost any chance to offer a distinctive economic alternative to National. In the rest of its short future in government, it was consigned to representing the centre flank of the National-led coalition.

The referendum failure also led to the demise of NZF in government. Cabinet ministers were allowed to express personal views on the referendum. Jenny Shipley publicly rejected the proposal, giving herself a public launch pad for the strategy which eventually toppled prime minister Jim Bolger, who had supported the RSS. Shipley then used her premiership to out-manoeuvre Peters politically, leading to the end of the coalition government in July 1998.

And yet retirement provision was to damage Shipley politically. In October 1998 her government announced and legislated that the married couple rate would be allowed to go below the 65 percent of the net average wage – the agreed floor of the 1993 Accord. The new floor was to be 60 percent, and there were hints that it would eventually be lowered to 55 percent. The government argued that it was continuing to increase the benefit in line with inflation, as had been occurring since 1991, so NZS’s real value was not diminished (but its level relative to other incomes would be). It claimed that no one would be worse off, but that it would save $2.5 billion over ten years, an achievement greater than the miracle of the loaves and the fishes. The public saw this as a betrayal and, to compound the irony of ironies, the fortunes of NZF lifted.

The rejection of the Act scheme by referendum was evidence of the strength of MMP. Arguably, had National been returned with a majority WTA government, the RSS scheme would have been proposed, accepted, and blitzkrieged into implementation. The referendum process prevented any blitzkrieg. The referendum outcome was a triumph for MMP.

The future of retirement provision: an accord?

The commitment to a universal first-tier retirement provision appears to be a fundamental part of the culture of New Zealanders. First discussed in the nineteenth century, and implemented from 1938 by stages, it has become such an integral part of their vision of themselves and of their governance that it could not be abolished. Even tampering with it can be unpopular, as the Third Labour Government found in 1975.

The failure of the RSS referendum, plus the break-up of the 1993 Accord, put retirement policy into a limbo. The policy instability meant that there was an uncertainty as to whether the existing provisions would continue long enough to enable people to plan with any confidence. A popular demand – arising from that fundamental culture – is for a new accord, but an old-style accord probably cannot be reconstituted. It was created under an FR/WTA parliament, when only the two main parties mattered. Parties seeking votes are analogous to firms seeking market shares. Under FR/WTA, there are really only two firms in the market, since any other entrant is unlikely to win sufficient seats to be an effective part of government. It is in the interests of oligopolists to reach agreement on the conditions of sale of any particular product they are both providing (especially where the cost, as in the case of retirement provision, is very high, without a great return – vote winning is a zero sum game; for every vote or seat one party wins, another loses it). Thus the Accord was a means whereby Labour and National could limit fiscally expensive competition over retirement policy. Not surprisingly, the Accord broke up as soon as MMP loomed. Smaller parties had an opportunity of winning sufficient seats to have a chance of influencing government.

In principle, any party which creates a policy attractive to five percent of the population (to get across the party-list threshold) will have that chance. The elderly are a rising 12 percent of the voting population. However, while there is a tendency to treat the elderly as homogeneous, they have diverse interests, so that subgroups may be targeted. For instance, the removal of the surcharge was beneficial only to the top third of the elderly, at a fiscal cost of around $2.5 billion over ten years.[13] Shortly after having eliminated the surcharge, the government changed the rule for calculating the benefit level, with a net fiscal gain of around $2.5 billion over ten years. In effect, the income of the bottom two-thirds was being lowered, to increase the incomes of the top third.[14]

In the long run, political parties will cease seeking support from all the elderly, because it is too costly – in any case, no single party is going to win them all – and instead will target segments which are compatible with the overall party philosophy. Because of the competitive process, there cannot be an old-fashioned accord – that is, a comprehensive agreement on retirement policy agreed by all the significant parties – for it will always be in the interests of at least one party to break away and offer another deal to attract a greater share of elderly (or other) voters.

Instead, a more flexible version is likely to evolve. The signatory parties might agree as follows:
* there should be a first-tier government-provided universal retirement benefit called ‘New Zealand Superannuation’;
* there would be an age of eligibility;
* the benefit would be treated as taxable income;
* the rate of NZS would be set according to a formula based on price and wage indexation;[15]
* the rates for couples and singles would differ according to a fixed formula;
* those below the age of eligibility would be entitled to an abated benefit if their circumstances warranted it;
* second-tier provision would be either voluntary or compulsory;
* there would or would not be specific subsidies (or exemptions) for second-tier and third-tier provision.

Each signatory party would attach a schedule which would describe how it would meet the optional provisions. The advantage of such an accord would be that it provides a framework for agreement and disagreement. By setting down a set of key parameters, it makes clear and easily comparable what each signatory party stood for. It seems likely that at least one significant party would not be a signatory, since judging by the referendum result there appears to exist a group of between 5 and 10 percent of the population who do not favour tier provision, but prefer an RSS/Act pier-type scheme. Conversely, such an accord can exist because 90-odd percent of the population support its structure, even though they may not agree on the details.

But is such a scheme, or indeed any retirement scheme, sustainable, especially as the porportion of the elderly in the population increases? The crucial issue is the share of the available consumption which goes to the elderly. When there are proportionally more of them, their share goes up, unless their relative standard of living falls. There is a case for trimming the cost of NZS, which means – even if the politicians won’t say so – reducing the share of available consumption of some of the elderly. There are three broad options.

First, the level of benefit could be cut relative to other incomes (as occurred in the October 1998 change which reduced the floor of the benefit relative to the average wage).

Second, the age of eligibility could change. It is being phased up to 65. The long-term age could be raised further to, say, 67, on the basis that people in their sixties are fitter and have a longer life expectancy now than in the 1890s, when the age of 65 was first chosen. In effect, people would be expected to work longer into their sixties, and to provide some private retirement cover up to 67 if they choose to retire early. Any raising of the age of eligibility requires adequate warning, and there needs to be a scientific debate on the biological, social, and economic aspects of ageing in the 60–69 age group.

And third, some abatement (such as a superannuation surcharge) on the high-income elderly could be reintroduced. [16] This particular policy option will not go away, and it is sufficiently logical to lead to the question of how it may be imposed. To be sustainable, it has to be announced in an election before it is implemented (in contrast to the 1984 and 1991 impositions which were surprise reversals of election promises). The abatement on the rich elderly will probably be proposed by a party whose voters are at the lower end of the income spectrum, and who will offer some offset to the poor elderly. It cannot just be presented as a fiscal saving measure. One possibility would be to phase in the surcharge from 2001, the year after the age of eligibility reaches 65, but to impose it only for those in the age range of 65 to 74, so that a universal unabated benefit would be available for the oldest elderly.

Prospects for a compulsory second tier

The 1993 accord assumed that any second-tier provision would be voluntary. Is there a place for a compulsory second-tier scheme, on top of NZS (as proposed by the Third Labour Government and by NZF out of government)? Any early introduction seems unlikely given the rout of the – albeit radically different – RSS in the referendum. A possible path is through the incremental development of voluntary occupational schemes.

To make such schemes more attractive, there is a case for converting them to a type where contributions and fund earnings are tax-exempt, but annuities and other payments from the fund are taxed. This is known as EET, in contrast to the current TTE arrangement, where fund contributions and earnings are taxed and payments are exempt.[18] The current arrangement suits the Treasury, but the alternative is likely to be more acceptable to contributors since they do not trust the politicians not to change the rules and tax (or double-tax) their retirement incomes. The fiscal balance aspects could be largely covered by requiring these EET funds to hold 20 percent, say, of their assets in government securities (matching the contingent asset implicit in the EET system, and maintaining fiscal balance).

People do not behave with the rationalism of the economic theory on which commercialisation was based, especially over their savings. The standard economic theory of individual behaviour is contradicted by the evidence of irrationality (or ‘quasi-rationality’).[18] In practice, as has been attested by numerous studies, the major predictions of economic rationalism fail.[19]

Richard Thaler’s summary of observed human savings behaviour gives the following rules:
1 Live within your means. Do not borrow to increase consumption except during well-defined emergencies (such as unemployment).
2 During emergencies cut consumption as much as possible.
3 Keep a rainy day account equal to some fraction of income. Do not raid the account except in emergencies.
4 Save for retirement in ways that require little self-control.
5 Borrow only on the security of a real asset.

Each rule, widely practised and generally thought prudent, infringes the economic rationalists’ theory. The fourth point has significant implications for retirement policy. We are not very good at saving unless there is a contractual element. We save by paying off the house mortgage or contributing to an occupational pension or life-assurance scheme. Berating us, as economists and government officials are wont to do, will not markedly raise savings, unless it induces us to contract into a compulsory long-term savings scheme (even though the contracting may be voluntary). Despite our best intentions, putting a little something aside each week for our old age will not generally succeed in providing a decent retirement income, unless we are forced to do so. On current policies it would appear that many New Zealanders are going to have a miserable old age.

The behavioural logic suggests that there is some merit in a compulsory second-tier retirement provision. Such proposals outrage economic rationalists. They have imposed their ideology’s narrow conception of the human condition on the public. Those who do not share it should be punished with an impoverished old age. Despite their claims to be liberals, the economic rationalists are fascists about personal behaviour, demanding ‘behave according to our rules, or our policies will punish you.’

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The Whimpering Of the State: Policy After MMP


Auckland University Press, 1999. 269pp.

The policy process has changed dramatically following the introduction of MMP. Fascinated by the theatre of politics, we too easily ignore the major changes in policy approaches and outcomes. Today, without an assured parliamentary majority the government has to consult over its policies rather than impose them. Along with the increasing recognition that the policies of the past have failed, the policy blitzkrieg has almost ceased and commercialisation is being shelved.

The Whimpering of the State looks at the first three MMP years with the same lively, broad -ranging and informed approach as Easton’s successful The Commercialisation of New Zealand, which described the winner-takes-all regime before 1996. Again there are case studies: health, education, science, the arts, taxation. retirement policy, and infrastructure. Policy possibilities are explored. Yet, as the title of the book suggests, any releif from the ending of Rogernomics is offset be a realistic pessimism arising from a shrewd analysis of the continuing deficiencies in New Zealand’s political and social structure. Although written for the general public, this book will also be read by politicians, policy analysts and students, and will shape policy thinking in the MMP era. Publisher’s Blurb

CONTENTS

Introduction
Prologue

PART 1: THE POLITICS
1. Policy Under MMP
Cutting Off the King’s Head
2. Moving Towards MMP
3. The Loose Canon and the Tight Prior
4. The Economic Failure
In Stormy Seas
5. The Politics of Retirement Incomes
Different Strokes
Richard Thaler’s Savings Principles
Selfish Generations
6. Taxation (and Government Spending)
Government Spending and Growth Rates
7. The Public Service
Does Professionalism Matter? (NZIPA paper)
Does Professionalism Matter? (Listener Column)
Two Styles of Management
8. The Social Basis for an Economy
Nationbuilding and the Textured Society
9. The Commercialisation of Democracy
10. The Health Post-Election Briefings
The Hospital Balance Sheet Crisis

PART 2: CASE STUDIES
11. Health
The New Zealand Health Reforms in Context
The Seven Percent Solution

12. Core Education
Why Economists Dont Understand Education … but still try to run it
Education Factories
13. Tertiary Education
14. Science Policy
15. The Arts
16. The Ownership of Water
17. Roading
18. Telecommunications

PART 3: THE FUTURE
19. The Political Future
20. A New Microeconomic Paradigm
Metrology and the Economy
The Economic Context of the ministry of consumer affairs

Epilogue: Culture and Reform

Bibliography
Index

Two Styles Of Management

From The Whimpering of the State: Policy after MMP (Auckland University Press 1999) p.88-91.

Keywords: Governance; Health

Alan Schick argues that the central theme of the reforms was ‘influenced by two overlapping but distinctive sets of ideas, one derived from the vast literature on managerialism, the other from the frontiers of economics. Managerial reform is grounded on a simple principle: managers cannot be held responsible for results unless they have the freedom to act. The new institutional economics is grounded in a very old idea: people act in their own self-interest.’ In effect, Schick contrasted two approaches (or cultures) to public sector management. He only faintly praises accountability, but warmly describes responsibility as ‘a personal quality that comes from one’s professional ethic, a commitment to do one’s best, a sense of public service’.(1)

The diagram immediately below summarises Schick’s analysis into two columns. Unfortunately they wont fit in simply to the text format so I have put one above the other.

PUBLIC SECTOR MANAGEMENT THEORY
vs NEW INSTITUTIONAL ECONOMICS

MANAGERIALISM
vs CONTRACTUALISM

Managers cannot be held responsible for results unless they have the freedom to act.
vs People act in their own self-interest.

Personal responsibility
vz Accountability

A personal ethic, a commitment to do one’s best, a sense of public service.
vs An impersonal quality dependent on contractual duties and informational flows.
(↓)

Not-for-profit
vs For-profit

The left-hand column shows public sector management theory leading to managerialism, where managers are given the freedom to act and are held responsible for the results, and in which personal responsibility and a personal ethic are expected of them.

The right-hand column shows the new institutional economics leading to contractualism, where people act in their own self-interest and they are held accountable, an impersonal quality dependent on contractual duties and informational flows. It was the latter that was emphasised in the 1987 Treasury PEB, but ‘clearly different conclusions might be drawn if the brief argued on different premises’.

The 1987 Treasury Post -Election Briefing, Government Management, devoted a chapter to economic rationality, the foundation of the accountability approach.(2) It is not well explained. Over half way into the exposition we are told that full rationality meant that people ‘possessed perfect knowledge and always maximised their own interests’. The straw theory is dismissed with this:

More recent thinking has instead developed the concept of the ‘contractual person’ [who] . . . is said to have ‘bounded rationality’ and to be opportunistic. The concept of bounded rationality still implies that individuals make decisions which will promote their goals, but without perfect knowledge: rather it is assumed that knowledge will be possessed differently by different people and that we [sic] have limited capacity to absorb and analyse knowledge. The limitation on knowledge allows the possibility of opportunism which assumes individuals are ‘self-seeking, with guile’. Organisations therefore need to evolve which can as efficiently as possible provide incentives for self-seeking individuals so their efforts will coincide with the common good.(3)

The text goes on to discuss altruism, stating that ‘[i]n a world of saints there would be no need for social policy or governments’, which is nonsense, since there would still be the problem of social co-ordination. But even if this point were not silly, the issue is not a choice between perfect saints and unmitigated sinners. Everyone is a mixture of self-interest and altruistic behaviour. The task is to design social organisations which harness both.

Just as men create their gods in their own image, economists design organisations based on their theories. A focus on self-interest means that the emphasis is on the selfish side of the majority of humanity, and they design systems accordingly. But selfish behaviour may drive out altruistic behaviour. Richard Titmuss considered the best way of obtaining a good supply of quality blood for medical purposes at the least social cost. Economists might argue that commercial relations work best. However, Titmuss showed that voluntary donations of blood resulted in better quality and a cheaper supply. Moreover, if some blood supply becomes commercialised, with donors being paid, voluntary donors are discouraged, so that there is a deterioration in quality of supply and a rise in its cost.(4)

Similarly Schick was concerned with the tension between the two modes of public sector management, and the possibility that contractualism undermines public managerialism. It ‘may diminish public-regarding values and behaviour in government’, including values such as ‘the trust that comes from serving others, the sense of obligation that overrides personal interest, the professional commitment to do one’s best, the pride associated with working in an esteemed organisation, and the stake one acquires from making a career in the public service’. The accountability of contractualism sabotages the responsibility of managerialism.

Sadly, Schick’s fears seemed to have been confirmed at the Accident and Emergency Service at Christchurch Hospital in the mid 1990s, where inadequacies may have led to unnecessary deaths. There was conflict between the management style of the generic managers who ran the hospital and who were accountability (contractualist) orientated, and the values of the clinicians and nurses with their professional ethics based on personal responsibility. Indeed, it was the pride of the clinicians and nurses in their professional standards, which they felt were being compromised, which led them to raise issues in public. The subsequent Stent Report found their concerns largely justified.(5) This is not to argue that public servants are never self-interested or opportunistic. But their personal ethic is also an important component in their behaviour, as the hospital’s generic manager learned. Designing institutions in ways which ignore and undermine such behaviour leads to inferior organisation, poorer performance by those who work in them, and a reduction in the common good.

In truth, people do not behave in the rational way proposed by economic theory. This irrationality (or ‘quasi-rationality’) is nicely illustrated in Richard Thaler’s The Winner’s Curse, which describes thirteen general anomalies where the standard economic theory of individual behaviour is contradicted by the evidence. Together they present a serious challenge to the ‘economic rationalism’ which is used to justify so much of recent economic policy.(6) It is always possible to invent an ad hoc explanation for an anomaly: the economic rationalists do it all the time. Recall how a planet Vulcan was invented to explain why Mercury did not follow the orbit which Newton’s laws predicted. When nobody could find it, Vulcan was said to be hiding behind the sun. Anomalies kept appearing in pre-relativity physics. For each anomaly an ad hoc explanation was found, until Einstein explained how Newton’s theory could be improved. Of course it is always possible to reinterpret anybody’s behaviour as acting in their self-interest – even that of a Treasury saint. The theory would then have to argue that if people use heuristic rules to pursue their self-interest, their rules are not particularly optimal. Economists have put considerable effort into developing optimal strategies, but the rest of the human race may not have access to the intricacies of some of the mathematics and concepts. At the minimum, the evidence Thaler brings together shows that heuristic rules, even if driven entirely by self-interest, give very different behavioral outcomes from those used in the theories of economists, outcomes which are so different that the policies derived from the theories are sub-optimal.

