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26 March 2012
Speech to Kiwi Chamber Business Breakfast
Chairman Grant Phillips, members of the Kiwi Chamber and guests.
Thank you for inviting me here this morning to exchange views with you.
PM addressing Kiwi Chamber breakfast in Seoul
I'd lke to take this opportunity at the outset to express my appreciation to the Kiwi Chamber for your tremendous fundraising efforts following the Christchurch earthquake of 22 February 2011.
I understand that as much as NZ$76,000 went to the Christchurch Earthquake Appeal and NZ$6,000 to the New Zealand Red Cross thanks to your efforts. Your support for the people of Christchurch is greatly appreciated. Thank you.
I am delighted to be back in Seoul. And can I say that I’m particularly delighted to be here on this day. Because it was on this day, the 26th of March, exactly 50 years ago, that the governments of New Zealand and the Republic of Korea entered into formal diplomatic relations. I think that’s a milestone we can be very proud of.
When I visited Seoul in July 2010 President Lee Myung-bak and I agreed that 2012 would be known as our two countries’ “Year of Friendship”.
Over the 50 years of our diplomatic relationship our two countries have created a web of cooperation that we can celebrate - and which we very much want to enhance.
This was the commitment President Lee and I made in 2010 – that we have a vibrant and broad relationship built on strong historic ties, shared values and mutual commitment. And that we will build a platform for our relationship to move forward.
We reconfirmed this commitment during our conversation yesterday.
Our strong historic ties were founded upon the battlefields of the Korean War over 60 years ago. Yesterday I visited the New Zealand and Australian Memorial at Kapyeong, the site of one of the most critical battles of the war.
At the memorial I remembered the 6,000 New Zealanders who served in the Korean War, those who survived and the 45 who sadly lost their lives. This was a horrendous struggle, the legacy of which endures today.
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15 March 2012
Better Public Services - Speech to the Auckland Chamber of Commerce
Ladies and gentlemen.
Thank you for coming this afternoon.
It’s a great privilege to have won the trust and goodwill of New Zealanders for a second term in Government.
I don’t take that for granted.
That’s why we’re working hard to take the country forward and deliver strong and stable government, just as we did over the last three years.
Today I want to talk about public services.
But before I do, I want to put this speech in the context of the Government’s overall priorities.
We have four priorities this term.
The first is to responsibly manage the Government’s finances.
We’re committed to returning the Government’s books to surplus in 2014/15 and that target is on track, despite events in Europe and the forecast slowdown in world growth.
Our second priority this term is to continue building a more competitive and productive economy.
We’ve got an economic action plan with the 120 key things we’ve been doing to build a more competitive economy.
We are currently developing that plan further. Over time we will be adding more initiatives that contribute to building a better environment for business growth.
Our third priority is to deliver better public services to New Zealanders within tight financial constraints.
That’s what I’m going to talk about today.
And our final priority is to rebuild Christchurch, our second-largest city.
So a better-performing public sector is central to what we will be doing as a Government over the next three years.
And it is hugely important for all New Zealanders.
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22 February 2012
PM SPEECH TO LATIMER SQUARE SERVICE, Christchurch
February 22nd, 2011.
It is a date permanently etched into all our minds.
A date that will go down in the history of New Zealand as one of our darkest days.
We all remember where we were when we heard the news. Christchurch - our second-largest city and home to 350,000 people - had been struck by an earthquake so violent and destructive that it would go on to claim 185 lives.
February 22nd began as just another summer day here in Canterbury.
It was a Tuesday and all over the region people were going about their usual business. Kids were at school. Office workers were popping out to get a quick bite for lunch. Shoppers were browsing and young students were together in class.
But at 12.51pm that day, everything changed.
At that moment, the city of Christchurch – and the lives of so many people - changed forever.
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26 January 2012
PM: Speech to Waitakere Business Club
Ladies and Gentlemen
Can I start by saying that it’s a tremendous privilege to have won the trust and goodwill of New Zealanders for a second term in Government.
I don’t take that for granted and I never will.
I learned quickly when I came into Parliament that a government has to earn the trust and goodwill of voters again and again, every day.
And that’s what we’ll be doing.
We proved in the past three years that we can deliver strong and stable government in difficult times.
We worked constructively with a number of other parties in Parliament to get things done for the benefit of New Zealand, and we’ll continue to do that.
I don’t know exactly what the next three years will throw up.
The past three years have shown us that adversity gives little warning.
New Zealanders have had to deal with catastrophic events outside anyone’s control; from a global financial crisis to a devastating series of earthquakes in Canterbury.
New Zealand has changed over the past three years and, in fact, the whole world has changed.
