National’s roading madness will cost us billions in Paris Agreement obligations and CTU gate crashes Luxon’s billion dollar budget blow out

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National’s roading policy is nothing more than an un-costed joke using garbage numbers which is a win only to the Road Privatisation lobby groups!

More than half of National’s funding for this comes from reallocating funds away from public transport and road safety programmes, while promising vast public private partnerships that will see Tolls and corporate price gouging.

But worse, much, much, much more worse than all of that is the naked truth that it is a climate denial policy!

It only mentions climate emissions 3 times and completely ignores all the extra pollution this roading over public transport generates which in turn will mean we miss our Paris Obligations and Treasury has priced the cost of failing that at $20Billion!!!!

No where at all does National tell you that if we miss our emissions goals we fall foul of the Paris Obligations and won’t bother paying the $20billion we promised we would pay if we failed to lower our emissions!

No one in the media (other than Bernard Hickey) is pointing this out!

Let’s be as clear as I can with you. If National is allowed to build fucking roads everywhere for your broom brooms, we will blow our emissions targets and be forced to pay $20billion, National’s costings are a joke and ON TOP OF THAT include a $20billion cost for failing two lower our emissions.

It’s like this country hates politics so much that they will willingly saw their faces off to spite their nose.

TDB Recommends NewzEngine.com

This is what we have become, political factions prepared to amputate our own limbs if it prevents a helping hand to the other side.

Meanwhile, someone has woken the CTU up and told them there’s an election this year and they’ve gatecrashed the party with a devastating critique of just how wonky National’s numbers truly are with research showing National are out by as much as $5Billion in their budget costings, so add that on top of all the other un-costed knee jerks National are being allowed to get away with…

BILLIONS MISSING TO DELIVER NATIONAL PARTY PROMISES, SAYS NZCTU

The New Zealand Council of Trade Unions has today released costings showing a current funding shortfall of at least $3.3-5.2 billion in the National Party’s tax and spending plans.

The true gap is likely to be even larger, as many of National’s publicly stated policy commitments were either uncosted or were too vague to be included in the analysis.

NZCTU Economist Craig Renney says the shortfall raises concerns about the impact on crucial public services that New Zealanders rely upon.

“Our costings show National has spent around two dollars for every dollar available over the next
three years. Further billions are likely from the policies that they have not yet costed or will likely announce on the campaign trail.

“A shortfall of this magnitude can only be accounted for by raising debt, increasing other taxes, or slashing funding for critical public services like healthcare, education, and police.

“Given National has ruled out raising debt or increasing taxes, this can only mean billions of dollars in cuts to our already stretched public services. Cuts of this scale would have severe consequences for the people who depend on these services and the workers who deliver them.

“National must be upfront about where these cuts would come from. New Zealanders deserve to know long before the election what programmes will be cut, what investment wouldn’t get made, and how National will balance the books – because on these plans they aren’t.”

The NZCTU took on this task of costing National’s policies as, in contrast to other opposition parties in recent elections, National has yet to release its fully costed fiscal plan.

“It is essential for opposition parties to be transparent and accountable by sharing comprehensive fiscal plans. National cannot promise billions in tax cuts and pretend there will be no impact on our stretched public services.

“If National disagrees with this analysis, we invite them to present a fully costed alternative budget of their own, one that costs all of their policies and is clear about where the money will come from, including which public services will be cut.”

METHODOLOGY

The NZCTU’s analysis is based on publicly available information from the Treasury and IRD. The NZCTU has used the most generous interpretations when costing National’s policies. Even when disagreeing with National’s costings of their own policies, the NZCTU used National’s figures.

According to Treasury, there is $3.5 billion of new operational spending available in each of the 3 years of the next term.

Treasury also notes that at least $2.8 billion in cost pressures funding will be needed in each year to maintain our existing public services. This figure is just to keep delivering the same services as the previous year. It does not account for population increase, demographic changes, or new services.

That leaves around $700 million in ‘new’ money that is available each year, or $4.2 billion over three years.