Endnotes

1. A. Schick (1996) The Spirit of Reform: Managing the New Zealand State Sector in a Time of Change, State Services Commission, Wellington. I have tentatively added a bottom line which suggests that managerialism appears to have most relevance to not-for-profit institutions (such as the public service and voluntary agencies) while contractualism applies to for-profit ones. This implies the Treasury approach of emphasizing contractualism forced government agencies into an inappropriate commercial structures.

2. p.427-34.

3. op cit p. 431. It is unclear whether the last sentence means that organisations have a will of their own, or whether there is just another collapse in the grammar.

4. Titmus, R.M. (1970) The Gift Relationship; From Human Blood to Social Policy, Allen and Unwin, London.

5. Commissioner for Health and Disability (1998) Canterbury Health Ltd, Auckland.

6. Thaler, R.H. (1992) The Winner’s Curse: Paradoxes and Anomolies of Economic Life, Princeton University Press; Thaler, R.H. (1994) Quasi Rational Economics, Russell Sage Group, New York.

Subjects Health, Labour Studies; Public Administration

Taxation and Public Spending

Chapter 6 of The Whimpering of the State. This was published in 1999.

Keywords: Regulation & Taxation; Social Policy;

During the writing of the 1984 Post-Election Briefing, Economic Management, Treasury economists got into a fierce argument over the purpose of taxation. Eventually a senior official, well known for his native wit, stepped into the heated fray and imposed the following opening of the relevant section of the PEB.

“The purpose of any tax regime is to raise revenue. The level of revenue will itself be dictated by the level of government expenditure and the size of the budget deficit that the government is prepared to accept.”[1]

The briefing goes on to discuss how to design a tax regime, making the obvious point that not all taxes are equally effective. Alas, such common sense has not been so evident in the public debate on taxation in the 1990s. The focus has been on taxes, with nary a reference to the government spending it provides, even though – a theme of this book – New Zealanders have a high demand for public spending on retirement incomes, health, education, and a myriad of other activities. Perhaps because taxation is the downside of such spending, those with an agenda of reducing public spending want to emphasise only its disadvantages. This chapter cannot be so irresponsible.

The role of government spending

More than most modern societies, New Zealand society is the creation of the state, a perhaps inevitable consequence of its recent settlement. Public spending is one of the most powerful instruments which the state can use to create a civil society. Thus government spending has been an integral part of the New Zealand culture. Surveys show that New Zealanders support increased public spending, including that which does not directly benefit the respondents (as when the elderly urge more spending upon education), even if it means they pay higher taxation.[2] In doing so, they affirm an involvement in a community: they are not just self-interested (and self-centred) individuals.

Undoubtedly there are many instances of advocacy of government spending (or other interventions) that are self-interested but presented as in the public interest. Teachers promoting more public spending on education are likely to improve their working conditions and remuneration if their advocacy is successful. Even so, one reason the advocates may be teaching – and perhaps having to accept inferior working conditions to those they could expect elsewhere – is that they believe education is socially important, and they are willing to take a financial sacrifice to pursue wider community goals. A common deception used to protect the self-interest paradigm is to argue that all behaviour is necessarily self-interested. Thus it is said the Good Samaritan really acted in his own interests when he helped the assaulted Jewish traveller. This verbal sleight on the meaning of ‘self-interest’ obscures the central point of the parable, namely that the Samaritan did not know who he helped (indeed, he belonged to a different community). Clearly we want to distinguish such behaviour from other kinds of behaviour where one is concerned only with oneself. It may satisfy the selfish to argue that everyone else is as selfish as they claim to be themselves, but common sense tells us this is nonsense. Each of us is a mixture of the self-interested and the public-spirited. The commercialisers choose to recognise only the mean-spirited component – but to do so is to reject the relevance of community to the human condition.[3]

An additional complication is over-optimistic expectations. Advocates, committed to a policy for public-spirited or for self-interested reasons, will overestimate the benefits and underestimate the costs. Very often arguments will be seized upon to justify policies, even if they are wrong, irrelevant, or short-sighted. Thus the debate on government spending and taxation rarely has the cool rationality one might hope for.

A particular downside that is rarely mentioned by an advocate of public spending is that the additional taxation may result in costs on the economy. These are not just administrative costs, but include behavioural responses. Briefly, higher taxation may result in the taxed changing their behaviour in a way that is economically detrimental. Most commonly, they will reduce the activity which is taxed, to some degree. If that activity is labour, the economy may have less output; if it is consumption, total spending on the commodity may be below that which is valued by consumers.[4]

There is an understandable tendency to use a simplified tax-free economy as a reference point to examine the effects of taxation on spending. However, the reference point is but a benchmark, rather than an economy with ideal properties. Treating the tax-free economy as some paragon is about as sensible as treating a temperature of absolute zero as special. Indeed, the point of advocating government spending is that the output of a tax-free (and hence public-spending-free) economy is criticised as not the best available. Those who are pressing for (more) public spending on education, health, the arts, or whatever it may be, are arguing that the output of the tax-free economy is inferior to one in which this public spending occurs. If the public judges them correct, it is illogical to use the output of the tax-free economy as a measure to evaluate the effects of the taxation and public spending. GDP may not be the best measure of economic welfare. The public appears to value much government spending more than it is valued in GDP.

Unfortunately, this gives little guidance as to how much public spending there should be, or what it should be spent on. That, ultimately, is a political question: some politicians and parties may argue for reductions in spending, others may argue for more. In practice, there is a need to judge each spending proposal in terms of its social benefits (realistically, not optimistically) and any offsetting costs (including the behavioural impact of the additional taxation). Typically, the government’s chief economic adviser, the Treasury, faces enormous pressures for additional spending and for reducing taxation: among government advisers it faces such pressures alone.[5] A cabinet might be thought of as nineteen ministers (backed by their caucuses) who want to increase spending, and a lone Treasurer who is expected to fund the increases (usually without raising taxation). Hence the Treasury’s support for fiscal austerity, although it does not necessarily lead to the ideology of commercialisation adopted in the mid-1990s.[6]

From the introduction in 1988 of the Public Finance Act, and especially in the 1990s under the National Government, there has been a steady squeeze on public spending. Much of this book is about the consequences of that squeeze on the state and on society. However, in the mid 1990s the political-economic debate tended to focus on levels of taxation without reference to spending. The debate may well have happened anyway, but much was institutionalised via the Department of Inland Revenue (IRD). In order to restrain the rampant Treasury minister Ruth Richardson, the National Government attempted to build up the policy advice capacity of the IRD under its minister Wyatt Creech, who sometimes bitterly clashed with her.[7] However the IRD’s hurriedly created policy advice arm seems to have got out of control, in the sense that its resources far exceeded the quality of its work.

The taxation debate (Diewert & Lawrence)

But poor-quality research on the effects of taxation was not confined to the IRD. A Business-Roundtable commissioned report, if taken seriously, suggested that the taxation reforms of the 1980s had been disastrous. The study by two overseas consultants concluded that the last dollar (i.e. the marginal dollar) spent by government ‘means forgoing $1.18 of benefit that would otherwise accrue to taxpayers. If the dollar of government spending were worth a dollar to the taxpayer, the gain from reducing government spending would be 18 cents.’[8] While the report’s introduction described the loss as ‘high’, the 18 percent figure (if true) means that if government spending at the margin was valued by the public at about a fifth more than it was valued in GDP terms, the taxation was worthwhile. This interpretation was completely ignored, even though it may more accurately reflect New Zealanders’ desires than the views advanced by the Business Roundtable.

The tax regime mentioned above was that of 1990, but the consultants also calculated the figures for earlier years. Before the reforms of the 1980s, the deadweight loss was 5 to 7 percent. Thus it appears that the effect of the reforms was to more than double the costs to the economy of income tax. [9] Apparently the tax regime under Rob Muldoon was more than twice as efficient as that introduced by Roger Douglas, even though the regime in Muldoon’s time was widely criticised – even by the government-appointed 1982 McCaw Committee – for its arbitrary exemptions and its complexity. Most independent expert commentators commend the Douglas reforms for creating a simple broad-based income-tax regime which rationalised expenditure taxation. (Many criticise the Douglas reforms for favouring the rich against the poor. That is a different issue from the overall design of the tax system. Most of the features of the Douglas system could have been retained with a higher marginal tax rate on top incomes.)

But there is a gross flaw in the consultants’ report, invalidating these conclusions. To simplify a little, the deadweight losses from a tax on labour earnings arise from the behavioural response of choosing to work less because the after-tax return is lower than before-tax return. Workers stop working because the taxes on their extra earnings do not make it worthwhile to labour. Instead of earning, and adding to the production of the nation, they choose more leisure. To make their model work, the consultants had to decide how much additional leisure there was in the economy as a result of the tax changes. They seem to have attributed all the increase in unemployment in the 1980s to higher tax rates. The unemployment rate more than doubled between 1984, when Muldoon left office, and 1990. In effect, the consultants claimed that all the additional unemployment is voluntary. They assumed that if only taxes were lowered, the unemployed would stop their ‘leisure’ activities and take up work. However, most of New Zealand’s unemployed do not have that choice – they simply cannot find a job. Rather than being discouraged by high tax rates, they are involuntarily unemployed. Thus it is unlikely that the Douglas tax regime was twice as inefficient as Muldoon’s which preceded it. The later regime – distributional objectives aside – is almost certainly more efficient.

The taxation debate (Scully)[10]

The IRD-commissioned studies were even stranger.[11] It is said that the department spent over $2m on its various commissioned studies. There have not been the resources outside the IRD to evaluate all the studies. We look at only one (probably costing around $100,000), but if the most prominently quoted one is so flawed, despite the quality control the department claimed it had, we must have similar reservations about all the others – until they have been properly and independently evaluated.

US economist Gerald Scully estimated the (‘optimum’) level of taxation which would maximise the GDP growth rate. [12] It would be tedious to go through all the weaknesses of the study, although they alert the experienced econometrician that there is a problem. For the layperson, it is important to note that correlation does not prove causality (although a lack of correlation means there can be no causal relationship). Scully estimated that an ATR (average tax rate; the ratio of tax revenue to GDP) of about 20 percent would give a maximum growth of volume GDP. The figure has been seized upon by politicians of a right-wing political persuasion, especially those in Act. In 1999 the actual ATR was about 31 percent for central government taxation,[13] so the advocates are covertly arguing for a major cut in government spending.

Note, incidentally, that Scully’s work says absolutely nothing about government spending or the government deficit. It appears to say that a 20 percent ATR would maximise economic growth, whatever the level of spending or deficit. Taking the research at its face value, one could advocate an ATR of 20 percent of GDP and a government spending rate of 31 percent and apparently obtain the maximum long-run optimal growth rate of volume GDP, despite the size of the government deficit that would be involved. Note also that the measure takes no account of the design of the tax regime, treating the clumsy Muldoon one as equally effective as the elegant Douglas one. Indeed, one of the oddities of the IRD research programme is that it did not address the area where the department had the greatest expertise and interest: the design and administration of an effective tax system. Instead, it examined an issue outside its remit: the relationship between taxation and macroeconomic performance.

Because the main fallacy of the Scully work involves some mathematical and statistical understandings, I have relegated the exposition to an appendix (not included here but in the book). The non-mathematical/non-statistical reader can see the work is silly, because Scully’s method produces absurd results. If there is an ATR which maximises economic growth, we might ask what ATR maximises other social phenomena. So I replicated Scully’s work, but I also applied the method to the growth of deaths and of reported criminal offences.[14] The results are summarised in the following table. In both cases, the maximum growth rate is given by an ATR of about 20 percent of GDP. Apparently high economic growth is associated with high mortality and high criminality. A Hobbesian outcome!

Optimal tax rate for various variables using Scully’s econometric method

Variable to be
Maximised
ATR for maximum growth
(Proportion of GDP)
Volume GDP .205
deaths .200
reported offences .230
unity (1) .212

The book table also includes the 95 percent confidence interval for each estimate. All cover .2

As the appendix shows, the results are the consequences of ‘spurious correlation’, induced by the way the data has been managed. A heuristic explanation of the results is that the actual econometric equation involves a transformation which results in the ATR being correlated on a (curved) transformation of itself. Providing the other variable in the equation is not correlated with the ATR (and thus there is no causal relationship at all between the ATR and the variable which is being allegedly maximised), the econometric equation will give an apparent maximum related to the average ATR. The 20 percent ATR conclusion only applies when the hypothesis being assumed is not true. The absurdity is well illustrated by using as the independent variable the number one (i.e. 1 for every observation). As the last row in the table shows, the econometrics dutifully advises that an ATR of about 20 percent maximises the number 1. Which is nonsensical: a change in the tax rate does not change the value of a number.[15]

Economic research and ideological politics

Science proceeds by such mistakes, to be corrected by later scientists. Normally one would expect this to happen here (although taxpayers might be disgruntled over the amount they paid to fund it). However, social sciences often function differently, in that work will be seized upon for ideological purposes, even if it is not scientifically robust. It is therefore worth exploring the wider context in which the Scully work was done. When I published a simplified account of these findings,[16] numerous economists said they agreed with me, or had come to a similar conclusion that the result was based on spurious correlation. Although Scully and the IRD chief tax policy adviser at the time of the work, Patrick Caragata, denied the finding, they did not try to replicate my analysis, and continued to promote the Scully result.[17]

The inadequacy of much economics research derives from at least three features. First, many economists have a very shallow methodology, deriving from the tight prior approach which sees the task of empirical research as being to find support for the theories which are tightly held, rather than testing them to see whether they are consistent with the real world.[18]Thus Scully seems to have had a theory that tax rates in New Zealand were too high. Since his econometrics supported that theory, it was uncritically accepted. In contrast, a scientist considers whether there are alternate theories (such as spurious correlation) which fit the evidence better.

A second feature is the dependence on ‘fifos’, fly-in-fly-out overseas consultants who spend a short time in the country to carry out work for government agencies (or the Business Roundtable). Why are the agencies so dependent upon fifos, who are not very knowledgeable about the New Zealand context of the problem they are looking at, and often not very competent, as shown by the quality of their work?[19] Why not use competent New Zealand economists (as shown by their ability to provide penetrating critiques of the fifos’ work if the opportunity arises), especially as this would build up the general competence of the New Zealand economics profession? There are probably two reasons for the limited use of New Zealand economists. First, the fifo can be controlled by the agency. Fifos may be independent, but the one with the right ideological bias can always be selected, and the consultant’s ignorance of New Zealand can be relied on to ensure that the agency’s assumptions are not challenged. Some would argue a second reason is the need for ideological control by the agency, but the issue is probably more subtle than that. Many economists in government agencies seem unwilling to go to New Zealand economists more competent than they, in case their own ignorance might be exposed. Moreover, a consultancy can increase the competence of the New Zealand economist, which one day might be turned against the agency. Better to go to the fifo for a one-night stand.

The third feature is the low quality of the reviewing of the research work. It is a standing joke that not to be invited to some presentations of commissioned research is evidence of one’s competence, for if a skilled person was asked to review the work, both the consultant and the agency which commissioned it would be exposed. Since the study meets the ideological requirements, if not the scientific ones, the only outcome of a rigorous review would be to undermine the research and raise questions about the wasting of funds. In defence, Caragata says that the IRD work was refereed by some economists the IRD chose, and it was published in an overseas journal. Others will conclude either that such refereeing was superficial, or else that the referees were not very knowledgeable about the particular research topic.

In an ideal world, scientists would offset this ideological predominance. In the natural sciences and medicine, they continue to do a reasonable job in New Zealand. But the closer the science relates to core political issues, the harder the task. Given the undermining of the independent scientific process in New Zealand, it commonly happens that politicians will abuse research for ideological reasons.

The future of the taxation debate

There will always be advocates of lower taxes, and the 20 percent target (central government’s tax take as a proportion of GDP) may be locked into the New Zealand political debate for some time. One would like to say that the advocates will honestly and as frequently state that they are advocating equally substantial reductions in government spending, which in practice would involve major privatisation in health and education, and reductions in social security benefits, together with a substantial distributional shift in favour of the rich. One might even hope that the advocates will eschew poor-quality economic research which seems to support their political objectives. More likely, they will focus on lower taxes, ignoring any spending and distributional consequences, using inadequate research when it suits them.

The other side of the debate can be equally cavalier. Interest groups will advocate government spending increases which contribute to their causes, usually without mentioning the need for higher taxation, and will quote equally faulty research when it suits them. It is more difficult to predict whether there will be a strong lobby for more government spending across the board and for the consequent tax increases. Both Labour and the Alliance are tempted towards this approach (albeit typically without mentioning the tax consequences), and there are even signs of support on the left of the National Party (i.e. the centre right), thus reflecting the stance of the majority of the public.

Even so, political parties seem to be reluctant to advocate increased public spending very strongly, perhaps for two reasons. First, while those who want lower taxes may be in a minority, theirs is the more vigorous political rhetoric. Second, there is the problem of finding the tax revenues to complement the spending. There may be some political mileage in a higher top tax rate on personal incomes. As Chapter 4 reported, both the Irish and Australian economies, which have had a better economic performance than New Zealand, also have higher top tax rates.[20] However, raising the top tax rate generates only a little revenue in comparison to the spending demands. Among other extensions which might improve the effectiveness of the tax regime, and raise a little revenue, are (1) a real capital gains tax to prevent distortion of investment and savings decisions; (2) a GST on various currently uncovered foreign consumption transactions (including tourism and international electronic commerce); and (3) a financial transactions tax. However, the big gains for improving the tax regime were made in the 1980s under Labour.

Which leaves the advocates of public spending largely arguing that the spending should increase in line with increases in GDP.

