What is the Real Economy?
The ‘Real Economy’ is made up of the farmers, manufacturers, tourist operators and service providers that sell to the world and generate New Zealand’s external income. As Angus Tait once said, “There are three ways to generate wealth; you farm things, you make things or you dig things up.” That is the essence of the real economy.
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mist Posted:
Perhaps IMF formulas are not accurate for this area.
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mist Posted:
" tax increases in one area supports decreases in another is correct" it can only be correct if it is true. Observation and repeated sampling has proven that the hypothesis is faulty. Tax increases in one area are not causally linked to decreases elsewhere - not "possibly", not "it adds up". "Philosophically" it _might_ but testing proves it does not. One could even say "it should" but we both know an equivalent term for "it should" is "doesn't" What drives taxes down is political advantage. If a political party has an agenda they don't want the public to look at too closely, then sweeters (aka "bait") is put forwards. Tax decreases is a classic. This can be achieved because the tax increases and tax decreases are not linked. They're not zero sum nor do they have causal or proportional connection. This is because the "buffer solution" in the middle is that endless hole. tax increase means more spending. tax decrease means more government borrowing. The in/out relationship is decoupled, through size and power in the marketplace (financial economy). The abysmal productivity is because of the massive overheads from doing business in NZ. personal taxes double the rates of the US, huge taxes on goods and services, massive levies on critical imports, price gouging in the energy and communications markets, interest rates 300 to 500 times that of the US!, and not nearly the number of cost writeoffs either (subscriptions, training, vehicle rebates). Nor would get the 401k option either, of rebuying into the same market and not having to pay CGT. Oh and horrendous ever inflating local rates, again much much higher, for less, than our foreign counterparts (excepting Scandinavian countries). Our "abysmal production" is a result of this overtaxation being sand in the gears of the economy, wearing it down and rubbing out real growth. Putting CGT makes that problem worse!! And to sum up... your last comment.... O.M.G. You think that improving our situation, of people not wanting to save or invest in government buggered industry is to bugger up the ability to accumulate equity in useful assets??????? Where do you think people are going to get savings or capital to do anything??? (including retiring when their earning ability is severely reduced!) Put it in finance companies???????????? Buy the oh-so-excellently-performing NZX? In the few companies squeaking by?
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John Walley Posted:
I think we agree on the lending without security issue. It might well be that the intent to change the source of tax and not increase government spending is fictitious, however given the provision that government spending does not change the statement that tax increases in one area supports decreases in another is correct. The broader point is demonstrated by the Romney situation where he pays tax at half the rate of his salaried staff - and in the USA capital gains carry a 15% tax rate - it will be interesting to see how that one pans out. For New Zealand the economic distortions supported by the complete absence of capital gains tax are clear from our abysmal productivity record. Why save, why invest in production (taxed interest paid or via the income statement) when money can be made without tax from passive asset appreciation.
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carl Posted:
"a Capital Gains Tax means less tax in other areas or lower borrowing for the same amount of government spending. " Only in your wildest dreams, mate. a drip or a bucketful does not change an infinite hole. The only reduction in tax you would see is short-term, and done to create a perception. Once the elephant was sold it'll be put back up, often with extra claw-back clauses to catch more cash. And Banks do lend for shares - but at lower rates of coverage. 50% for business assets is rule of thumb, 80% for first mortgages, 20-25% for basic unencumbered share parcels. with additional security and reasonable ability to cover debt servicing compliance. That's the ball. So why's the man (original poster) running with such blatantly obvious fouls????
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DGS Posted:
SEE ABOVE
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03/06

Survey - Export led recovery: not yet


Print-friendly 0 comment(s) Posted in: In the media

The latest New Zealand Manufacturers and Exporters Association (NZMEA) Survey of Business Conditions completed during May 2010, shows total sales in April 2010 increased 7.9% (export sales decreased by 5% with domestic sales increasing 19%) on April 2009.

The NZMEA survey sample this month covered NZ$563m in annualised sales, with an export content of 40%.

Net confidence fell to 46, down from 64 last month.

The current performance index (a combination of profitability and cash flow) is at 102.5, down from 103.5 in March, the change index (capacity utilisation, staff levels, orders and inventories) remained steady at 102, and the forecast index (investment, sales, profitability and staff) is at 108, up on March’s result of 107. Anything less than 100 indicates a contraction.

Constraints reported were 69% markets, 23% production capacity and 8% capital.

Staff numbers for April decreased year on year by 0.1%.

“Sales have increased on 2009, but reports have indicated that many manufacturers are suffering lower profitability despite the higher sales figures,” says NZMEA Chief Executive John Walley. “Domestic sales are continuing to grow while export sales and returns are volatile.”

“Export markets are patchy with Australia growing, the US stagnant and Europe weakening. Exporters to Europe are having a tough time due to the financial instability and the resulting fall in the Euro.”

“Staff numbers have not yet returned to growth overall, but there are reports of some firms ending short time working, adding shifts and taking on more staff.”

“Confidence and index numbers have dropped back a bit but generally reports are that things have shown improvement in 2010. The hope is that this will continue, but there is no export led recovery at this stage. So far it is an entirely domestic story and many wonder how long that can last.”

“The Monetary Policy Statement on Thursday should explicitly recognise the fragility of the recovery and that even though domestic sales are filling the hole in export markets, significant capacity remains in the economy. From a demand perspective we still have a long way to go, so there is little point in risking any recovery. The Reserve Bank can wait until September at least.”

“There has been significant disappointment expressed around the budget. The removal of accelerated depreciation in particular will be a setback to any recovery in productive investment. The lack of action around addressing bias in our fiscal policy and the inadequate replacement for the R&D tax credit compound this.”

“All in all Budget 2010 fell a long way short of any sort of step change from the perspective of the real economy.”
 

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tags: survey, sales, staff, budget, r&d, monetary policy

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Please play the ball not the man.