The New Zealand Herald

Muller outlines framework for recovery plan

- Audrey Young

National leader Todd Muller says the magnitude of the economic downturn due to Covid-19 has not yet sunk in to the public or to the media because they have been preoccupie­d by the “shambles” at the border and quarantine centres.

But he says National will present a plan to the electorate before the election setting out how it will respond.

And later this month he says he will announce the largest infrastruc­ture package in New Zealand’s history.

Muller spoke to the Christchur­ch Employers’ Chamber of Commerce yesterday, in the same week his Clutha-Southland MP Hamish Walker shocked his party and the country over breaching the privacy of Covid19 patients. Walker said on Wednesday that he would leave politics at the September 19 election.

Muller said National’s full economic plan would not be finalised until after the Government released the Pre-Election Economic and Fiscal Update (Prefu) in August.

It would be available by September 2 when overseas voting began, to be followed by early voting, which starts on September 5.

He said the plan’s framework was made up of five components: responsibl­e economic management; delivering infrastruc­ture; reskilling and retraining the workforce; a greener, smarter future; and building stronger communitie­s.

“National will be releasing each of these components in a series of major speeches through this month and into early August to give New Zealanders time to scrutinise each element,” he said.

“With Labour not having anything to offer except ‘ borrow, spend and tax’, National understand­s that responsibl­e government is about creating a deliberate and considered plan — and then following it.”

Muller said that when the earthquake­s devastated Christchur­ch, it was a blow to the whole country. “The National Government took decisive action to generate the rebuild. Our legacy isn’t one of ruined buildings behind fences, awaiting insurance settlement­s, it’s of a new vibrant city, from the beautiful riverside to the shiny new buildings.”

A major part of that recovery strategy was the Christchur­ch Central Recovery Plan, put together in just 100 days.

“Our execution of that plan returned life to a devastated CBD.

“The Prime Minister told her party rally over the weekend that she had no playbook or plan for her three years in Government, no plan for Covid-19 and no plan for recovery.

“National knows how to shape a plan that delivers.”

He said Labour forecast net core debt would reach 53.6 per cent of GDP in 2024 under their policies. “That’s an eye-wateringly high level. We will work hard to try to keep it lower than that, which would put New Zealand in a better position to recover. But of far greater longer-term importance is that Labour projects that under its policies, but with a far stronger economic environmen­t than we face today, net core debt will still be as high as 42 per cent by 2034.

“I’m not hiding that my Government will borrow large amounts over the next three years, and in 2020/21 in particular. National will always be more discipline­d in its spending than Labour. Yes, we will borrow what we need to, to support New Zealanders through the crisis — neither more nor less. But we will not just fling money around, the way the Labour Party is.”

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Todd Muller

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