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(The Appendix is Omitted)

Notes
1 The crucial notion here is `regime’. Individual taxes may have other purposes, such as to align private costs with social costs. (Hence the excise duties on licit drugs.) Treasury (1984:210)
2. Easton Listener 1 March 1996, p.630 May 1996, p.75; RCSP (1988); NBR, 26 Feb 1999.
3. Part of the problem is that the commercialisers, besotted with US economic theory, do not recognize that in a federation as large as the US, taxation is less likely to benefit the community of the taxpayer. (Hence the strong pork barrel politics in the US congress.) This is another example of the fallacy which persists in commercialist thinking – the US is a model economy and all others should be forced to conform to it.
4. If the commodity is an economic bad – such as pollution – the reduction in consumption would be a good thing. However, the totality of economic bads is insufficient for taxes on them to fund all the economic goods that is desired. In any case, given an objective of the complete elimination of most economic bads, the taxation revenue on the (almost) eliminated is going to be (almost) zero.
5. I do not deal in detail the issue of the size of the government deficit, which temporarily allows spending to be funded from non-revenue sources. Briefly, a deficit adds to public debt, which has to be serviced from future revenue, so that a deficit shifts forward the required taxation rather than permanently avoids it. To some extent a deficit may contribute to economic growth, and pay for itself from the higher government revenue, as many Keynesians would argue. But this occurs only to a limited extent. Once that limit is exceeded, the situation in the second sentence applies, either immediately or in the future.
6. CONZ (85-98)
7. Richardson (1995); Creech (1996)
8. Diewert & Lawrence (1994)
9. The consumption taxes show a similar difference.
10. Sieper (1997) makes some similar points.
11. The Treasury has distanced itself from this IRD research. (Sieper 1997) When it is not down its ideological path, Treasury remains the most competent of all government economic agencies. The IRD work was so flawed, and had such horrendous policy implications – such as the ignoring the government deficit and not designing an effective tax regime – that the Treasury needed to reject the IRD findings.
12. Scully (1996, 1997)
13. This includes the income taxes on benefits and GST on government spending, which increase the ratio in comparison to most other OECD economies.
14. My estimates differ from Scully’s at the third significant figure, presumably as a result of rounding errors. I have used the Scully ATR, even though it does not include all the taxation revenue received by the government. John Lepper has pointed out that unemployment levies in the 1930s did not go to the consolidated fund, and it seems likely that other such revenues were also overlooked.
15. Another demonstration of the inadequacy of the econometric equation, is that if it is used to predict the growth rate, the error of prediction is greater than if the average had been used.
16. Listener, 12 July 1997.
17. Caragata (1997, 1998) The IRD asked me to provide a report but were unwilling to pay a fee for it. They did not even discuss a contingent fee, that is I would only get paid if the work was of acceptable quality. A number of agencies seem to have a belief that if they pay good money for a low quality work, they should get high quality critiques of it for free. Caragata misrepresents this interchange in his 1997 report.
18. CONZ (91-94); Reder (1982)
19. In 1987 I attended a lecture in Australia, where an Australian economist who had worked for the New Zealand Treasury on labour relations (so he said) told the audience that it was impossible to get a newspaper in New Zealand before 10.00 in the morning because of union restrictions.
20. 45 percent and 47 percent respectively in contrast to New Zealand’s 33 percent (although Labour has promised to raise it to 39 percent for incomes above $60,000 p.a.).

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Health Policy

Chapter 11 of The Whimpering of the State

Keywords: Health;

The chairman of the Health Funding Authority (HFA), Graham Scott, reported that the 1991 health reforms were predicated upon productivity gains in the public hospital sector, which had not occurred. As a result the Crown Health Enterprises (CHEs, now Hospital and Health Services – HHSs) are in permanent financial deficit. In Scott’s convoluted presentation ‘the current deficits in CHEs are not only about inefficiencies and variations in the quality of management but are also an outgrowth of the original efficient pricing policy [whatever that means]. In other words a share of these deficits was made in Wellington, because the policy did not work out as intended. They were inherent in the policy framework that assumed efficiency gains would be allocated to the deficit.’[1] More simply, the policy failed. Scott went on to explain that the failed theory derived from the experiences of corporatisation in other areas of government and in consultants’ reports.

Corporatisation and culture

The success of the corporatisation of State-Owned Enterprises (SOEs) was misleading for at least four reasons. First, the SOEs – in communications, energy, finance, forestry, transport – were not very different from ordinary businesses. Second, the success was measured by consultants’ reports, which usually had narrow terms of reference focusing on accounting measures.[2] Thus the study of TVNZ almost totally ignores the effect of the corporatisation on programming, despite this being the main concern of viewers.[3]

Third, the reports were often interim, and the subsequent complications were yet to become evident. Auckland has recently had three major outages, with perhaps two more to come: the national power shortage of 1992; a Auckland-wide water shortage in 1995; loss of power to Auckland’s CBD in 1998.[4] Experts say the Auckland sewerage system is close to capacity; drivers draw similar conclusions about Auckland roading. There is a pattern here. As Lady Bracknell could have said, ‘to lose one could be regarded as a tragedy, to lose two looks like carelessness.’ An easy – almost invisible way – of cutting back on investment is by squeezing safety margins, the extra capacity installed to deal with the unexpected. This seems to have happened with national electricity supply and with Auckland’s water supply and local electricity grid (and its sewerage and roads). Auckland has been the most vulnerable because it has grown fastest. Other urban centres may have serious outages in the next decade. Once engineers reigned supreme, resulting in – so it was said – the overbuilding of the infrastructure: ‘gold-plated’ works was a frequent criticism. Today it is the accountants who rule, and the infrastructure is underbuilt for emergencies: the pewter is not taking the pressure. The issue of whether the public would prefer to pay more at the beginning to give better safety margins, or suffer the deprivations when the safety margins are exceeded, was hardly discussed before the decisions to diminish the margins was made.

Fourth is the question of the institution’s culture.[5] The corporatisation typically involved sweeping changes to management, replacing specialists in the business with generic managers, and where possible outsourcing the specialists. This was often feasible because – with the economy stagnating and safety margins squeezed – the role of specialists could be downgraded. However, that is not so easy in a health system. There was no diminution of demand as a result of the economic stagnation – sickness rises with unemployment. Managers cannot stand in for medics – a notion nicely satirised in a Tom Scott cartoon in which a group of obviously demented people are being told the ‘chief accountant has just gone through the books and says you are all cured’.

The clash between the cultures of the clinicians and the generic managers came to a head at Christchurch Hospital’s Accident and Emergency Department. Some people probably died as a result. The resulting Stent Report was severely critical of the generic managers, both at the CHE and central government level.[6] The implication was that they did not understand the clinical issues involved, ignored the doctors and nurses who did, and undermined the safety margins. It would be comforting to believe the Christchurch experience was unique, but probably it was not. What distinguishes the Christchurch experience, aside from some exceptionally inept management, is that with a large workload, safety margins were exceeded often enough to rule out mere misadventure, while the size of the professional staff meant there could be the solidarity to protect the whistle-blowers.

Culture clashes appear endemic to the current system. More recently, a study into why hospitals were not adopting ‘best practice’ had the generic managers telling the investigators the main impediment to best practice was clinicians.[7] (It is not clear clinicians were even consulted.) What the generic managers were actually saying is that the clinicians were resisting the measures to cut costs and safety margins because they believed they would lead to unacceptably lower standards of health care.

If the managers were unwilling to listen to the health specialists, they seemed besotted by the consultants, the other group which Scott said let the reformers down. In a 1987 study, Chicago consultants Arthur Anderson claimed that public hospitals were inefficient and 20 plus percent productivity gains could be made. Even at the time the conclusion was known to be statistically flawed. The Gibbs taskforce, which commissioned the study, then jumped to the conclusion that a privatisation of the health system based on generic managers and market demand and supply would reap these alleged gains. Their case was entirely ideological – the consultants had not even investigated the efficiency of private hospitals.

In 1991, when implementing the Gibbs strategy, the government hired officials and consultants who knew absolutely nothing about the health sector, while those with proven competence were ignored or sacked. Detailed questioning of the reform team indicated they had no idea how the gains would happen, other than the odd anecdote based on small unrepeatable gains already made. The advisers were so ideologically committed that expert critics were dismissed. Accountants Coopers & Lybrand even advised that, in effect, the CHEs sack any staff doubtful about the reforms.[8] Ironically, the public, who had access to both viewpoints – of the reform advisers and of the critics who were competent – were better informed than the government politicians. The difficulty with such policy implementation regimes is that not only can they lack competence, but that any attempt to draw attention to major mistakes is ignored or repressed. The consultants are hired to implement the plan, not to assess its feasibility and identify its weaknesses. Unlike the clinicians at Canterbury Health, consultants do not have an ethic which overrides their contractual obligations. Commercialism brooks no higher morality.[9]

As Scott rightly acknowledges, the result of the advice of such narrow and restricted consultants was a failure, although one may argue – as experts did at the time – that the changes to the health system were so misconceived that the reform was bound to fail. If mistakes of this magnitude involved a dam falling over, or an electricity outage, there would be a public inquiry. But the response to the health reforms disaster has been quite different. Those involved are still advising the government. Scott, who as Secretary of the Treasury ought to be accountable for the watchdog’s failure, is chairing the HFA, which makes critical decisions about the future of the health system. Coopers & Lybrand provides further reports promising vast cost savings by closing hospitals. Other advisers with equally unimpressive records continue to guide public policy. Why? The best parallel I can give involves a tenor performing for the first time at the La Scala opera house. After his aria, the audience – well known for its discernment – shouted: ‘Encore, encore!’ He sang his aria again, and again an encore was demanded. A little breathless the tenor asked how often did the audience want him to sing the aria. A voice called out: ‘Until you bloody well get it right.’

But what does ‘getting it right’ mean in this context? Why do they not do the obvious and abandon the commercialisation reforms since they have failed? It is hard to teach old advisers new tricks, while the commercialisers had substantially diminished the capacity of others to present alterative views. Many government officials are not inherently commercialisers, but they know no alternative. Moreover, the ultimate destination of privatisation has not been abandoned, even if the route is more circuitous.

Demand-side privatisation

Health system privatisation can be on the demand side or on the supply side (or both). The demand side is how health care is paid for. Traditionally, 90 percent and more of health care was paid for from the public purse. (It is not sensible to expect 100 percent to be paid by the government – people are going to purchase their own aspirins and alternative medicines.) But this proportion has been falling. Recently, less than 80 percent of total health care spending has been publicly provided, despite a 1993 election promise by the National Party that it would maintain an 80 percent ratio. There was some recovery in spending under the coalition government – but not enough to attain the 80 percent target.

Figure 11.1 [not included – see book], which compares New Zealand health spending as a proportion of GDP with the OECD trend, shows the extent of the underfunding. Even after the increases from the Coalition Agreement, the late 1990s levels will not rise to the 1991-based trend. The gap is around $2.3 billion for the last six years, almost six months of the health vote, equivalent to closing down the entire public health system one month every year. Instead, there have been financial deficits in the HHSs, explicit and implicit waiting lists of those in need of care, additional private health expenditure as a result of cost-shifting, and death and suffering that the sick and their families have experienced.

This deficit seems to be the source of the imbalanced balance sheets of the HHSs. Although the government cut back on funding, the public providers continued to provide services for patients in need, even if they were not paid adequately for them. The commercialisers who were devising the purchasing prices (Scott’s so-called ‘efficient prices’) for health services did not communicate with those who were restructuring the balance sheets, and so the purchase prices do not properly incorporate the prices set for the assets. It was a matter of the right hand not telling the left hand (or, more accurately, the very right hand) what it was doing.

According to commercial theory, the loss-making health services should have stopped producing, sold up their assets, and closed down. This applies to virtually every public hospital. Their facilities would, according to the commercialisation theory, be better converted into some other use with a higher rate of return – say hotels or brothels. This obvious nonsense, except to a commercialiser, has the consequence that selling off loss-making providers – even giving them away – would improve the government finances. Human health and welfare does not appear in the government’s balance sheet. But the commercialisers were unable to destroy the professionalism and public commitment that characterises the public health service. So the CHEs made losses by providing services for which they were not paid. Rarely a week goes by without new announcements that there is ongoing pressure on the HHSs to cut service provision.

This typically results in cost shifting on to the private sector – on to patients – thus incrementally privatising the demand side. The shift may occur indirectly, as when an early discharge adds to the costs of the family, friends, and neighbours in looking after the patient, or when the patient finds her- or himself unable to be treated and so carries an economic burden from the sickness. It becomes direct when the sick abandon the public sector and purchase private care. By screwing down public spending, the government forces what is, in effect, privatisation on the demand side.

The commercialisers aim to force the population to purchase private medical insurance as their funder. They have not been successful. Indeed the proportion of the population with private health insurance has fallen.[10] The existing private medical insurance system had developed as a supplement to the state, topping up a well-established public system (so that the insured could jump public waiting lists). They were unable to adapt to the new system, especially as their charges were being dramatically raised as they were required to cover more and more deficits in the public health system. Moreover, because of the purity of the reforms, explicit and implicit subsidies were withdrawn (as when private hospitals depended upon facilities from public hospitals without charge), further raising private costs to the public. Ironically, a system of private medical insurance needs some government interventions and support – as Act advocates. But encouraging private medical insurance is a signal to the public that privatisation is the ultimate destination on the demand side. Once private medical insurance begins functioning properly, the government would increasingly restrict access to the public system, driving people to make use of private insurance. (A similar strategy applies in the tertiary education sector. By cutting back government funding to the teaching institutions, the institutions are forced to raise their fees to students.)

As long as the government insists on cutting back on public health sector funding, the threat of demand-side privatisation remains. Post-MMP, there were two initiatives to address the undermining of the public sector. First, as a result of the Coalition Agreement, public funding was increased. And second, there was an attempt to have a citizens-initiated referendum, to further raise the level of public health funding.

The health spending referendum

In the course of the planning of this health-spending referendum I was asked to advise on a suitable target for public health spending. It had to be about public spending, excluding private spending, since a major concern is the cost-shifting where patients, families, and communities pay an increasing share of the cost of health. In order to prevent politicians manipulating the statistics, an official definition of health spending like that used by the OECD was necessary.[11]

One possible target variable was a dollar value, but that is vulnerable to inflation. A constant price total could be targeted, but there are no official price indexes for the calculation.[12] In the end the Referendum Group chose to target public spending as a proportion of GDP, a standard OECD measure, so international comparisons are possible. As Figure 11.1 shows, the GDP percentage of government spending on health fell after the 1991 reforms. But total public spending after NZF joined the government increased (demonstrating, incidentally, that MMP has had an effect). OECD health spending rises over time, as its populations age, people desire more health care, and new technologies become available. If the New Zealand government spending on health continued according to the projected OECD trend, it would have been a fraction over 6.9 percent of GDP over the three years from 1999/2000. The Referendum Group wanted a simple number – preferably an integer. So the target was rounded to 7 percent. Given the spending backlog, the slightly higher target is easily justified.

I checked the 7 percent of GDP target in two other ways. First, government spending as a percentage of total health spending would be about 82 percent, which would put New Zealand below Belgium, Denmark, Iceland, Luxembourg, Norway, and (even Mrs Thatcher’s) United Kingdom, and about the same as Sweden. The public to total ratio for New Zealand was 87 percent in 1981, and in the 1993 election National promised a target of 80 percent. Second, could the proposed amount of money on health be spent effectively? I looked for evidence of real health needs being unmet: New Zealanders require 35 points on a scale to be treated for a cardiac condition, although the international recommendation is 25 points; some patients diagnosed with cancer had been waiting for over 14 weeks for treatment in some locations; a recent survey of families with a child with cancer found that they almost all face substantial personal costs, usually in tragic circumstances, which the public health system does not cover. The list of examples could go on interminably, but in summary individuals and their families are suffering unnecessarily because there has not been enough spending on health care. There will always be rationing of health care, but current rationing – overly dependent on rationing by ability to pay – appeared far too tight: unjust, inefficient, and unhealthy.

So my recommendation to the Referendum Group was a target of public health spending of 7 percent of GDP, or about $550m a year more than was currently planned. While the group was happy about the proposed target level, there was an unease that it was too easy to agree with it. And then someone said the question should include the condition that we should attain the target even if it meant higher levels of taxation. The effect on the group was electric, for this gave real teeth to the question, and the condition was promptly added. This economist liked the referendum proposition because it offered a demand with a price (of higher taxes). Thus the group chose as its proposal for an indicative referendum that Government should increase its spending on health services to at least 7 percent of GDP, if necessary by increasing personal income tax.

Would the public like the trade-off? There is a history of surveys which suggest ‘yes’. But there is still the issue of public enthusiasm. Would there be sufficient to obtain the 10 percent of the electoral roll required to initiate a referendum? In the end the task proved too onerous. The various voluntary organisations exhausted by day-to-day matters were unable to find the energy to pursue long-term ones. And so despite a lot of public support the sponsoring organisations decided not to go ahead. A citizens-initiated referendum requires a petition signed by 10 percent of the voting population – a high hurdle – which indicates why such referenda have so rarely occurred.

Supply-side privatisation

Supply-side privatisation refers to use of private sector providers. Until the 1996 election this goal was pursued by contracting to private hospitals and other providers, so an increasing proportion of the public funding has been going to private suppliers. Should a medical service be provided by a public or private supplier? The crucial element is whether the private sector can provide the high professional and public spirited standards that are expected of the public health service. Without going into detail, we may ask whether a private hospital would provide treatment for a patient in need for which it has not been paid, as do public hospitals. The other worry is the fragmentation of the entire health system. A private provider can choose to offer services which are profitable, leaving the public provider those which are unprofitable, but may be socially valuable but badly priced. This can result in the abandoning of the so-called unprofitable services. Given interdependencies between various services, that could collapse local provision, especially in rural areas. (Recall Scott acknowledging that the government had made mistakes in its health pricing policies. Obviously it can do better, but it will make mistakes which leave the private sector with the opportunity to cherry-pick.)