National has set out between $7.5 billion and $9.4 billion of new spending over that period that we can identify based on their tax and spending commitments that are able to be costed. This is two dollars for every dollar available, leading to a fiscal gap of at least $3.3 billion to $5.2 billion.

No costs have been assigned to National’s vaguer policy commitments, although they should provide that analysis. This costing also assumes no further policies from National during the election campaign, or any governing partners’ policies. It also provided no contingency for emerging needs such as natural disasters or future Budgets. This is the minimum amount that they will need to cut to balance the books.

The analysis and the numbers within were reviewed by Dr Geoff Bertram, Economist and Former Senior Associate at the Institute of Government and Policy Studies at Victoria University.

The figures do not take into account the National Party’s transport announcement yesterday, though as these are delivered through the National Land Transport Fund, they will not have a material impact on the NZCTU’s costings.

…now weirdly instead of responding to this incredibly well argued and researched critique, National have started a weird attack on the CTUs Craig Renney by claiming he’s a mate of the Left so why believe him which is just one level up from, “I know you are, I said you are, but what am I”…

…what the fuck?

No, no, oh no you don’t.

Regardless of Craig’s mateship with Grant and his coffee dates, that doesn’t in any way shape or form detract from Craig’s very brutal assessment of just how bullshit National’s numbers are and attempting to discredit the worth of his argument via association with Grant is so bullshit it’s genuinely disappointing to see a senior member of the Opposition attempt it!

The truth is these are bullshit numbers with huge holes in the budgets but I think the electorate has to ask themselves some big questions. Are you just voting National or ACT out of anger with Labour, because that’s fine and dandy but don’t pretend you don’t know what you are being sold are lies and don’t pretend to be shocked when those lies are exposed as lies when it all implodes.

 

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17 COMMENTS

  1. Maybe Kiwis would be better off if NZ didn’t give that $20B to Paris, and instead spent it on something like health and education in NZ? Or building some resilience against climate change effects?
    Or the defence budget?

    • So very true.
      And let’s not forget the same Paros climate accord warned against emissions legislation that affected food production but Labour chose to be “world leading” and attack ours.

    • Anaru Matiu your suggestion is commonsense something sadly lacking in the Labour Party.
      The Paris Agreement is completely ineffective.

      • “The Paris Agreement is completely ineffective.”

        says the nobody of note in the worlds standings. Bob who?

        The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results. In this case Nationals roads and tax cuts for the rich.

  2. Nobody should remain in the Paris Accord until the twenty largest polluting nations are close to cutting their emissions by 30%. They kept missing their targets before. Why believe them now?

    The road network is terrible (even by 1960s standards), and what the Tories are proposing isn’t anywhere near enough — electric cars still require roads. High speed rail, coastal shipping and fully restoration of tramway and trolleybus services is required as well. Nuclear power stations and C.T.L. synthetic oil production will also be needed to cheaply supply these systems.

  3. So are we going to raise the 20b hole due to the “Boxering” of NZ businesses by the Beavis and Butthead of finance (Robertson and Orr). Will Robertson fall on his sword over this 20B shortfall or does he have no shame nor standards?

  4. Even if everyone changed to EV cars we still need roads .Rail is a good for of secondary transport but with a country sparcly populated like us cannot afford to take rail to all areas so we need good roads for freight trucks.

  5. Maybe we should really look after our own country first before we sign away the right to self determination?

  6. Also the current government is Labour and they have a whole somewhere between 10 – 30 + billions. Oh my. Be scared of Luxon, cause clearly Labour ain’t bad enough yet.

  7. Swing Voters, especially soccer mum’s love 4 lane highways. Doesn’t matter who pays, just do it.

    Voters hate Potholes, road Cones, speed restrictions, judder bars , roads with out medium barriers and traffic jams.

  8. More roads won’t lead to Paris payments if the ETS is left to do its job properly. Unfortunately the Greens and Labour keep messing with it.

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