Nov 19, 2011
Show Me the “Monetary Reform” David Cunliffe!
Following Phil Goff’s release of Labour’s Finance Manifesto today, David Cunliffe has said in a New Zealand Labour Party press release: “Labour is backing the drive for more high value exports with monetary reform ...”
I challenges David Cunliffe, Labour’s Finance Spokesperson, to front up and explain what he means by the term ‘monetary reform’.
If he means replacing toxic debt-based commercial bank credit with social credit, as the sole means of money coming into existence and continuing to exist – issued in the public interest, to serve the common good - then I would endorse his definition.
And if he accepts that it’s crazy for our government to borrow from foreign lenders, with interest, when we could use the publicly-owned Reserve Bank of New Zealand as an independent statutory monetary authority with the sole power to create, issue, and cancel New Zealand’s money, then I applaud his endeavours.
But if Mr. Cunliffe thinks ‘monetary reform’ means implementing a Capital Gains Tax; tweaking the objectives of the Reserve Bank Act; having exporters represented on the Reserve Bank Board; taking pressure off the official cash rate and relying on greater supervision tools; and encouraging more aggressive Reserve Bank interventions in the currency markets ... then he doesn’t mean monetary reform at all.
In fact, Labour’s Finance Manifesto is nothing more than ‘monetary orthodoxy – with lip gloss.
Jul 13, 2011
A relationship counsellor has an article published 12 July 2011 in one of our local Matamata newspapers. The article is great and is certainly worth a read, but his words apply to a wider sphere than just relationships. What he said was:
· Just because you have been told something lots of times does not make it true.
· Just because you believe something doesn’t necessarily make it true.
· Just because you have believed something for a long time also does not make it true.
· If you learn something based on information at the time you can unlearn it by getting more information and understanding.
· Remember that whatever you believe, you will find evidence to support it, whether it is true or not.
We should take heed of these words when we read and watch the media in the lead up to “Election 2011”.
For instance:
· Just because you hear New Zealand Superannuation is unsustainable and the age of eligibility must be raised to 67, doesn’t make it true.
· Just because they say New Zealanders do not save enough so we have to borrow overseas, doesn’t make it true.
· Just because they say “Banks don’t create money” doesn’t make it true.
· Just because they say “The Reserve Bank can’t create money” doesn’t make it true.
Look for the truth and vote for that this election.
Jul 8, 2011
New Zealand Herald 8 July 2011 has the above as the lead headline on page 2. The article continues with " Generous pensions wrong while children are living in poverty, medical trio say".
New Zealanders are locked into a "them or us" mentality, instead of a "If we can afford it for them, we can afford it for us as well".
Logic suggests that if New Zealanders desire particular outcomes i.e. to provide super to those over 65 years and to spend up on kids health or on any other desired outcome, then the financial system should enable those outcomes to be financially possible - subject only to the availability of people with the necessary skills, technology, resources and that all projects are also environmentally sustainable.
Jul 7, 2011
Older workers taking the jobs while youth unemployment rises - currently 27.5% for those aged between 15 to 19 and 13.5% for those 20 to 24.
What's going on?
I would suggest that we should aim to reverse the process - progressively reduce the retirement age to 55 while increasing the employment rates of the youth. We should be extending the working hours, the life, the productivity and the efficiencies of our technologies and production lines.
Jul 7, 2011
Somebody accused Labour of "Walking backwards into the future on the crutch of a new tax" - Must of been one of the other members of their "Tag Team" National who are currently in the ring doing nothing but walking backwards into the future in a wheelchair of new Public Service cuts and the sale of State Assets".
While New Zealand's political theatre plays the same old show, the rest of the world is seriously looking at something new - A Financial Transaction Tax, aka Tobin Tax, aka Robin Hood Tax.
Jul 6, 2011
The above heading quoted from the New Zealand Herald's BusinessHerald lead article (6 July 2011) just highlights what an absolute mess New Zealand's economic & financial system is in (let's include the world).
It's obviously a no win situation - we've had no confidence, no growth, no jobs, no pay increases (so depressing), low interest rates (that part is good) and that's given us lower inflation, and now a climb in confidence, a robust recovery, more jobs, higher pay (so exciting ... not for long), higher prices, higher interest rates (and that is not so good) and that gives us higher inflation.
If you've been reading newspapers ( hard copy & online) as long as I have, you'd see that nothing has changed in the world of economics, finance and politics. The problems are the same. The small array of solutions that are offered are the same and as each so called solution is implemented the results are the same ... we all get older and collectively deeper in debt.