It is unclear whether the commercialisers running the health system deliberately drove the hospital system into debt to facilitate its privatisation: incompetence is probably a better explanation. But even if that was not their explicit intention, it is the long-run effect of their policies. The HHSs have had strong financial signals to let the private sector win contracts, and sell off the buildings, lands, and other services – a privatisation by attrition. It is not as efficient as straight privatisation, but that has been proscribed by the public. In principle, the shift of public funding to private provision was prohibited by the Coalition Agreement, except in special circumstances. Practice has been more complicated. While it is too soon to tell about the successes and failures of the practices, the policy makers have continued to seek ways of reducing the government’s involvement in the supply of health care.

Privatisation could be pursued by turning primary carers into fund-holders. It is not clear how advanced is this strategy, and there have been some recent setbacks. Here is an extreme scenario, where the funds that would normally be spent on secondary care for a particular population are given to their general practitioners, who purchase the secondary care on their patients’ behalf. Thus groups of general practitioners replace the HFA as the regional purchaser of all local secondary services. There is a case for some fund-holding by GPs for those services whose use they control: pharmaceuticals, laboratory services, possibly first referral to specialists. It rests on GPs taking responsibility for the resource consequences of their treatments. However, it is difficult to organise equitably the funding (to decide how much funding for each patient),[13] while in Britain there are stories of GPs making poor-quality decisions – treating patients in their clinic instead of referring them to a competent specialist. But once the patient is outside their control, the case for GPs managing funding is considerably weaker. At best it would be a privatising of the HFA, with inefficient agencies managing the funds on behalf of the GP group, a private decentralisation reminiscent of the ‘Health Care Plans’ proposed in the original reforms, but rejected as impractical and socially undesirable. GP fund holding can be used to privatise demand. GPs already charge their patients. Faced with squeezed public funding, they would have to charge their patients more. At first these would be supplementary payments, but after a while the organisation managing the funding on the GPs’ behalf would start offering what amounts to a medical insurance scheme. GPs would insist that all their patients join it, and after a while there would be, virtually, a nationwide compulsory private medical insurance scheme, which would allow the further squeezing of public funding. This scenario is speculative. But it illustrates how privatisation can remain on the policy agenda, whatever the public wants and whatever the politicians may protest – as indeed they protested innocence about their intentions in the 1991 reforms.

An alternative approach

Can the disintegration of the public health system of the 1990s be stopped? The policy needs to be based on neither extreme privatisation nor extreme anti-privatisation. Because there needs to be public confidence that any advice is pragmatic and not ideologically committed to privatisation, the most important single change would be to staff the government advice and provision agencies with people who are committed to a public health system, and who want to implement one pragmatically.

The second major change is that there needs to be a recognition that there is no substitute for more public spending on health. Promises of efficiency gains to substitute for funds are worthless. As explained above there is a strong case for public funding to be increased to at least 7 percent of GDP, and thereafter in line with the OECD trend.

The third major change is that the primary purpose of the system must be the provision of health care, and a secondary objective is to do so within the constraints of the available funding. This would be a return to the pre-1991 culture.

Is there a role then for private provision? In some respects the crucial distinction is not between public and private provision, but between not-for-profit and for-profit provision (for many private sector providers such as voluntary agencies are not-for-profit). Recall Allen Schick’s equation of public sector managerialism to ‘responsibility’, which he defines as ‘a personal ethic, a commitment to do one’s best, a sense of public service’ (Chapter 7). Schick is of the opinion that the contractualism which has driven the public and health sector reforms can undermine public managerialism for it may diminish public-regarding values and behaviour in government. While it is not an exact equation, a not-for-profit organisation is generally driven by personal responsibility, whereas accountability is much stronger in a for-profit organisation. This is not to argue that responsibility cannot occur within a for-profit organisation. What Schick was saying is that it is harder to nurture responsibility in a system which is driven by accountability.

Today, senior doctors’ employment contracts often include a clause which states that all parties (including the HHS itself) recognise the primacy of the personal responsibility of the clinicians to their patients. As the Medical Council said, ‘doctors should be aware when taking up employment that they have a personal responsibility to their patients which should take precedence over accountability to their employer . . . It is important to ensure that management policies reflect ethical medical advice.’ The clause is a whistle-blower’s charter. Suppose a medical professional is aware of some circumstance which is contributing to the financial viability of the employing institution, but a risk to patients – say compromising the safety margins. Suppose all internal channels of redress have been exhausted. Then the professional is obliged by their personal ethic to go public. Their employment contract means to do so is not a disciplinary offence. This approach is very different from that taken by a newly appointed CHE chief executive, a generic manager from outside the medical system, who announced that his object was to get his staff to ‘own the problem’. When asked what the problem was he admitted the problem was CHE profitability, and even his voice trailed off when he realised the absurdity of the notion.

It may well be that the objectives of for-profit institutions are more destructive to the culture of personal responsibility, because they are more concerned with accountability. Thus the crucial questions in the public or private provision debate may be: does the agency expect that the first loyalty of the professionals will be to their patients or to their employer’s profits? Is it organised on responsibility or accountability lines? No doubt every health organisation, if pressed, will say that of course their highest priority is to their patients, although for-profit ones may be a bit more reluctant to incorporate that notion into their employment contracts, because of its potential to compromise the bottom line. That cultivation of responsibility needs to be a part of the design of a health delivery system. It should be mandatory on publicly owned providers. Most not-for-profit organisations in the private sector may well follow voluntarily. A condition of public funding of the private sector – for-profit or not-for-profit – should be a professional responsibility clause in all the relevant employment contracts.

In the longer run, the best way to implement this change of orientation and recommitment to the traditional health service culture may be to make each HHS responsible for a particular region, and give it responsibility for the provision of public health in its region. But they should be required to utilise private agencies which provide comparable quality at lower cost.

Conclusion

Despite the 1996 Coalition Agreement, and despite a public demand for a reversal of the policy direction of the 1990s, a surreptitious privatisation of the public health system appeared to remain part of government policy. The government has been trapped into the strategy by three major factors. First, it was reluctant to provide adequate funding. Second, it has continued to rely on a paradigm – and those who promoted it – which emphasised the running down of the public provision, while continuing to ignore those who advised that the reforms were not going to work. And third, the government has not been able to apologise.

It is worth exploring the political implications of the third factor. Australian Graham Richardson, an ex-Labor senator and insightful political analyst, argues that when building a house the first thing to build is the backdoor – the exit if something goes wrong. The same almost applies for policy. What is a politician to do, if the promised outcome proves elusive, or even is worse than the situation it was alleged to remedy? How is a politician to say, ‘sorry, let’s reverse the policy and start over again’? The conviction politics of the commercialisers implementing a blitzkrieg make this virtually impossible. Apologising and retreating are not in politicians’ vocabulary, eventually to their cost. When Geoffrey Palmer became prime minister, the government undertook a major secret review of its economic policy, and concluded it could not be changed. The inevitable outcome was that the Fourth Labour Government was destroyed in the 1990 election.

For that is one of the strengths of democracy. Failed policies can be changed by changing the politicians. Any smart politician must conclude that there has to be a better way. Given parliamentary outcomes are going to be more responsive to public judgements and sensitive to policy failure under MMP-elected parliaments than under FR ones, and given it is inevitable some new policies are going to fail, successful politicians are going to have to find ways of apologising and retreating. Not overcommitting oneself to a fallible policy development would be the first step.

Even so, Bill English, the Minister of Health from 1996 to 1998, was promoted to Minister of Finance in early 1999 with much comment that he had taken ‘health off the front pages’. In part that was because his cabinet colleagues had other political disasters which were crowding health stories out. But also, the additional funding as a result of the Coalition Agreement enabled the government to attend to some of the worst problems. There are two interpretations to this success. The first is the Treasury nightmare: a politician can buy popularity by spending more generously. It is instructive that as a new finance minister English commented: ‘The view that you can just shrink expenditure if you have an ideological commitment to it, I don’t think is practical in New Zealand.’[14] The second is also in English’s statement. The public desires more public health, and although seeking productivity improvements is continually necessary, ultimately and more importantly ongoing increases in public expenditure are more significant in meeting the public’s aspirations. It will be interesting to see whether the public is willing to trade-off additional spending for no apology, or whether the simmering anger will burst out again and be offset by another round of additional spending. But without that apology – the admission that the health reforms were deeply flawed – it is difficult to see how National can provide a sensible account of its new policies.

There is one further lesson from the failed health reforms. Despite their incompetence, the health system struggles along reasonably successfully. True, there are near-bankrupt financial statements, run-down buildings, inadequate equipment, limited access to resources, management that does not understand health care, waiting lists, inappropriate discharges, cost-shifting, and a host of other items which leads New Zealanders to despair. Yet they regularly report how well they are treated once they are admitted to hospital. The paradox is explained by the quality of the doctors, nurses, and technicians, with their culture of public service. Ironically reforms, which were contemptuous of their culture and tried to undermine it, have had the fig leaf of success preserved by the dedication of the medical professionals to high standards of health care, and their disregard for the commercial principles which override personal responsibility by financial accountability.

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Endnotes

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The Hospital Balance Sheet Crisis

Extract from The Whimpering of the State: Policy After MMP, p.131-132.

Keywords Governance; Health

However, the CCMAU report underestimated the size of the financial problem, as became clear when the CHE accounts for the year to June 1997 were published. …

… By way of background, in the early 1990s almost all the old AHBs had unsatisfactory balance sheets, which would generate future cash flow difficulties. It is not a major issue: given a choice between a cash deficit and a medical emergency, the priority has to be the patient. But it is better for an institution not to be financially stressed, so it can concentrate on its real task of health care. The reforms of the 1990s were intended to address the imbalances by reconstructing the CHE balance sheets. But they were not put on a sound basis. Four years after the reforms 20 of the 23 CHEs made a loss totalling $228m in the 1996/7 year, with little prospect of the loss substantially reducing in the immediate future. At the same time 20 of the 23 CHEs had a shortage of working capital amounting to over $412m.

In 1990 the Bank of New Zealand required a capital injection of $600m and resulted – so we were told – in the newly elected National Government having to abandon its election promises. The financial difficulties of public health providers are of a similar order of magnitude. There is a difference between the balance sheet of a bank and of a hospital system but, insofar as they are comparable, the aggregate imbalance in the CHE balance sheets is probably slightly larger. Basically this fiscal stress is covered by ‘letters of comfort’ from the shareholders (the government) to the CHEs, which provide guarantees to private lenders. In any case patient health is more important. But the one thing the reforms ought to have achieved was balanced balance sheets.

(The suspicious may ask: if the BNZ financial crisis led to the government abandoning its election promises in 1990, why did it not abandon them in 1996 because of the CHE crisis? The answer is, perhaps, that an incoming government can blame such events on its predecessors: an incumbent government cannot, and so rather than dealing with the matter dramatically, it hides the problem. Even so, the procedures set down in the Fiscal Responsibility Act (FRA), including the publishing before the election of exceptionally comprehensive financial accounts, failed to identify this crisis. So a Bank of New Zealand type crisis can still sneak up on an incoming new government.)

The 1996 Health Post-election Briefings

Chapter 10 of The Whimpering of the State

Keywords: Governance; Health;

An indicator of the poor functioning of democracy in recent years is the gap of perceptions between officials making policy and the concerned public. This is nicely illustrated by contrasting the Coalition Agreement on health policy, drafted by politicians, and the post-election briefings of the three administering agencies, which the politicians did not have access to during their negotiations.[1] While this chapter provides a background for the next on health policy , its primary purpose is to illustrate the gap.

Public perceptions

Fresh from the election hustings where they had been listening to the populace, the politicians probably captured popular concerns about health in the Coalition Agreement, summarised as

(a) The Government is committed to providing a flexible, modern, properly funded, accessible health service that meets changing public needs and expectations. The Coalition Government’s health policy has the overriding goal of ensuring principles of public service replace commercial profit objectives for all publicly provided health and disability services
(b) The Coalition Partners are committed to publicly funded health care that encourages cooperation and collaboration rather than competition between health and disability services.
The principles are similar to those in the Labour–NZF draft agreement, indicative of a widespread national perception. The Agreement goes on to state six ‘non-negotiable’ principles:

1 Retaining the structure which replaces RHAs [Regional Health Authorities] as funder and all health service providers including . . .;
2 Limiting bureaucracy where possible;
3 Removing the ‘for profit focus’ from the CHEs [they were renamed Hospital and Health Services– HHSs] but requiring them to work in a businesslike fashion;
4 Giving greater emphasis to health gain;
5 RHA purchasing from providers on a competitive price volume basis will be replaced with contractual funding agreements . . .
6 The structure replacing RHAs will undertake monitoring, auditing and reporting functions to enhance health gain and financial accountability.

Central to the approach is to emphasise health gain rather than commercial objectives, with priority given to Maori health, child health, and mental health, and to more public spending. The shift was back towards the health system which preceded it. Under pressure from an MMP parliament, the National politicians at last acknowledge that the public desires a primarily publicly funded health system, and primarily publicly provided health care.

Interestingly, one of the government advisers, the Crown Company Monitoring Advisory Unit (CCMAU), which supervises the HHSs, listed some public concerns:

“… Despite most patients being satisfied with the level of care they receive, the wider public are anxious about the public hospital service. The anxiety stems from long waiting times for, and the availability of, some kinds of elective surgery, and concern about the treatment and quality of care – or lack of it – of individual patients.
Also giving rise to this anxiety are a number of perceptions and concerns among the public, including:
● continued debate about the adequacy of Government health funding;
● rejection of the ‘profit-driven’ model for health, and the jargon of management and economics rather than health;
● the news of persistent CHE deficits and levels of debt leading people to believe that the health services in their community will suffer;
● public confusion about the roles of purchaser and provider – i.e. little appreciation that it is the RHA rather than the CHE that must ensure an appropriate level and quality of health services in a community;
● the public airing of conflicts between CHEs and RHAs over contract negotiations;
● apparently irrational decisions such as when, despite long waits for elective surgery, CHEs close theatres for surgery before [the] year’s end because they have completed their annual contract with their RHA;
● a perceived increase in bureaucracy, with more central agencies and more managers (more suits and fewer surgeons); and
● a number of well-publicised resignations of CHE chief executives and chairs.[2]

It continues: ‘These perceptions may or may not accord with reality.’

CCMAU’s list was largely confined to CHEs for which it is responsible, although there are implicit criticisms of RHAs and the total level of funding. It also played down some issues which worry the public. Its emphasis is on surgical waiting lists and it ignores the public’s increasing concerns about psychiatric care, care of the elderly, and long-term care. There is no mention of cost shifting, the mechanism by which the public health systems limits costs to itself by shifting them on to the public. And among the irrationalities the public seethed over, there seemed to be no clear lines of entitlement.[3] However, while the CCMAU report mentioned the public unrest directly, the PEBs of the Treasury and the Ministry of Health (MoH) largely ignored it.

The Treasury briefing

The 1996 Treasury Ministerial Briefing devoted just over six pages – five percent of its total – to health issues. Inevitably the coverage is selective. It made international comparisons of public spending and mortality rates, provided a few anecdotes and statistics, admitted that ‘[w]hile progress has been made, areas of concern clearly remain’, mentioning that waiting times have not diminished and there continue to be disparities in health outcomes, especially that Maori and Pacific Islanders still have poorer health status.[4]

The Treasury briefing goes on to talk about the cost drivers on health spending (technology and ageing), and argues that health gains do not depend on health spending alone, for there is a socio-economic dimension. ‘Good health outcomes are strongly related to opportunities for higher incomes and educational levels. Thus better economic performance and more effective social policies have a key role to play in promoting health outcomes.’[5] Later it adds the individual’s responsibility for positive life-style choices.

The briefing is cautious about the effectiveness of additional spending generating improved health outcomes. One may not be uncomfortable with that conclusion, yet have reservations with the Treasury derivation. Ignore their analysis that total per capita spending has little influence on infant mortality in rich countries – no one should be surprised. Treasury concludes that ‘there does not appear to be a close relationship internationally between total spending per capita and . . . life expectancy . . .’[6] In fact Figure 10.1[not shown here – see book] – with one exception – shows a very plausible relationship. Countries which spend more on health tend to have higher life expectancy (although one may not cause the other). The outlier on the right of the diagram is the United States, well known to be peculiar. The Americans’ extensive use of the private market for health care delivery is extremely expensive and inefficient, so that they appear to get little extra benefit from higher rates of health spending. No one is surprised at this conclusion, although it emphasises the stupidity of being so dependent upon American models, American analysis, and American experts.

Of course, Treasury says that ‘the above factors suggest that how health dollars are spent is just as important as how much is spent’,[7] a frequent theme of recent years. When it came to suggesting improvements, the Treasury was largely satisfied with the current structures and recommended only:

● improve accountabilities within existing structures (including reward structures);
● let structures evolve over time in response to bottom-up innovations. There may be a role for the government to play to encourage the pace of innovation;
● hold on to budgets and allow more devolved decision-making to occur. Special attention needs to be paid to controlling CHE deficits and the frequent ad hoc increases in purchase budgets (which often have a short term focus only);
● strive for clinician cooperation. Clinicians have significant influence in promoting best cost-effective practice. The government needs to ensure consultation with clinicians; information dissemination on best practice and successful innovation; and alignment of incentives, so the clinicians’ day-to-day decisions are made within budget and reflect value for money.[8]

Thus the recommendations hardly address the public’s concerns, illustrating that Treasury has its own agenda, not particularly connected to the everyday concerns of the rest of New Zealand. The second recommendation is almost pure Treasury-speak, unintelligible to anyone on the outside, and subject to at least two interpretations – a contentious one, and a fall-back one if the political process does not like the other. What is ‘bottom-up innovation’? How do ‘structures’ evolve when there is innovation? The soft interpretation is that the recommendation is about integration of primary and secondary health care. But it also might refer to further commercialisation (privatisation, contracting out, cost shifting – there are numerous possibilities) of the public health system. If this seems paranoiac, consider ‘. . . in practice the current health structures are operating in a kind of “half-way house”.’[9] Half-way between where and where? The old public health system and an unstated ultimate destination of a more privatised health system?