The next three years will about rebuilding and strengthening the country.
And compared to a lot of other nations we are in a good position to do that.
Today I want to talk about the Government’s priorities over these next three years – in other words, how we are going to continue with our plan to secure a brighter future for New Zealand.
A brighter future is where New Zealanders from all backgrounds and all walks of life have the opportunity to better themselves and go forward in their lives; where people have the jobs, higher incomes and better living standards they aspire to and deserve; and where as a country we have the resources to provide better frontline services in health and education, stay strong on crime, protect the most vulnerable in society, and look after the environment.
How do we achieve that?
The Government has four priorities this term.
Our first priority is to responsibly manage the Government’s finances. In the world as it is today, the state of the country’s finances is all-important.
Our second priority is to build a more competitive and productive economy. That means an export-focused economy, which is selling more of what the world wants, at a competitive price, and is built on a solid base of innovation.
Our third priority is to deliver better public services to New Zealanders, within the tight budget the Government is operating under.
And our final priority is to rebuild Christchurch, our second-biggest city.
I want to talk some more about these priorities and give you an indication of where the Government is going.
But before I do that I want to talk briefly about the international backdrop.
The global economic outlook has deteriorated since the end of last year, and the European crisis, in particular, is the biggest potential threat to the world economy and therefore to the New Zealand economy.
Leading forecasters like the IMF, World Bank and Consensus Economics are expecting world growth to be weaker over the next couple of years than previously predicted.
For the most part, that is because of the ongoing turmoil in the Euro area.
The most likely outcome is that European countries manage through the crisis with the Euro intact, because it is in their collective interest to do so.
But that is by no means guaranteed.
As recently as yesterday, the IMF warned that if the required actions are not taken, the European crisis could spill over into a global recession.
Even under the more likely scenario, where Europe avoids a full-blown crisis, the Euro countries are expected to go into recession in 2012 and will be in for a protracted period of sluggish growth thereafter.
This poorer growth outlook for Europe has, in turn, contributed to lower growth forecasts for Asia, including China.
Overall, growth in China is expected to remain strong, but an easing in that growth will still have a flow-on effect for Australia, because of a lower demand for minerals.
The outlook in the United States is actually looking better than it did late last year, but growth is still likely to be subdued.
What does that mean for New Zealand?
Weaker global growth, particularly in our key export markets in Asia and Australia, will put downward pressure on the demand for our exports.
That will have a real and noticeable effect on the New Zealand economy, which is expected to grow somewhat slower than was predicted at the end of 2011.
But it won’t knock the New Zealand economy for six and it certainly won’t stop the Government pushing ahead with its priorities.
We are a small economy doing the right things, our banks are in good shape and the Government has managed effectively through the difficulties of the past three years.
The really difficult challenges will start to come if world growth continues to be revised further and further downwards, or if the European crisis triggers a global credit freeze.
Those are not the most likely scenarios for the world economy but they are certainly possible and the Government will continue to monitor global events very carefully.
So given that international backdrop, I want to talk some more about each of the Government’s priorities:
- responsibly managing the Government’s finances
- building a more competitive and productive economy
- delivering better public services
- and rebuilding Christchurch.
Our first priority is to responsibly manage the Government’s finances.
As every household and business around the country knows, that involves living within our means – budgeting carefully and deciding which things are priorities and which are not.
The Government is committed to returning to surplus in 2014/15.
Sticking to this commitment is an important part of our plan to limit debt and take pressure off interest rates and the exchange rate.
And sticking to this commitment is also important for New Zealand’s credibility with international financial markets. As we have seen overseas, a loss of credibility is very difficult to reverse and can have widespread effects across the whole country.
As you’d expect, the forecast slowdown in world growth makes our surplus target harder to achieve.
But today I can confirm that we are still on track to post a surplus in 2014/15.
The upcoming Budget Policy Statement will show a forecast surplus in the range of $300 to $500 million in that year.
Given the events in Europe, this surplus is understandably smaller than was forecast in the PREFU.
But we still remain on our tight fiscal track.
You’ll see a fuller picture of that in the BPS, which will be released on February 16.
The next update after that will be in the Budget itself.
The Budget will set out the Government’s revenue and spending, and show exactly what we are doing to meet our fiscal targets, get back to surplus and start reducing debt.
If the international outlook worsens between now and the Budget we may have to do more than we are currently anticipating to reach our surplus target, bearing in mind that the target is still three years and many forecast revisions away.
If the absolute worst happened, and there was a major shock to the global economy, the Government would look at whether retaining that surplus target would actually harm the economy by forcing a sharp reduction in demand.
