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BUILDING A CAPABLE NEW ZEALAND ECONOMY Productivity, Ownership and Growth: Towards an “NZ Inc.” Approach Hon David Cunliffe, MP for New Lynn.

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Presentation on theme: "BUILDING A CAPABLE NEW ZEALAND ECONOMY Productivity, Ownership and Growth: Towards an “NZ Inc.” Approach Hon David Cunliffe, MP for New Lynn."— Presentation transcript:

1 BUILDING A CAPABLE NEW ZEALAND ECONOMY Productivity, Ownership and Growth: Towards an “NZ Inc.” Approach Hon David Cunliffe, MP for New Lynn

2 DEMUTUALISING THE NZSX  Pressures for demutualisation  Members bill  Timing: faciliatiating rebuild  Regulatory framework: Securities Markets and Institutions Act

3 BUILDING A CAPABLE NZ ECONOMY 1. The drivers of productivity 2. Globalisation and integration 3. Benefits of foreign investment 4. Risks of hollowing out 5. Towards an NZ-Inc approach

4 1. DRIVERS OF PRODUCTIVITY GDP per capita Labour productivity Labour utilisation Capital per hour Multifactor productivity (MFP) Participation rate Unemployment rate Macroeconomic stability, business environment, innovation

5 GDP PER CAPITA GROWTH IS RECOVERING… (11-year moving average comparison with OECD countries)

6 …DRIVEN BY RISING LABOUR UTILISATION ….. (11-year moving averages growth in hours worked per capita comparisons with OECD countries)

7 …..MASKING POOR GROWTH IN CAPITAL-LABOUR RATIOS (Capital-labour ratios: New Zealand vs Australia, 1988-2002)

8 2. GLOBALISATION AND THE CHALLENGE OF INTEGRATION  Globalisation: a fact not a philosophy  New Zealand is highly trade dependant  Integration therefore essential but terms vary  “Open up and hope”  “Head in the sand”  “Smart engagement”

9 3. THE SAVINGS GAP AND FOREIGN INVESTMENT  Domestic savings gap requires capital inflow  Partial offset from government fiscal surplus  FDI brings potential spillover benefits  Technology, capital access, market access  Large net investment outflows on current account persist (~3-4% GDP)  High level of foreign investment in NZ  Lower returns on NZ investment abroad

10 4. RISKS OF HOLLOWING OUT  Out-migration  Capital migration  Intellectual property  Risk of self-reinforcing processes  FDI composition  High levels (~85%) of M&A FDI  Low levels of “greenfields” investment  Historical investment and migration rules

11 5. TOWARDS AN “NZ INC” APPROACH  Build on firm foundations  Target capital productivity drivers  Redefine “NZ’s economic space”

12 (i) BUILD ON FIRM FOUNDATIONS  Strong economic fundamentals  Easy, safe business environment  Increase labour participation and skills  Invest in innovation and technology  Active international trade policy

13 (ii) TARGET CAPITAL PRODUCTIVITY  Address the savings gap  Deepen domestic capital markets  Incubate and protect intellectual property  Leverage technology across sectors

14 (iii) REDEFINE “NEW ZEALAND’S ECONOMIC SPACE”  Recognise ownership matters  Maximise the benefits of FDI  Link with domestic sector strategy  Negotiate as “Team Kiwi”  (re)Brand NZ Inc


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