The fourth recommendation is perhaps the most eye-catching. Can it really be true that Treasury was acknowledging that clinicians have a role to play in the management of resources? Clinicians had been excluded from the reform process because they were interested parties.[10] The strategy to get clinicians to be more responsible for their resource use, which had been slowly developed from the 1970s, and which was set back by the reforms, appears to at last have Treasury endorsement. But before this is interpreted as an admission of failure of a central feature of the reforms, observe that while clinicians are expected to work within their budgets, there is a vagueness about how the budgets are to be set. If the budgets are simply imposed on clinicians, without involving them in the budget setting and getting their commitment, there will be no gains, only grumbles, exacerbating the clash between resource constraints and the professional (and ethical) duties of the clinician.

The Ministry of Health briefing

The Ministry of Health Ministerial Briefing consists of two volumes. The second was a useful reference on the state of the health system. There were even three paragraphs on the quality of life: a nice reminder as to just how little information we have on one of the most important issues challenging health policy. The first volume, ‘key policy issues’, is harder to follow, and often platitudinous. The briefing acknowledges ‘there is a lack of support among public and clinicians for the role of purchasers – the RHAs – or the role of the managers within publicly owned providers – the CHEs’. Setting down the case for retaining the current structure, a list of current problems is provided:
● costs of contracting;
● lack of support among the community and clinicians (especially within CHEs);
● lack of clear strategic direction;
● difficulty where national co-ordination is required.[11]

This does not sound like the outcomes promised by the health reformers in the early 1990s. The Ministry’s judgement that the clinicians were not supporting their CHEs is chilling (a view consistent with the public understanding). Not surprisingly, the ignoring of clinicians’ involvement in the health reforms, other than to supply services, appears to have caused demoralisation. Together with the apparent implication of the fourth Treasury recommendation, their morale could deteriorate further. However the PEB contained no clear proposals for an alternative health structure.

The Crown Company Monitoring Advisory Unit briefing

The CCMAU Ministerial Briefing was concerned only with the CHEs, and was committed to the commercial model of health provision. CHEs are but a part of its overall brief of monitoring state-owned enterprises, and CCMAU’s internal culture clearly prefers the profit-driven corporation. Thus there is a vigorous criticism of the pre-reform Area Health Board (AHB) system, followed by a justification of the current one, including a point-by-point defence of such issues as competitive pressures, commercial disciplines, ‘commercial’ boards of control, and profits. Unfortunately the briefing does not address the public concerns it lists.

Of course CCMAU reported anecdotes of success, but by the profit measure which CCMAU ought to be judging their responsibility, the record is one of failure. Except of course, people do not directly care about CHE losses, so that the losses may lead to further cutbacks or yet another reform (‘redisorganisation’, as Alan Maynard so aptly put it), with a further worsening of health provision.

The CCMAU briefing showed a chart which reported that in 1994/95 the CHEs were expected to break even in 1996/97, that in 1995/96 the date had been advanced to 1997/98. The CHEs have made a near $200m loss in every year they had operated. It is a classic forecast based on optimism – always with a promise that next year the loss will be significantly less. Free beer tomorrow, but tomorrow never comes.

The balance sheet crisis

However, the CCMAU report underestimated the size of the financial problem, as became clear when the CHE accounts for the year to June 1997 were published. By way of background, in the early 1990s almost all the old AHBs had unsatisfactory balance sheets, which would generate future cash flow difficulties.[12] It is not a major issue: given a choice between a cash deficit and a medical emergency, the priority has to be the patient. But it is better for an institution not to be financially stressed, so it can concentrate on its real task of health care. The reforms of the 1990s were intended to address the imbalances by reconstructing the CHE balance sheets. But they were not put on a sound basis. Four years after the reforms 20 of the 23 CHEs made a loss totalling $228m in the 1996/7 year, with little prospect of the loss substantially reducing in the immediate future. At the same time 20 of the 23 CHEs had a shortage of working capital amounting to over $412m.

In 1990 the Bank of New Zealand required a capital injection of $600m and resulted – so we were told – in the newly elected National Government having to abandon its election promises. The financial difficulties of public health providers are of a similar order of magnitude. There is a difference between the balance sheet of a bank and of a hospital system but, insofar as they are comparable, the aggregate imbalance in the CHE balance sheets is probably slightly larger. Basically this fiscal stress is covered by ‘letters of comfort’ from the shareholders (the government) to the CHEs, which provide guarantees to private lenders. In any case patient health is more important. But the one thing the reforms ought to have achieved was balanced balance sheets.

(The suspicious may ask: if the BNZ financial crisis led to the government abandoning its election promises in 1990, why did it not abandon them in 1996 because of the CHE crisis? The answer is, perhaps, that an incoming government can blame such events on its predecessors: an incumbent government cannot, and so rather than dealing with the matter dramatically, it hides the problem. Even so, the procedures set down in the Fiscal Responsibility Act (FRA), including the publishing before the election of exceptionally comprehensive financial accounts, failed to identify this crisis. So a Bank of New Zealand type crisis can still sneak up on an incoming new government.)

Conclusion

All the briefings, one way or another, mention the problem that given the lack of public commitment to the existing system (and, one might add, its manifest failures as far as the public is concerned), the policy and funding environments are unstable. But the briefings’ diagnosis is the politicians should sell the reforms better, not that the reforms were failing. Revealingly of the governance of New Zealand in recent decades, the officials thought of the politicians as their agents to support their policies, against the public. Under MMP the order is likely to be reversed.

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Endnotes

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Literacy and Development

Speech to the 1998 Planning Hui of the Adult Reading and Learning Assistance (ARLA) Federation of Aotearoa New Zealand: Waipapa Marae, University of Auckland, Saturday 20 June. Published in Nga Kete Koreo, the Journal of Literacy Aotearoa, July, 1999.

Keywords: Education;

During his second voyage of discovery, James Cook had two boats which arranged to meet in Queen Charlotte Sound. They did not. After waiting around, the Resolution had left a week or so before the Adventure arrived in late 1773. The arriving crew found a tree stump, which told them there was a message below. They dug it up, to be told – in a rather curt note – that Cook had sailed on. The Polynesians were amazed, for here were two men communicating, without being in each other’s presence, and without a human intermediary.

There is a sense in which that was the day, 225 years ago, when writing came to New Zealand. Despite being an oral culture, the Maori seized reading and writing with alacrity. At first it was to read the bible, which is a communication from men hundreds of years before, and so long dead. Later they used writing for numerous purposes including petitioning the nineteenth century government about wrongs, letters which are important today in the identification and settlement of Tiriti grievances.

I recall this history not because it shows that the European introduced writing into New Zealand. In fact they had learned it from the Middle Eastern Phoenicians, who in turn had been influenced by African Egyptians. Independently, the Chinese – the ancestors of the Maori are thought to have come from China – had their own writing. Thus the ability to read and write does not seem to be an inherently cultural one, but programmed deep inside all humans, perhaps as an extension of the universal ability to speak. Some came to writing early, some late. By the middle of the nineteenth century many Maori were more literate than many Europeans.

That still applies today. The International Adult Literacy Survey, which – alas – is still not fully published, reports that there are almost one and a quarter million New Zealand adults are not competently literate in that they are unable to cope with a varied range of material found in daily life and work. Most of those would be Pakeha/European. However the rates were much higher in the Maori, the Pacific Islanders, and those of other minority ethnicities. About 40 percent of Pakeha are not functionally literate on this measure, but for the other groups the figure is more than 60 percent.

The Survey splits those who are not functionally literate into two groups. The lowest group were those with very poor skills, who experience considerable difficulty using the printed materials that they encounter in daily life. There appears to be about half a million adults in this group. Another three quarters of a million are able to use some printed material, but this would generally be relatively simple.

Most of those with the poorest literacy are Pakeha/European, but the problem is proportionally higher other ethnic groups. The highest reported proportion is the 70 percent of Pacific Islanders born outside New Zealand are at this bottom level.

Other social variables are also related to the poorest literacy level. Women are slightly more functionally literate than men are, although the report mentions that Polynesians men are better at being able to read a document or material using numbers, than the women who are nevertheless better at reading prose.

The least literate are also least likely to be employed, and more likely to have low incomes. The correlation does not tell us that a lack of literacy destines a person to unemployment and poverty, but that seems probable for many. But it would be misleading to concentrate on the unemployed. About 38 percent of the employed are not functionally literate; around 10 percent are in the very lowest group of poor literacy.

The longer at school, the higher the level of literacy although – astonishingly – even 7 percent of those with a tertiary education are among those with the poorest level of literacy. Low schooling is one of the reasons for poorer literacy among the eldest. Even more astonishing it would seem that more 40 percent of those who complete their formal education in recent years are still not attaining functional literacy. That means each year over 20,000 students leave school who are not functionally literate.

In pointing out that we have a half a million New Zealand adults with very poor literacy, and another three quarter of a million adults whose literacy is at best limited, it is not my intention to bash the education system. It has insufficient resources as it is. I suspect, though, much of the system may suffer from what might be called the “English disease”.

A British friend, Professor Sig Prais was intrigued why the German economy was doing so much better than the British one. So he compared the educational attainment of German and English workers. He found that the top of each labour force attained impressively high standards. The difference was that when the bottom half were compared, the German students preformed much better than the British ones. Thus the Germans did not just concentrate on their top students. They made sure that their bottom students also gained good skills. The English education is very successful with elite students too, but it puts much less emphasis on the rest. (It shows in other international comparisons. The International Literacy Survey gets the same conclusion. Germans attain higher literacy standards than the British. I’ll come back to the international comparisons.) In summary it seems that the performance of a country’s top scholars may be less important than the whole team effort.

Does New Zealand have a German or an English approach to education? Many schools are committed to their educationally weaker students. Nevertheless I cannot help noticing that the educational debate is often in terms of the successes at the top of a school. Each year our newspapers publish schools ranked by school certificate or scholarship passes: terribly English really. What we really want to know is about achievement, not attainment: the extent the school takes students with a particular background and improves their performance. A school which takes in students from a diversity of ethnic backgrounds, including immigrants, where many come from poor and social difficult circumstances, where many are – and have been – poor academic achievers, may be very successful in upgrading the skills of its students. But it may not do well in the School Cert stakes.

Do we allocate the resources fairly among the schools with their different mixtures of students? Or do those with easy students get more relative to the task asked to them? All those to whom I have spoken, acknowledge there is some so-called compensatory funding in grants to schools, but it is nowhere near enough.

Let me express a prejudice. There is a dispute between the Ministry of Education and the educational unions over whether some funds should be spent on bulk funding or funding more teachers. Me, this lay person, thinks we should be hiring more teachers. This is not to argue bulk funding is wrong, I am arguing that more teachers at the book face are a priority. Now I am aware of the research which says that smaller classes do not increase educational attainment. But it can still be efficient to use adjunct teachers, to upgrade particular skills of students. Recall that there are over 20,000 students leaving school who are not functionally literate. The argument is about an extra 1200 teachers. That is about 17 students per full time teacher. Those teachers could be used to get literacy standards up among the weakest students, who would leave school better able to function. It would also mean they would get more out of school. They might even stay on longer.

It is no good saying that there are students who will never be literate. It is a much smaller proportion than you might think. For instance 75 percent of adult Swedes are functionally literate, and only 5 percent are at the lowest level. (New Zealand’s figures are just over 50 percent, and almost 20 percent.) If the age effect of those with a poorer education is allowed for, and if recent immigrants are taken out, Sweden must be getting very high rates of effective adult literacy over 90 percent among its young adults. That is the sort of goal we should be setting ourselves.

Putting more resources into raising literacy at school still leaves between half a million and one and a quarter million adults who have left school in a poor state of literacy. That is the place for organizations such the ARLA Federation. But as valiant and noble are your effort – in 1997 you dealt with 8935 students, up 31 percent on your 1996 effort – the 1997 achievement is still less than half the number of not functionally literate students leaving the formal education system in 1997. The numbers of functionally non-literate are probably increasing. There is a sense, you know, that the nation has a literacy crisis, which it does not even know about it, let alone do something about it. This crisis is not self-correcting.

Admittedly the available report of the International Literacy Survey suggests that New Zealand is in the middle of the eleven countries survey surveyed, or perhaps just a little below the average. The report warns that international comparisons are difficult. For the record Sweden, the Netherlands, and (probably) Germany are definitely better than we are; Poland definitely worse. We do worse on document literacy and quantitative literacy than on prose literacy. But to settle for average is hardly a commitment to excellence. Moreover it mat be our place in the ranking is deteriorating. Does such a literacy crisis matter? For instance does poor national literacy affect economic performance? There is some evidence it does.

I have already mentioned the correlation between poor literacy and unemployment and low incomes. The research of Sig Prais supports the conclusion of the importance of everyone doing well in literacy and other school attainments. We also know that poorer countries have lower average literacy. Insofar as other factors – such as technology and sound business systems – drive economic growth, one of the main means of access to them is via reading and writing.

Moreover this week’s visitor, American economist Robert Reich, reminds us at the heart of successful economic development is the quality of the labour supply. Quality labour is high productivity labour; international investors seek it out. Quality labour can read, read better than 38 percent of the New Zealand labour force. Being unable to read instructions is a handicap: for instance being unable read safety instructions leads to accidents. And what about the most famous New Zealand advice of all “when all else fails, read the instructions.” That advice is no use to almost two fifths of the labour force.

Nor must we think about this in static terms. The level of literacy which was sufficient for our grandfather’s workplace is hopelessly inadequate for the workplace of our grandchildren. We talk about the microchip revolution, but what relevance does the revolution have to a person who cannot easily read a screen. While it may liberate the literate, enabling them to attain higher and higher standards of living, the relevance of the computer to those who stumble over reading and writing is surely long term unemployment and poverty.

So economic imperatives require a higher standard of literacy than we are currently producing. But the economy and material production are but means to an end of higher human welfare, and literacy also contributes to other human purposes as well. In the nineteenth century the Maori did not want literacy for the purposes of economic development although, of course, it helped. They learned to read because they wanted access to the bible, to a new way of thinking. And they wrote to pursue their democratic rights. The material output of the economy is important, but culture, spirituality, knowledge, and liberty are all important too. Without literacy the individual loses those opportunities which makes us so inherently human.

That lack of literacy leads to shame, nicely illustrated in a couple of recent important novels: Primary Colours (now a film) and a German novel Die Vorleser, or The Reader. Note I can get in contact their world through books, but they cant use the medium to contact my world.

From that fundamental human rights perspective, as well as the needs of economic development, we – I dont mean the schools, I mean we, the whole of society – have failed to give New Zealanders some of the most fundamental human rights there are, the right to be able to participate fully in the life of their society. There are at least half a million, even one and a quarter million adult New Zealanders who are denied that right.

The Adult Reading and Learning Assistance Federation is committed to giving those rights to New Zealanders, as many as it can organize. In doing so it belongs to a long and honourable tradition, going back to the first missionaries who knew the Maori wanted to be able to read and write, to obtain the benefits of access that literacy provides. In commending your effort, I also say it is not enough. But that is not a criticism of your effort, or of you. It is a condemnation of a nation that has failed to recognize a major internal crisis of so many people who are not functionally literate.

The Green Tiger: The Irish Can Joke About New Zealand

Listener 19 June, 1999

Keywords: Globalisation & Trade; Macroeconomics & Money;

The OECD report on the Irish economy, released this month, is unusually fulsome about their economy, describing its performance as “stunning” and “the envy of countries around the world.” They were referring to the last three years, but they could have been referring to the last fifteen. The accompanying table shows an annual GDP growth rate of 6 percent, high employment and productivity growth, low inflation, a balance of payments surplus, and the almost halving of unemployment.The feat is all the more extraordinary because their economic performance before 1985 was worse than New Zealand’s. Between 1978 and 1985 Irish employment actually fell, consumer inflation was marginally higher than ours, and at 8 percent of GDP the current account deficit was even larger than New Zealand’s is today.

Admittedly the Irish have had some advantages. They are the first stop from the US to the European Union, and English speaking at that, making Ireland attractive to the American business that wanted to produce and distribute in Europe. As a poor member of the EU with a largish agricultural sector it has received substantial subsidies from Brussels, probably amounting to around 5 percent of GDP. But even without these subsidies the current account deficit would still be smaller than New Zealand’s. Their strong growth of imports has been more than covered by stronger export growth.

At the heart of the success has been an open economy strategy. There has been little import protection (being in the EU gave no choice); their growth strategy emphasises exports: and the economy is be open to foreign investment. The Irish have also maintained a firm fiscal and monetary policy, reducing government debt (without depending on privatisation).

This may appear to be the New Zealand strategy also, but there are some important differences. A social consensus covering wages, taxation, and government spending between the social partners (including the unions) and the government has buttressed macroeconomic policy. Monetary policy does not have to be too tight, since the wage path assists the anti-inflation strategy. To help stabilise house prices, the Irish government builds more houses, rather than drives up interest rates. They ran a realistic (and undervalued) real exchange rate.
A second major difference is that Irish microeconomic interventions actively support industry. Direct support includes grants to new business, tax breaks, and industry incentives. Indirect support includes active labour market interventions, and a strong educational system. (The OECD appears to commend the introduction of free third-level education.)

The third major difference is that while New Zealand concentrated upon opening up its economy financially, including selling off New Zealand firms, the Irish focus has been on foreign direct investment building new businesses. (That New Zealand produces relatively more commerce graduates, whereas the Irish produce relatively more science and engineering degrees, reflects this difference.)