But outside that scenario, we remain firmly committed to our target for surplus in 2014/15.
I want to talk now about our second priority, which is to build a more competitive and productive economy.
The reality, all around the developed world, is that the pre-GFC period of relatively strong growth, fed by a massive increase in borrowing, is unlikely to return in the foreseeable future.
Households and businesses are having to reduce the debt they built up over that time, and they are saving rather than spending.
So anyone who complains that New Zealand isn’t growing at four, or five, or six per cent a year right now is on the wrong planet.
In fact, we are doing better than most developed countries.
In both 2012 and 2013, the New Zealand economy is forecast to grow more strongly than the Eurozone, the UK, Japan, the United States and Canada.
So we are in relatively good shape.
However, it is important to understand the Government’s main role.
For the most part, New Zealand’s growth over the next year has already been set in train, and any stabilisation is the job of the Reserve Bank.
The Government’s main role is to keep looking out over the next five years or so and put in place policies that will help the economy become more competitive and productive, through good times and through bad.
Again, the European crisis offers some important lessons.
European countries are in difficulty for two main reasons.
The first is that they have high levels of government debt, and I’ve already talked about the importance of sticking to our tight fiscal track.
And the second reason is that many of the economies in Europe have lost competitiveness.
That doesn’t happen overnight – it happens slowly over a number of years.
Here in New Zealand we have also lost competitiveness over time, particularly as a result of poor policy decisions in the 2000s.
In other words, it has got harder than it would otherwise have been for our exporters to compete in overseas markets. And it has got harder than it would otherwise have been for New Zealand manufacturers to compete with imported goods that are made off shore.
As a result, the industries and sectors that compete internationally actually went into recession in late 2004 and shrank in size by almost 10 per cent in five years.
That decline in competitiveness has started to turn around over the past three years.
A good example of how government policies can help competitiveness is in ACC. As a result of the decisions we made in ACC over the past three years, levies on employers and the self-employed will fall by 22 per cent this year, reducing total costs to business each year by around $250 million.
That’s just one example among many, but there is still much more to be done.
The Government’s view has always been that there is no magic bullet – no one ‘big bang’ reform that would turn the economy on its head.
What is actually required is a series of good policy decisions and reforms over an extended period of time, in 100 different areas, to enhance the competitiveness of New Zealand firms.
And I literally do mean 100.
During the election campaign we released an economic action plan of 120 key things we had done, or were doing, to build a stronger, more competitive economy.
Most of those action points are still ongoing.
So we have a very busy economic reform agenda, following through on things we started last term and on new things we announced during the election.
For example:
We’re restructuring IRL to become an advanced technology institute to work alongside the high-tech manufacturing and services sector.
We’re rolling out ultra-fast broadband and the Rural Broadband Initiative, to lift New Zealand’s connectivity.
We’re comprehensively overhauling New Zealand’s securities law, to restore investor confidence in our financial markets.
We’re introducing a six-month time limit for consenting medium-sized projects under the RMA, to reduce costs, uncertainties and delays.
We’re allowing for choice in the ACC Work Account, to help ensure efficiency and keep a lid on costs for levy payers.
We’re encouraging oil and gas exploration with a competitive new system for processing permits.
We’re negotiating free trade agreements with nine countries in the Trans-Pacific Partnership, including the United States, and separately with a number of other countries including India, Russia and Korea.
We’re extending the mixed ownership model to four State-owned energy companies, to make better use of the Government’s balance sheet and to provide new investment opportunities for New Zealand savers.
And we’re investing heavily in roads of national significance and in the rail network, to promote economic growth and productivity.
These are a few of the initiatives in the 120-point plan, which sets out what the Government will be doing over the next three years.
I have tasked Bill English and Steven Joyce – the two most senior economic ministers – with driving this economic action plan.
I have told them I want to see this action plan regularly updated, showing progress on the existing initiatives and adding further initiatives as they are developed.
The first update will be in the middle of this year and will be publicly released.
Our third priority is to deliver better public services for families and businesses, within tight budgets.
Delivering better public services will help improve the lives and wellbeing of New Zealanders.
New Zealanders rightly expect a world-class health service, an education system that delivers for every child, a strong and effective justice system and social services that protect our most vulnerable and provide children from all walks of life with the opportunities they need to succeed.
Again, the Government has a very busy agenda over the next three years.
In education, our focus is squarely on raising achievement, in particular for those groups of students who have historically under-performed.
We’re strengthening performance measurement and accountability in schools, and we’ll be investing $1 billion of the proceeds from mixed ownership in modernising New Zealand schools.
It’s vitally important for New Zealand that students achieve because they are our future workforce.