Compared to the New Zealand policy stance, the Irish spend more on active labour market policies, and have higher social security rates, higher direct tax rates, and more on government spending. In other words the Irish just about reverse all the rules we are told are necessary for New Zealand to improve its economic performance. Humiliatingly for those who promised us an economic miracle by following the policies opposite to the Irish ones, the New Zealand economic performance has been dismal compared to their’s. In the last 15 years Irish GDP has grown 80 percent more than New Zealand, and it now has an average level of production above the European Union per capita average.

The New Zealand Race Relations Commissioner discourages jokes against the Irish. Look at the table and wonder if his Dublin equivalent prohibits jokes about the New Zealand economy.

ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE: 1985-1998
Average % p.a 1985-1998 change unless otherwise stated.

Performance
Indicator
New
Zealand
Ireland OECD
GDP Volume 1.7 6.0 2.7
Employment 0.8 2.2 1.2
Labour
Productivity
0.9 3.8 1.5
Consumer Prices 4.6 2.6 5.5
Export Volume 3.9 11.7 6.9
Import Volume 5.3 9.8 7.2
Current Account*
Deficit
3.9 -0.8+ 0.2
Unemployment 1986** 4.0 16.8 7.1
Unemployment 1998** 8.2 8.9 6.5

* percent of GDP (average for 1985-1998)
** percent of labour force
+ surplus

Who Should Be Treated? Interferon-β for Multiple Sclerosis

Presentation to Information Workshop on Disease Moderating Agents, sponsored by the Multiple Sclerosis Society of New Zealand: Thursday 17 June 1999.

Keywords Health

The Public Policy Context

Public policy is about problem solving. The specific problem I shall look at today is who with multiple sclerosis should be able to obtain access to Interferon-beta therapy? But public policy answers to such questions have to take place from a wider perspective. Resolving the public spending problem on multiple sclerosis has to take place mindful of the tradeoffs with other public spending (including on other diseases) and the raising of the revenue (typically via taxation) to fund them. There has to be a consistency between the specific answers, for otherwise the various decisions – the resolutions to the problems – becomes a matter of arbitrariness, creating ongoing tensions (and further problems) because of inconsistencies.

Each democracy solves its public policy questions differently in terms of the institutions it uses, and technologies it uses for evaluation. There is however, considerable convergence between different countries’ practices. The New Zealand arrangements I am going to describe today would be recognized as similar to those in most western democracies – the US, with its emphasis on commercial principles excepted although they may be at different stages of implementing the systematic practices.

At this point, I should state that I am neither a neurologist nor a pharmacologist, so I know very little about these aspects of the treatments considered here. My contribution is to say something about the resource consequences of the use. I shall be using published papers, each typically by a team which includes a neurologist, a pharmacologist and an economist. If my task were to do an original evaluation, I would work with such a team too.

The registration of pharmaceuticals, is medical-pharmacological matter, which among other matters considers safety aspects of the drug. Once a drug is registered, it is available for a treatment. Registration provides no guarantees of universal accessibility if the drug is expensive. Those who can afford the drug may purchase it. Aspirin is available from a chemist. However many drugs – especially new drugs – may be far too expensive for the typical sufferer to afford. At which point arises the public policy problem of whether it should be funded in whole, or part, by the public purse.

The Funding of Public Health Care

A simplified version of the public policy towards the funding of health care goes like this. At the top of the system the government decides how much it is willing to spend on all its activities. That decision depends largely on the amount of taxation revenue it raises, and on a judgement of the effects of various tax rates and the willingness of the community to pay those taxes.

There is no value-free formulae which tells a government how much it should tax or spend. In a democracy that decision is made by the political judgements of the government in power. Once every three years we have the opportunity to vote for a parliament to select a government. One of the factors which influences our voting is our personal preference for more or less government spending and less or more taxation. Within the period between elections, the government is continually judging the extent to which the public in general, and its supporters and potential supporters in particular, want to spend and tax more or less.

Having decided on total spending, the government allocates it between the various general areas, including health. For instance, in last month’s budget the government announced total spending of about $36.4 billion for this fiscal year, of which $6.8 billion it allocated to health spending. Again there is no rigorous formula which says how much the government should allocate to health or any other spending. That is a matter of political judgement.

I have stressed these political judgements at upper levels, because as the money moves down through the system, technical considerations become increasingly important, and politicians become increasingly less involved. That is how it should be in a democracy. We do not want politicians making the decisions in the clinic or surgery. Even so, technical decisions almost always value judgements lurking near them.

Reflecting the changing balance of political and technical, parliament decides the amount of the health vote which goes to the Health Funding Authority which funds (in the jargon “purchases”) the various health and disability services the public health sector provides. This year the amount is about $6.2 billion. The HFA allocates about $700 million to Pharmac or the Pharmaceutical Management Agency, which is charged with administering the public subsidies on about 3000 pharmaceuticals.

Pharmac’s Problem

The policy problem which Pharmac faces is how to use its funds effectively. Some of its actions are fairly obvious. It buys drugs as cheaply as possible. It tries to make sure the drugs it pays for actually work. It tries to make sure they are not wasted. Even when such sensible things are done, the demand for medication far exceeds the funds that Pharmac has available.

I am now going to try to explain the policy framework which Pharmac is increasingly using to decide which drugs to fund, given the budget constraint it faces. The underlying theory is complex, although I have done my best to keep the exposition as simple as I dare. Some readers may find it convenient to jump three pages, accepting that there is a criteria, and the ratio of the Net Cost to Quality Adjusted Life Year (or QALY) is a rational way of making the decision whether to fund a drug or not. However others will value the opportunity to obtain some idea as to the underlying analysis behind the theory.

The (over) simple example is set out in the Table 1. It assumes there are just 10 drugs (Column 1) to be funded, which in total cost $55m (Column 2). But suppose there is only a total of $20m available for funding. How is the $20m to be spent given that the demand for funds far exceeds those funds available?

There are many possible rules, some of which have developed in an ad hoc way over the years. For instance, the “grandfather rule” is that if the treatment had applied in the past it should continue into the future. Whatever its merits – much of today’s treatments are grandfathered rather than using any systematic approach – the rule does not tell us how to decide between new therapies.

Another approach might be called the “shout principle”: those who make the most noise get the treatment. There are a number of dangers: given all the shouting, no-one may be heard, however justified their need; it is an encouragement for political interference in technical decisions; and it can be very wasteful of resources.

To illustrate, suppose that therapies are chosen in order to have the maximum number of people treated – since loudness is in numbers. That is equivalent to allocating the funds by cost per patient (or shout). Column 3 shows the cost per patient for each therapy. Table 2 ranks the drugs by cost per patient. Drug A costs $10 a patient, cheaper than any other, so the rule would fund the 1,000,000. Drugs E and G are the next to lowest in cost per patient terms, so they are funded. The three cost $20m, and exhaust all the available funds. On the shout criteria, the drugs A, E, and G would be funded.

There is absolutely no allowance in this assessment for the benefits of the treatment. For instance, drug A may be something like an aspirin, which is of small benefit to a lot of people. In contrast drug H might be a matter of life and death – if the patient does not get it the patient dies. Intuitively one feels that drug H should be given more significance than drug A, but the cost per patient criteria does not take that into consideration.

QALYS and Decision Making

In order to get around the problem of treatments having different benefits, economists have evolved the QALY, or “quality adjusted life year”. QALYs work like this. A person living a normal life, in normal health, has a QALY of 1. A person who is dead has a QALY of zero. People whose health is between have a QALY level between 1 and 0. If a person’s health changes, then the QALY level also changes. For instance a person who is saved from certain death has a QALY level of 1 rather than 0, and a treatment that saves is treated as adding one QALY a year to the person’s life. Calculating QALYs is complicated and riddled with problems. Let us take it here that they are a reasonable way of resolving the impossible problem of comparing everybody’s health. We know no better one.(1)

Historically, a common means of measuring the effects of Multiple Sclerosis has been by the Kurtzke expanded disability status scale (EDSS) of neurological impairment on a 0 (normal) to 10 (dead) scale, based on responses to 20 questions. The EDSS scale can be mapped onto a QALY one, which applies to all health statuses.(2)

Column 4 of Table 1 shows the QALY gained from the treatment for each patient. The aspirin of drug A gives only a small gain of .0001 QALY per patient, but the life saving drug H treatment gives a gain of 1 QALY. The gains for the other drugs are in the range from .1 to .4 QALYs. Column 5 gives the total QALYs gained from each treatment, and Column 6 gives the cost of each QALY gained. They range from $6000 for drug H to $500,000 for Drug I. If we want to maximize the QALYs to be gained from treatment, we will choose those which are cheapest in terms of the cost per QALY. This is summarised in Table 3, where you see that drugs D,E,G and H are the cheapest and there total cost is $20m. So if we choose our therapies by the criteria of QALY gained, we replace the low return drug A (the aspirin) with drugs D and life saving H which seems to be a more sensible outcome.

There is one further major modification to the Pharmac evaluation method. Some therapies save resources elsewhere in the health system. For instance, a course of Interferon-β may mean fewer relapses, and less use of medical and hospital resources. Column 8 of Table 1 lists the cost savings to the health system for the various therapies, Column 9 shows the net total cost to the health system when the savings per patient are deducted. It makes sense to include these cost savings in the calculations. For instance, without them the method could rule out a better and cheaper drug therapy for a particular condition, because it would ignore the savings from abandoning the old therapy. So instead of using gross cost per QALY, we would use net cost per QALY, which is shown in Column 10.

Table 4 shows the rankings. Now drug J is the cheapest, and that with drugs H, D, G, and F would be the recommended ones. However, while their gross cost is $20m, their net cost (after we have deducted the savings to the health sector) comes to only $12.2m. We can now also afford drug E, and still have a bit over for some spending on drug C.(3)

Table 5 summarises the outcomes of different choice of drugs within the budget constraint. By changing the selection criteria we change the set of drugs which the agency would provide free. As the criteria moves from gross medical cost per patient to cost per QALY, drug A gets dropped in favour of D and H. Shifting to net medical cost enables drugs F, G, and part C to be added.

What is unavoidable however, is that given the budget constraint a selection has to be made, and that some selections are better than others.

Some Problems with the Method

I have simplified the method for expository purposes. However there are some issues which are still being debated and need to be briefly mentioned:

– Should other net gains to government revenue (such as savings in social security benefits and additional tax payments from working) be included? But we need to be careful about the implications. For instance, incorporating the gains from employment could mean that the potentially employed were given preference to the unemployable.

– Should non-government gains (such as the extra earnings of a well person) be include? We have to be careful here not to double count, since the quality of life includes the consumption which goes with it. Moreover, too wide an approach can lead to ethical issues: if some illnesses cause marital breakups, which treatment prevents, does that mean the treatment should preferentially be given to the married?

– Are all QALYs are the same? Some surveys suggest that people think some lives have characteristics (such as age) which are more worthy.

– How are the effects of the treatment on the quality of life of others to be included? For instance there is a case for a higher QALY score of parents with young children, because it improves the young’s quality of life too (or adding in a QALY for the better life of a child without a sick parent).

– Should low probability health events (such as MS) be treated differently from high probability ones (headaches)? Part of the issue here is what costs can be reasonably attributed to the person. We dont give higher social security benefits to people who need to more to eat.

– What about moral hazard, the technical term for situations which affect one’s health or entitlement to treatment? Most people would be more reluctant to provide aspirins for a headache precipitated by a hangover, which the patient’s drinking brought it on.

– How events that take place over time to be treated?. The technical notion is “discounting”: there is some dispute over what is the correct discount factor. Different ones may affect the relative ranking of wasting diseases such as multiple sclerosis compared to one-off gains from surgery.

These are proper matters for debate. Very often they will reduce the cost per treatment but not change the rankings. Whatever the outcome of these debates, I doubt they will have much influence of the question of the funding of Interferon-β therapy. And they certainly do not invalidate the need for an approach which involves a systematic decision rule.

In Defence of Pharmac

After presentations such as this, economists are often accused of being calculating and hard hearted. Calculating we are, just like engineers who design bridges you can trust. In the economists’ jargon the calculations are to get “as big a bang for the buck as possible.” Without them there will be a waste of resources, and less people would be effectively treated.

But economists are not necessarily hard-hearted. What we are aware is that where there is a budget constraint, being warm hearted to one means being cold hearted to others. It is a sad truism that people allege cold heartedness when they are turned down, but dont mention a warm heart if they are given a “yes”. Economists dont push into health policy because they are intelligent, beautiful, witty, wise, or power hungry. They may (or may not) be some (or all) of these. The reason economists get involved because of the funding constraint. Were there no economists, the government’s health agencies would still face the problem of what to do with limited funds. Eventually someone would recommend a prioritisation not unlike that which economists recommend.

My impression of the economists and others who work for Pharmac is that they would love to be able to say “yes” to everyone. They, too, have friends and family who suffer illness but are unable to get the maximum treatment for conditions they suffer, because of the budget constraint. Of course they are tough. They have to be, when they say “no” to one treatment because the funds could be better spent on another. And they have to be tough when the front up to a pharmaceutical company to get the best possible price, knowing the money saved can be spent on other drugs.

The Threshold

In practice, Pharmac does not do the elaborate exercise I have just described, for that would mean evaluating every drug therapy every time a new drug appears. Rather they calculate the net cost to QALY ratio of each new drug, and compare the ratio with that for other drugs. This is equivalent to a “threshold” approach where if the cost per QALY of a new drug is below the base threshold it is subsidised. Usually there is a grey area, where drugs with ratios above the base threshold up to a second higher threshold, where other factors not included in the Cost per QALY consideration are taken into account.

Looking at Table 4, the lower threshold might be $10,000. If the ratio comes below that, and Pharmac has the money, they are likely to recommend to the provision of the drug without charge to the patient. In the grey area, say up to $20,000, they are likely to say no, unless there are some other relevant considerations.

Pharmac has not said what its thresholds are. Essentially they are the consequence of the amount that parliament provides for health care. The more money voted, the higher the thresholds, and the more drugs and other treatments that can be funded by the public. However, we can guess the Pharmac thresholds must be near $20,000 a QALY. That is about the average (public and private) consumption per New Zealander. If, for instance, the threshold was $200,000 a year, then ten people in the community would have to give up all their consumption in order to gain one QALY. It seems unlikely that New Zealanders would be willing to accept the taxation consequences (and their personal consumption loss) of such a high threshold. Thus the technical threshold for evaluating the drug ratio reflects a political judgement at a higher level.

(Even so, I am of the view that there is a case for spending about an extra $500m a year on the health sector, in terms of what New Zealanders are willing to sacrifice, and the substantial health improvements which would arise as a result.)

The Net Cost to QALY Ratio for Interferon-β

Although there has been no New Zealand specific evaluation of the costs per QALY for Interferon-β treatment for multiple sclerosis, there are four foreign reports in the public domain, which give us a strong indication of what a New Zealand analysis would look like. They identify two key benefits from the treatment, where it is applicable (noting that there is no evidence those with primary MS benefit from the drug). Among those with its relapse-remission from it appears that as a result of using Interferon-β:
– there are (perhaps a third) fewer relapses, which saves medical costs and gives a better quality of life;
– the progression of the disease is retarded. However, not a lot is know about the long run retardation, mainly because the systematic evaluation of the treatment is recent, so there has not been enough time to observe its effects in the long run. Trials have been at most three years, and there may never be long term trials because of the ethical issues involved.

Here is a brief summary of each, focusing on the key efficiency finding:

A Therapeutic and Economic Assessment of Betaseron@ in Multiple Sclerosis. (Dalhousie MS Research Unit, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada: July 1996)
The net cost/QALY of the Betaseron® therapy amounts to around $CAN160,000 (say $NZ200,000) for women and $CAN136,000 ($NZ170,000) for men.

Interferon Beta-1a in Relapsing-Remitting Multiple Sclerosis. (The Wessex Institute for Health Research and Development: December 1997)
The net cost/QALY of the Interferon Beta-1a therapy amounts to between £740,000 and £5.5m ($NZ2.1m and $NZ16.5m). The report concludes “not proven”, the lowest level of its five recommendations.

Comparison of Drug Treatment for Multiple Sclerosis. (Canadian Coordinating Office for Health Technology Assessment: November 1998)
The net cost/QALY of the Rebfin® therapy amounts to at least $CAN406,400 ($NZ.500,000).

A Cost-Utility Analysis of Interferon Beta for Multiple Sclerosis. (University of Newcastle: December 1997)
The net cost/QALY of the Interferon Beta therapy amounts to between £228,300 and £809.900 ($NZ680,000 to $NZ2.4m). This study, the most comprehensive, looks at various retardation rates and reports “[t]he most optimistic estimate from the ten year model, incorporating some extreme assumptions about natural history and the impact of therapy was £74.500 [$NZ220,000] per QALY gained.”

These are all very high figures – the lowest is around $200,000 per QALY, well beyond any likely threshold that Pharmac (that means “us”) can afford. I was asked to look at doing a New Zealand study, which would have applied New Zealand parameters to these studies. My advice to the MS Society was that they would be wasting their money, because whatever changes were made, the ratio would remain well out of line with any Pharmac threshold.

Why is Interferon-β so cost ineffective? An examination of the studies suggests that:
1. Interferon is expensive – treatment costs about $20,000 a year;
2. It is ongoing treatment (rather that a one-off therapy – like surgery);
3. The average reductions in other medical costs are relatively small. For instance, while there are medical savings from fewer relapses, one study estimated that the saving was only 31 percent of the cost of the drug.
4. The therapy is ineffective for many people, and it does not eliminate all relapses. The studies assume that it is not possible to discriminate between those who will benefit and those who wont, and so – as it were – much of the expensive shot is wasted.
5. The health (quality of life) gains are on average relatively small per dollar spent.

It appears that in our current state of knowledge, the gains from reducing relapses are insufficient to justify Pharmac subsidizing the medication. Ultimately the justification is likely to be from better targeting on those with a high relapse rate (because that may reduce high hospitalisation and other medical costs), but the big gains arise if the progressivity is greatly retarded, especially with better targeting. Only further trials will tell if we have been too pessimistic.

In the longer run, we can expect neurologists and pharmacologists to refine their administration of the therapy to get improved patient benefits, while the drugs themselves will improve, and their costs reduce. The net cost to QALY ratio is likely to lower steadily overtime. Unless someone finds an better drug, Interferon-β may eventually be made widely available without charge by Pharmac or its successor. But that date is some time away.

A Strategy for Accessing Interferon-β for Multiple Sclerosis

What is clear is that Pharmac is not going to be funding the drug to all potential beneficiaries (no matter how small the benefit) in the near future. What is to be done in the interim? I am assuming that the MS Society will not want to do nothing, nor would it waste it time by trying to bust the policy framework.

It appears that in most countries where there is MS, make Interferon-β available for some patients without charge. But given the greatly varying utilisation rates, they must have quite different rules about its use. This suggests that New Zealand will also settle on a selective rather than universal entitlement.

The criteria for selection needs to be designed primarily by neurological and pharmacological specialists, but with a clear view of the implications of the policy framework analysis which I have outlined above. Pharmac will be most responsive to a criteria which targets those:
– who are most likely to respond to the treatment; and
– who have highest relapse rates or otherwise incur relatively high health sector expenditure; and
– who are likely to experience high retardation of the progressive deterioration; and
– where there are rigorous and effective criteria for identify those who are not responding to treatment, and should have the treatment withdrawn. (Alternatively a trial followed by selection as to those who are successful may be an option.)
Basically we should be searching for practices which cut therapeutic costs (of both the drug and of other therapies), and/or which increase the efficacy of the therapy in terms of some concept as the EDSS or QALYs.

There may also be personal factors which may affect eligibility for treatment (as occurs for the surgical waiting lists). One which may be especially relevant to a MS, with its high initial incidence among young women, is that parenthood should be taken into account, since success will also benefit the quality of life of young children.

Ultimately the criteria could even end up with a points system, like in surgery eligibility.

However, I would not wish to raise the expectations of the MS Society and its members that there will be a lot of people eligible under this criteria. Because funds are so scarce, Pharmac is more likely to look favourably on a proposition involving 25 people than 450.

If I may end on a personal note. I usually enjoy my consultancy work. This case is an exception. It gives me no pleasure to have to be so pessimistic about the short term opportunities for moderating the condition of people suffering a debilitating disease like multiple sclerosis. But that is how the material available to me appears. I would have even less enjoyment if I had used my expertise to tell the sufferers an untruth.

Endnotes
1. There are alternative proposals, such as Disability Adjusted Life Years (or DALYs), but they are not as nearly convincing as QALYs. They would not change the story greatly. Pharmac, rightly in my opinion, uses QALYs.
2. One contribution at the seminar argued that QALYs are not yet well defined for neurological problems.
3. I am not sure whether the HFA directly gives over to Pharmac the savings to the rest of the health sector from the use of pharmaceuticals. However, what we can be sure is that insofar as Pharmac increases its contribution to the rest of the health sectors savings, the HFA will increase Pharmac’s budget in due course.

When Things Go Bump: Is Monetary Union a Help or a Hindrance?

Listener 5 June 1999

Keywords: Macroeconomics & Money;

The Cook Islands lost 13 percent of its population in the last two years, about the same as New Zealand losing Christchurch. The economy suffered some severe external shocks – mainly from New Zealand – which contracted the economy. The government tried to spend its way out of the crisis, ran out of foreign currency, and the consequential cuts plunged the economy into depression and unemployment.

Given the severity of the shocks, the Cooks were bound to face economic difficulties. But different policy responses can moderate the impact to different degrees. Because they were in a kind of monetary union with New Zealand – the Cook Island dollar is at parity and freely exchangeable with the New Zealand one – they were unable to change their exchange rate. Instead there was a reduction in national spending and a rise in unemployment was one. Because the Cooks are in a labour market union with New Zealand – the Islanders may readily come here – a major adjustment was through emigration.

New Zealand regions experience similar external shocks to the Cooks. But the local government in, say, Christchurch, in monetary union with the rest of New Zealand, knows it cannot spend its way out of a contraction. However the region is also in a nation wide fiscal union, paying taxes and receiving government spending. When its businesses close, the workers go onto the unemployment benefit and the tax drain lessens. The Christchurch contraction would not be as severe for the same shock as the Cook Islands’.

The recent rhetoric advocating monetary union has paid little attention to external shocks or how to adjust to them. Over the last thirty years New Zealand has had major ones (good and bad) in 1971-2, 1973-4, 1979, 1981, 1984, 1986, 1987, 1991, 1993, and 1997-8, including export price collapses, oil price shocks, the international world business cycle, and world financial chaos. I have probably overlooked some, but the record is an average of one every three years or less. If New Zealand’s economy is a ship buffeted by stormy seas, many of the arguments for monetary union assume that the sea is calm. As Keynes said “economists set themselves too easy a task if in tempestuous seasons they can only tell us when the storm is long past the ocean is flat again.”

Forming a monetary union with Australia or the US (or Pantagonia, for the advocates seem not to care with whom), would mean give up the ability to use monetary and exchange rate policies to assist the adjustment with the external shocks. But there would be no fiscal union, and there is no labour market union with the US. We would be better off by being a state of either country. It is true there is not full fiscal union in the European Union (there is labour market union) but there is a supranational political system and there are central funds. If, for instance, there was a disease which destroyed the olive crop of its Mediterranean members (equivalent to foot and mouth disease here), the European Union would switch its funding to help the devastated regions adjust.

If there can be no emigration and no fiscal inflow, monetary union forces a region to adjust by reducing its domestic price level. We simply do not know how to induce deflation on top of an already contracting economy without causing a depression. I am not saying that with independent monetary and exchange rate policies, a country can avoid the pain from a large detrimental external shock. The Cook Island’s are bound to suffer a major and painful adjustment. But not having available the full range of policy instruments is like turning up to fight a big fire with a fireman or two short.

Whatever the nationalist reasons for monetary independence – for having one’s own currency – if there were significant gains to be made from monetary union, the task would be to redefine our nationhood in terms of a country without its own money. Its a challenge many European nations and sub-nations are facing. But monetary union without full economic union makes the ship easier to manage in calm waters. The concern is its seaworthiness in storms. That probably means sailing under its own flag.

View from Abroad: What Do We Know About Economic Growth?

Listener 22 May, 1999

Keywords: Growth & Innovation;

Even a good scientific theory experiences anomalies which it cannot explain. Resolving those aberrations eventually leads to a better theory. However ideologists prefer certainty to complexity and ignore inconsistencies. An article in the April 10 London Economist – the world’s top economics weekly and prominent upholder of “more market” – nicely illustrates the phenomenon.

Although it is not as extreme as our commercialisers, The Economist regularly praises the US economy for being more market driven and more flexible. But when it looked at actual outcomes, comparing the US with the other two big economies of Germany and Japan, to its (suppressed) horror, it found that the US performance was not superior. I have shown their figures for the last decade below. (I added New Zealand’s.) US production per head has grown more slowly than Germany despite the German’s difficulties of absorbing the shambolic East German economy, and about the same as Japan, despite everyone muttering that Japan is in permanent recession. Its labour market performance is better, with more job growth (US unemployment is down to a miraculously low 4.5 percent of the labour force), but that is because its productivity performance is miserable. (New Zealand shows the same pattern of relatively high employment growth which is offset by poor productivity and miserable per capita growth.)

does not defend the US by arguing that the most technologically advanced and highest income economy in the world suffers because others have a catchup effect, as they cheaply imitate the US. Nor does it argue that economies with large service sectors find productivity growth difficult, because the expanding service sector tends to have low productivity (the so called McJobs effect). Both are relevant, although they do not seem to explain all – or even the large part – of the inconsistency.

One answer may be that the flexibility of the market is not as crucial as is claimed. (This is a different argument from that the market outcomes are inferior: that belongs to another column.) Arguably, economic actors need some stability in their economic decision making, and an un-intervened market is too volatile. One might illustrate this on the shop floor, where the Employment Contracts Act gave managers a high degree of labour force flexibility, but the insecurity means the workers lose their commitment to the employer, which may reduce their productivity. Microeconomic policy becomes a matter of finding the right balance to allow sufficient flexibility to enable firms to seize opportunities and deal with crises, but not so much that normal performance suffers.

The article dismisses some anecdotal explanations where a special factor favours one economy over the other. Indeed The Economist – like this columnist – thinks some of recent US economic growth is based on a speculative bubble, so perhaps their US figures are misleadingly high. Instead, it argues that macroeconomic policy – monetary, fiscal (and in a small economy like New Zealand) exchange rate policy – are as important. Or even more so: the article is a vague at this point. It is not arguing that microeconomic policy is irrelevant. It would probably agree with my view that macroeconomic policy works better if there is some flexibility in the economy.

But below The Economist’s concerns of the poor productivity performance of the US economy is an unspoken question: what do we actually know about the process of economic growth? One theory says that by reducing government interventions, abolishing protection, reducing taxation, an economy will grow faster. (It is the theory that the reforms from 1984 was based on.) The supporting empirical evidence is not very compelling: much begins by assuming the theory works (the ideologists’ approach), rather than testing it (the scientists’). The more I look at the evidence the more I am struck with how little we know, especially in contrast to how confidently ideologists present their conclusions. This is not to back down from the central theme of my book, In Stormy Seas: the Postwar New Zealand Economy, which argues that the economic growth of a small open multi-sectoral economy is intimately related to the effectiveness of its export and import substituting sector. What it does not explain is the economic growth of the world economy. But neither can The Economist.

What The Economist said about New Zealand

New Zealand is only referred to twice:

“Even New Zealand’s mode, of which The Economist has been a big fan, has been looking somewhat sickly: it was the only rich country besides Japan that suffered from recession last year.”

“Radical reforms in the 1980s transformed the rich world’s most regulated and closed economy into one of the most free-market, with [one of] the lowest tax, lowest trade barriers and widespread privatisation. Bad point: a big increase in inequality.”

Most will agree an increase in inequality is bad. But The Economist overlooks that we have not done too well in the economic growth, productivity, or employment stakes either.

THE GROWTH STATISTICS (1989-1998)
(percent annual growth rates)

Country GDP/head Productivity Employment
Germany 1.8 2.5 0.0
Japan 1.7 1.1 0.8
US 1.5 1.2 1.3
New Zealand 0.6 0.5 1.3

Means to an End: Social Radicals Who Are Fiscal Conservatives

Listener 8 May 1999

Keywords: Macroeconomics & Money;

Michael Cullen and Helen Clark are fiscal conservatives. They think there is a practical constraint to the size of the government’s budget deficit: they may well prefer it to be in a surplus. While they may think, as sophisticate Keynesians, the size of the deficit should vary over the business cycle as a part of demand management, in the long run they see the internal deficit as constrained. However much of their Labour Party are not fiscal conservatives. In government, already evidently in opposition, Labour will face tensions because much of their caucus – even the cabinet – are not so committed to fiscal austerity.

Understandably, for Labour sees a run down public sector under severe expenditure restraints and observes the resulting harm to New Zealanders that results. Spending more on culture, education, the environment, health, housing, industry assistance, law and order, public infrastructure, science research, social security, and so on would relieve the pressures. Moreover, there is a crude Keynesianism which seems to suggest there is no limit on the size of the government deficit or, if there is, it is substantially larger than the current level. If so the policy prescription seems to be to spend more and run a larger deficit.

The argument for fiscal conservative requires greater sophistication. How is a larger deficit to be financed? Pure credit creation (increasing the money supply or zero interest loans from the Reserve Bank), either blows out through spending on imports (and a balance of payments crisis) or through inflationary pressures (or both). (The Cook Islands is an illustration of that path) Borrowing leads to higher interest rates and an increasing public debt burden. Either path ultimately leads to severe fiscal austerity.

The reason I have focused on Cullen and Clark – other fiscal conservatives include Bill Birch and Bill English – is they are confronting the dilemma. Both believe, like the rest of the Labour Party, that there are substantial benefits from additional government spending. To fund it fiscal conservatives have to raise taxes. Labour has announced that if in government it will raise taxes on high income individuals (over $60,000 a year) to raise an extra $400m a year. They have also stated their spending priorities for this extra funding. (They can tell you which.) It is disappointing that the resulting public debate focused almost exclusively upon the higher taxes, ignoring government spending.

It is easy to argue that taxation is a bad thing, and if it were only a matter of raising taxes – which is much the way the public discussion is presented – that would be true. But if there is a purpose to the additional taxation, the argument is transformed. Now the debate is about the adequacy of public provision, and the amount of private consumption we are willing to sacrifice to have that public consumption
.
For example, Jenny Shipley, as Minister of Health gave a direction that 90 percent of New Zealanders were to be within an hour of an emergency treatment at a hospital. The Alliance Party’s hospital plan adopts that target (actually 91 percent will be within 80kms of the service). I spend most of my time within an hour existing emergency services. Probably I would average not more than week a year away from them. Other New Zealanders are not so well off. So the choice posed is whether I am prepared to pay an extra 50 cents a week in taxation for the extra coverage I’d get, plus the benefits to others worse off than me. (Private health insurance cannot provide it so cheaply.)

What is the response of the average New Zealander to this choice? Do they prefer the current hospital configuration and tax levels, or do they prefer a more comprehensive one and are willing to pay for it with higher taxes? The choice we are being offered is about the balance between public and private consumption, not more or less taxation. All New Zealanders will have an opportunity to express their choices in the next general election, providing the politicians are principled enough to present the alternatives before us honestly.

Possibilities: Could New Zealand Have a Financial Crisis?

Listener 24 April 1999.

Keywords: Macroeconomics & Money;

If it were possible to predict the precise timing of a financial crisis, everyone would take precautions, and precipitate an earlier one. However the footnote has three lists of indicators. My scorecard for New Zealand gives 5 out 8 for macroeconomic performance factors and 5 out of 7 for macroeconomic policy factors (although some of our policy changes were more than a decade ago). But for microeconomic conditions (which the conventional wisdom says is the more important), I reckon it is 0 out of 8 (assuming reasonably competent bank management – who can tell until after the event?). Moreover, with one small exception all New Zealand banks are owned overseas. Megabank International will quickly and quietly bail out Megabank New Zealand if gets it into trouble, to protect its reputation elsewhere.

Non-banking financial institutions which take deposits have a higher (although still usually low) likelihood of difficulties. The rules of capitalism are that, under a liberalized financial system, the odd financial institution will occasionally go bust. That is why some pay higher interest rates – a premium for risk – and why prudent investors never put all their eggs in a single institution.

Other factors could damage the New Zealand financial system. Because the New Zealand dollar floats we wont get into the difficulties like those with a fixed currency regime. A currency collapse is unlikely to hit our banks directly, since they limit their foreign exchange exposure. But they lend to importers and non-bank financial institutions which may be more exposed. The same broadly applies if there was a sharemarket collapse. If a disruption is sufficiently great, who can be sure what will happen?

The New Zealand financial system cannot isolate itself from a systemic international financial collapse. The world has evolved a variety of institutions (such as the IMF, the Bank of International Settlements, and the G7) to prevent a repeat of the 1930s, but the international financial system has also got more complex. The recent performance of the IMF and others suggests they may not be able to cope with a full blow out.

Between the local and the global possibilities is that of “contagion” where financial disruption in one country spills over into others as investors “reassess risks” (i.e. panic). New Zealand seems to have benefited from the contagion effect of the East Asian crisis as some international investors treated us as a safe haven. (We are, of course, suffering from a loss of export markets.) But were Australia to get into financial trouble, so would New Zealand, despite the protestations (and fact) that we are different.

What to do? Many consider the Reserve Bank’s system of prudential supervision is the best available. Even so, it cannot guarantee every depositor’s dollar in every financial institution. Moreover until it is tested by a rip-roaring financial disturbance we cannot be sure how it will work. Improvements would be to limit speculative capital flows, without disrupting long term capital flows. But no one knows how to do so effectively. (Better macroeconomic performance would also help.)

What is the individual depositor to do? Putting money into an overseas bank exposes it to similar risks. You could invest in the sharemarket, but a sharemarket crash is much more likely than a financial one. Put the money under your bed? There is the danger of burglary, fire, or nuclear war.

It would be irresponsible of this column to conclude there was no chance of a financial meltdown in New Zealand. Life is about risk: true for one’s savings too. Even during the secure 1970s they were being systematically undermined by inflation. In today’s world there is a non-zero probability of one’s savings being slashed by a financial crash, instead of being eroded by creeping price rises.

FACTORS COMMONLY ASSOCIATED WITH BANKING CRISES

1. Macroeconomic Performance
Low GDP growth
High real interest rates
High inflation
High stock of money relative to international currency reserves
High private credit relative to GDP
High credit growth
An external (current account of the balance of payments) deficit
Low GDP per capita

2. MACROECONOMIC POLICY
Financial opening (domestic financial market liberalisation)
Opening to external capital (freeing up international capital flows)
Currency appreciation
Disinflation
Trade liberalisation
Fiscal expansion (increase in internal, or government, deficit)
Domestic credit expansion

3. MICROECONOMIC CONDITIONS
Deficient bank management: poor credit assessment & monitoring, poor internal risk management & risk controls, strained credit assessment skills
Connected lending: loans extended to banks’ owners, managers, and related businesses. (sometimes called “cronyism”)
Poor supervision or regulation (by the financial authorities)
Deficient market oversight
Political interference (which often involves cronyism)
Weak judiciary
Fraud
Deposit insurance (which encourages poor bank management, and cronyism)

What Happened to the Nation Building State in New Zealand?

Paper for the New Zealand & Australian Studies section of the Conference of the Western Social Sciences Association, April 21-24 1999, Fort Worth, Texas.

Keywords: History of Ideas, Methodology & Philosophy;

Brent McClintock’s “Gordon Coates and the Nation-Building State: 1920-1935”, which precedes this paper, also sets its stage. [1] In the interwar period there arose a group of New Zealanders who were committed to use the instruments of the state to build a New Zealand nation distinctive and independent (as much as it could be). Coates may have been the earliest, but numerous other New Zealanders in politics, the public service, corporations, and cultural life also participated. Most are recognized in The Dictionary of New Zealand Biography and many have full biographies published or in the process of being written: politicians Peter Fraser, Apirana Ngata, and Walter Nash (as well as Coates); public servants Clarence Beeby, Joe Heenan, Alistair McIntosh, Douglas Robb, and Bill Sutch; businessmen James Fletcher and James Wattie; writer Rex Fairburn and Frank Sargeson (with prominent artists coming a little later). Even so, acknowledging such great totara trees but locates the bush over which they towered: that bush below was dense with others equally committed to the nation building state. Curiously, there are no obvious women for the list. The tallest was Te Puea, but her vision was to build the Tainui nation.

The influence of most of these men continued through the war, and well into the post-war era. They had successors, some of whom grew to totara of comparable height. Nation building was a central part of the political agenda through to the early 1980s. There is not the place to detail the story, but the strength of nation building might be illustrated by Robert Muldoon’s “Think Big” energy industrialisation strategy which was intended to use the energy surplus that developed in the late 1970s to make New Zealand a significant player in the world energy: an ambition which failed, but here is a useful illustration of the persistence of the nation building vision.

This papers focus is on economic policy, and in particular the dramatic collapse of the nation building vision in the 1980s. This collapse did not necessarily occur in other fields. New Zealand’s commitment to a nuclear free territory was a continuation of a theme of an independent foreign policy which goes back to the 1930s nation builders who challenged the Italian invasion of Abyssinia in 1938 and made significant contributions to the development of the United Nations immediately after the war. The arts flourish, and while their practitioners take a vigorous interest in overseas developments, none of the greatest trees could be said to suffer a cultural cringe, even though they win international recognition.

The decisive change in economic direction – of the conception of what constitutes a national economy – could be demonstrated by listing various policies which had the effect of reducing New Zealand’s national economic autonomy – the effective abolition of foreign investment controls, border protection, and preferences for New Zealand businesses, and the selling of state owned businesses to foreign companies. There is not a comprehensive study of the degree of foreign economic protection but two statistics will illustrate the transformation. In the 1984 March year the difference between GDP and GNP, which is the part of total production which goes to foreigners was 3.7 percent of GDP. By the March 1997 year this proportion had risen to 8.0 percent, or more than double. [2] Secondly, the New Zealand Business Roundtable, the peak powerful organization for big business and the most vociferous exponent of the new economic policies, shifted from a group of chief executives of mainly New Zealand owned businesses (which were producing enterprises) in the late 1970s when it was founded, to members who are mainly CEOs of foreign owned companies today (and which are mainly financial enterprises).

The turn around is all the more puzzling because it was made by the fourth Labour government (1984-1990) whose predecessor first Labour government (1935-1949) bedded in the economic nation building which Coates was an exponent. Not that nation building was a solely left wing activity. While there is dispute where Coates is located on the political spectrum, the first great secretary of the modern Treasury, Bernard Ashwin, was undoubtedly a political conservative. Yet as Secretary, he was actively involved in the founding of the Tasman Pulp and Paper Company in the 1950s, which might be thought of as a (successful) precursor to “Think Big”, retiring from the Treasury secretaryship (he served from 1939 to 1955) to play a major role in the company. After retirement he objected strongly to the National Government’s sale of its interest in British Petroleum (NZ) in 1955 for essentially nation building reasons. [3,4]

Instructively too, while the Australian Labour Government (1983-1995) was pursuing similar policies if more moderately, one gets no sense of their betraying their commitment to Australian nation building to the same extent. (A more extensive version of this parer would illustrate the vision was widespread in the post-war era, especially among ex-colonies. What appears is unusual is that few – perhaps no other – retreated from the nation building vision as much as New Zealand did.)

It could be argued that the Labour leadership of the 1980s was as committed to nation building as its predecessors, but it ventured unknowingly down an economic policy strategy, which had the unforeseen consequence of undermining nation building. It is true that some of the Labour leaders maintained the rhetoric of nationalism, but it was largely in non-economic contexts. Rarely was national interest invoked in economic policy, other than in the platitudinous rhetoric that the changes would benefit all New Zealanders. (They did not.) That may be the key in economic policy terms. The intellectual foundations of the economic liberalisation which Labour adopted, largely on the advice of its public servants, was based on the (right wing version of the) standard economic model which had been primarily developed by US based economists. [5,6] While purporting to be a general model of all economies, it is riddled with assumptions which are peculiarly American, and which do not readily apply to New Zealand. It assumes that individual markets are generally large enough so economies of scale are unimportant and there are sufficient actual and potential firms to make each market competitive for practical purposes. It assumes that the national economy is a significant proportion of the international economy, and so is not subject to the external financial, price and political shocks that a small open economy such as New Zealand regularly experiences. It ignores that public choice theory, while purporting to be general, reflects the institutional political arrangements of the United States with its large population, its federal structure, its separation of powers although, ironically, the political strategy the New Zealand reformers used to implement their policies would be have been impossible in the US because of the very different political arrangements.

It would be easy to explain the use of the inappropriate model as intellectual laziness, grabbing the most readily available from the shelf, without considering its relevance to the local situation. Phillida Bunkle, currently an Alliance MP, has a more fundamental explanation.

… I met a large number of them [the future reformers] in the United States. They’re baby boomers, and they returned to this country with a vision that was very much gained from graduate school in the United States. They came home with a cosmopolitan[‘s] view of New Zealand. They were going to transform this society. Now they thought they had 1960’s student values, but they actually were very impressed by North America and its consumerism and its choice and civil rights and all that. They came back with that liberalized kind of vision. But it was also I think that they had a kind of sense of embarrassment about what a hick little place they had come from. They were in Chicago, they were in New York, they were in Harvard, and they were very aware that they came from `Hicksville’. And part of it was their awareness that they were products of the welfare state because what the welfare state does in New Zealand is bring in social uniformity. It is deeply egalitarian. People end up having the same social services. They were not very sophisticated. and what they were going to do – they were going to bring us into the global village. They were going to bring MacDonalds and all these wonderful slick things and transform `Hicksville’ into a sort of social paradise of the sort you would dream of in Cambridge, Massachusetts in 1968. [7]

Before discussing where this inferiority complex (the Australians call it a “cultural cringe”) it is worth taking the story of the reforms a little further. In terms of their overt objectives – better economic performance – the reforms failed miserably (other than in the squeezing out of inflation). [8] Table 1, which compares the performance of the New Zealand economy between 1985 and 1998 to Australia and Ireland, and to the OECD average demonstrates the unimpressive performance of New Zealand (other than in price stability) in the post-liberalisation period. Any shorter period, providing it is cyclically adjusted, gives the same picture, as do all the authoritative projections/predictions of future performance. The optimistic ones suggest the New Zealand economy will grow at the same rate as the OECD (but from a base lowered by the reforms) while continuing to depend upon an unsustainable current account deficit, financed by a private capital inflow. Advocates of the reforms, who only a few years ago were enthusiasts (typically after confusing a strong cyclical upswing following an exceptionally long contraction with a new secular growth trend) are today either bewildered or, at best, promising significant benefits some time into the future.

There are still a few who think the reforms succeeded, but typically their criteria is that the reforms were implemented, rather than the economic outcomes are better. Overseas, there are those who advocate liberalisation policies and use New Zealand as an example of the success of the policies they advocate. But they do not evaluate the outcomes either. (There is an odd symbiosis between them and the New Zealand reformers. Because of their inferiority complex, the latter require the plaudits of overseas commentators – I have seen them respond to praise from good, or even mediocre, “overseas experts” like puppies having their tummies tickled. So each group has an incentive to misrepresent the true situation to the other, and neither has an incentive to carry out a proper scientific examination.)

In one unspoken sense the reforms succeeded for they put a new elite in charge of the economy. In a just published, and very important, book Only their Purpose is Mad, Bruce Jesson calls this the “financial transformation” because the elite is now characterized by being business people primarily interested in financing rather than production. [9] We observed this earlier in the transformation of membership of the Business Roundtable. The transformation occurred partly because the reforms implicitly assumed that finance was at the core of economic decision making. But perhaps even more important, the resulting economic failure, coupled with the globalisation of the world financial system that was occurring at the same time, meant that there has been substantial capital inflows into the New Zealand since the liberalisation of the external capital account at end December 1984. Much of this has involved the purchase of equity in New Zealand businesses, including those sold by the government of New Zealand. Thus the financial community’s main function is to manage the finances of overseas investors.

Jesson is critical of the competence of many of the financiers. But in addition, and more fundamentally, he argues that they lack a sense of the history and culture of the land in which they live. This cannot have arisen simply from a failure of New Zealand to articulate such matters to its people. The vitality of the local artistic community is evidence enough that they have absorbed that culture, and used it powerfully in their creative activity. But the confidence of the New Zealand arts community to be able to do their own thing, and yet be of international standing, did not carry over to the modern policy community and the business community which benefited from the policies. Perhaps the failure begins with the dominance in New Zealand business schools of overseas staff, most of whom are not good enough to get comparable positions in their home countries. New Zealand business, economic, or financial graduates are thus poorly educated in the basics of their own history, culture and economy. From the beginning New Zealand is treated as something inferior, not conforming to the overseas model which is being taught as some ultimate truth. Thus the New Zealanders end up with the inferiority complex that Bunkle identified. Nation building policies got abandoned because they had no commitment to the nation in which they lived, and which nurtured them. Instead, they clung to some idealised model of very different economy, of which the United States economy is the closest living example.

Today the New Zealand business elite – the financial community – are but subordinates of overseas interests. The abandonment of nation building has strengthened the neocolonial status of New Zealand, exactly as Coates and his generation of nation builders feared. Recovering a significant nation building element in New Zealand economic policy, will not be easy, given the burden of foreign liabilities which dominate the nation’s balance sheet, and a continuing cultural cringe among the elite.

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Notes
[1] B. McClintock, “Gordon Coates and the Nation-Building State: 1920-1935” (Economic Department, Carthage College, 1999).
[2] This excludes retained profits of foreign owned firms. The SNA treats their profits as domestic income (since foreign owned corporations are legally local entities) until the profits are remitted. Thus the true proportions (i.e. are even higher, and probably the increase over the period is even greater.
[3] B.H. Easton, “Bernard Ashwin: Secretary to the Nation Building State”, New Zealand Studies, November 1997, p.13-21.
[4] B.H. Easton, “Ashwin, Bernard Carl 1896-1975,” Dictionary of New Zealand Biography: Vol 4, (AUP, 1998) p.21-22.
[5] B.H. Easton, “From Reaganomics to Rogernomics”, in A.E.Bollard (ed) The Influence of American Economics on New Zealand Thinking and Policy (NZ-US Educational Foundation & NZ Institute of Economic Research Monograph 42, Wellington, 1989) p.69-95.
[6] B.H. Easton, The Commercialisation of New Zealand (Auckland University Press. 1997)

[7] CBC Ideas program, “The Remaking of New Zealand” (first broadcast on October 1994).
[8] B.H. Easton, In Stormy Seas: The Post-War New Zealand Economy (Otago University Press, 1997).
[9] B. Jesson, Only Their Purpose is Mad (Dunmore Press, 1999).

Table 1 ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE: 1985-1998

NZ Aust Ireland OECD
Inflation Private Consumption Deflator (%p.a.)
1985 17.3 6.7 5.0 6.9
1998 1.3 1.9 2.7 3.3
Average
85-98
4.6 4.1 2.6 5.5
Inflation GDP Deflator (%p.a.)
Average
85-98
4.5 3.9 2.7 5.4
Unemployment (% of Labour Force)
1986 4.0 8.1 16.8 7.1
1998 8.2 8.1 8.9 6.5
Average
86-98
7.2 8.6 12.9 6.6
Employment Growth (%p.a.)
Average
85-98
0.8 1.9 2.2 1.2
GDP Volume Growth (%p.a.)
Average
85-98
1.7 3.1 6.0 2.7
Labour Productivity Growth (%p.a.)
Average
85-98
0.9 1.2 3.8 1.5
Export Price Change (%p.a.)
Average
85-98
1.4 0.2 0.5 1.0
Import Price Change (%p.a.)
Average
85-98
0.5 2.3 0.7 0.5
Terms of Trade Change %p.a.
Average
85-98
0.9 -2.1 -0.3 0.5
Export Volume Growth (%p.a.)
Average
85-98
3.9 7.1 11.7 6.9
Import Volume Growth (%p.a.)
Average
85-98
5.3 6.6 9.8 7.2
Current Account Deficit (% GDP)
Average
85-98
3.7 4.8 -0.8 0.2

OECD Economic Outlook (December 1998). The New Zealand figures do not always correspond to the official figures, but are used here for consistency. The OECD consists of 28 economies. The 1998 data is estimated.
* G7 for unemployment.

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Constant Crises: It Is True – There Are More Of Them

Listener: 10 April, 1999.

Keywords: Macroeconomics & Money;

The worldwide trend of financial liberalisation since the early 1980s seems to have resulted in more financial crises. These include currency crises, where the foreign exchange market is disrupted, forcing the government to change its exchange rate regime (frequently either changing the peg of the fixed exchange rate, or shifting to some sort of floating regime). New Zealand had a currency crisis in July 1984 when there was a fixed exchange rate, and so much conversion of New Zealand into foreign denominated financial assets that the Reserve Bank (which funded the conversion) became short of foreign currency.

There are banking crises, where the banking system is under stress, typically when the balance sheets of assets and liabilities of a number of banks are awry. It may be they are illiquid and are short of the cash to pay their immediate bills (but have enough assets in the long run to do so), or they are insolvent and their liabilities exceed their assets, so they could never pay all their bills. There has been no banking crisis here, unless one so treats the upheaval beginning with the collapse of the overseas Bank of Glasgow in 1878 (before the Reserve Bank was established in 1934). The resulting credit contraction led to our long depression of the 1880s.

There are bank crisis, where a single bank is illiquid or insolvent (There is a danger one could undermine public confidence in the entire banking system precipitating a systemic banking crisis). The illiquidity of the Bank of New Zealand at the end of 1990 was a bank crisis. There have been other bank crises, most famously in the nineteenth century.

Even if some politicians panicked, the BNZ bank crisis was a tiddler, costing less than 1 percent of GDP. The banking crisis in Mexico (1994-7) cost about 15 percent, in Israel (1981-84) 30 percent, and in Chile (1981-84) 41 percent, while the Argentinean crisis of 1980-82 cost a whopping 55 percent of GDP. Most countries have had a bank or banking crisis in the last twenty years. (Note the list does not include sharemarket or property collapses. Such a collapse can cause a banking crisis, when banks have too many of their assets in devalued shares or property.)

Currency crises can cause banking crises. Banks usually have some liabilities denominated in overseas currencies (they borrow overseas). If the value of the currency falls, the value of the banks’ liabilities rise, and the equity on the assets side may be wiped out, so the banks becomes insolvent. Prudent banks do not greatly expose themselves to foreign currency risk. However, when a government has been successfully maintaining a fixed exchange rate, the temptation is to assume that it will always be successful. That is what happened in East Asia, so when the various currencies devalued, the banks found themselves in difficulties. Worried investors subjected them to greater scrutiny, and there was a growing realisation that many of their assets were overvalued too.

The Thai baht collapsed in mid 1997 (see below). Currency ructions followed in other East Asian countries later in the year. The Russian rouble collapsed in August 1998, and the Brazilian real joined in a couple of months ago. None of these economies have yet really recovered, although some may have bottomed out. We are told that the current world financial crisis is over. Perhaps. I would wait at least a year after the last collapse before I was confident.

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MEXICO 1994

Between 1988 and 1993 economic stabilization and reform in Mexico led to a sharp reduction in the rate of inflation, although it depended on a real appreciation of the exchange rate so import prices rose more slowly that domestic production prices. Not surprisingly, the current account deficit widened as exporters found the going more difficult and importers found it easier. There were huge inflows of speculative capital attracted by favourable interest rates. In early 1994 the flows reversed. Accounts mention the First Chiapas uprising and the assassination of presidential candidate Luis Colosio. Various economic and financial indicators looked weak before then, so the political events may have drawn attention to problematic fundamentals. International reserves fell rapidly. Interest rates rose. But the external deficit expanded to over 7 percent of GDP. Reserves continued to fall. By late December the authorities’ ingenuity defending the currency peg was exhausted, capital flight was severe, and the exchange rate collapsed from around 3.5 pesos to the US Dollar to 5.5 pesos. Banks depending on foreign loans were in trouble.

THAILAND 1997

Again there was a fixed exchange rate, and a real appreciation as Thailand inflated faster than its trading partners in the mid 1990s, in this case complicated by the baht being primarily fixed to the US dollar, which appreciated relative to the Japanese yen in whose area Thailand had important markets. The current account deficit widened – to about 8 percent of GDP in 1996. Speculative pressures built up from December 1996. Foreign reserves began to run down. Defensive measures proved ineffective, the baht was floated, and fell 42 percent against the dollar (after being stable since 1984). At which point Thai banks found they had too many liabilities denominated in US dollars.