But it’s also vitally important for the young people themselves, because a good education is the most important investment they can make in their own lives.
Welfare reform is also a very high priority for the Government.
At the moment around one in eight people aged 18 to 64 is on some sort of benefit, and about half of those have spent at least five out of the past 10 years on a benefit.
That is not only a poor position for beneficiaries themselves to be in: it's also not good for their children, for society or for taxpayers.
So we'll be moving quickly this year to get our welfare reform programme underway.
Early in the year the first Bill will be introduced to Parliament to enact the youth reforms I announced last year, targeting young people who are very much at risk of long-term welfare dependency.
That will be closely followed by another Bill in the second half of this year, to bring in the changes we campaigned on at the election.
New benefit categories will be created, and a greater proportion of beneficiaries will be required to make themselves available for work.
At the same time we will do more to help beneficiaries into work through services like childcare, training, workplace support, and access to health and disability support.
We also have a busy agenda in health, where we are working with local primary care networks throughout the country to provide free after-hours GP visits to children under six.
More people will get elective surgery, and we’re reducing waiting times for cancer treatment, first specialist appointments, diagnostic tests, elective surgery, and for people waiting in emergency departments.
In terms of public safety, we will be introducing legislation to strengthen sentencing, parole and bail laws.
We’ll be making it harder for those accused of the most serious offences to get bail and we’re increasing the penalties for child pornography.
These are all examples of individual initiatives we have underway in different areas.
But it has also become increasingly clear to us as a Government that the way public services are organised across the board needs to be addressed.
The state sector as a whole could do much better at delivering value-for-money, and it could do much better at achieving results, particularly in areas that cut across multiple departments, and which have proved difficult to get traction on over many years.
Last year the Government established the Better Public Services Advisory Group, and we have since received its final report, which we are currently considering.
We will release this report in the next month or two, when I give a speech on where the Government intends to go with state sector reform.
As I said, we are still working through the issues, but I have been quite clear with my Ministers that there needs to be significant change in the way the state sector is run.
Greater efficiency across government is an important part of this, but it is by no means the only part.
We are also focused on the quality and responsiveness of services, on strong and effective leadership, and on orienting the state sector around achieving results that really matter to New Zealanders.
Our final priority is to get on with rebuilding Christchurch.
2011 was about dealing with the damage caused by the destructive earthquakes that hit the region.
2012 is about starting to rebuild a vibrant, strong city.
The Government is totally committed to the reconstruction of Canterbury. That’s why we put aside $5.5 billion in last year’s Budget and created a whole new government department to lead the recovery effort.
We are committed to removing the barriers to reconstruction, and I can assure you that we won’t hesitate to use the powers we have to clear blockages in the system.
It’s easy to underestimate the scale of this undertaking.
Rebuilding Christchurch and its surrounding areas is an unprecedented project – without doubt the biggest economic undertaking in New Zealand’s history.
It is also at risk of delays from more seismic activity.
I want to say again to the people of Canterbury that we really do understand the frustration and anxiety you have felt as a result of the ongoing aftershocks, particularly the latest major ones that occurred around Christmas.
We continue to stand with you and I’m determined to see that momentum is maintained.
A National Bank report last year showed that economic activity in Canterbury was growing faster than anywhere else in the country.
The Re:START shopping area in Cashel Mall is up and running, and is drawing people back to the heart of the city.
And we have seen large companies show their faith in the city by announcing new investment in Christchurch.
Nearly 70 per cent of the 1,357 buildings approved for partial or full demolition in greater Christchurch have been demolished.
And early next week, the first suburban demolition by CERA begins in the residential red zone in Bexley.
We have made changes to the Regional Policy Statement for the greater Christchurch area, which The Press has reported could pave the way for more than 45,000 new houses.
The challenge now is for local authorities to use these powers to free up new land.
The residential red zone settlement process is progressing well. There are around 6500 properties in the residential red zone in Canterbury, and around 90 per cent of those homeowners have now returned their consent forms to CERA so they can receive an offer from the Government.
Around 46 per cent have also now formally accepted either of the Government's offers to purchase their property.
The commercial redevelopment of Christchurch is well underway.
And from February, residential housing reconstruction should move up a gear, subject again to seismic activity.
Plans by employers to hire more permanent staff in Canterbury are at an eight-year high.
And as the rebuilding grows the demand for workers and materials in Christchurch will be huge.
The Government’s strong focus will be on removing roadblocks so that demand can be met.
Finally, for Canterbury’s passionate sporting fans – of which there are many – the good news is that big-match rugby returns to Christchurch on March 24 when the Crusaders play the Cheetahs at the new 17,000 seat stadium in Addington.
Can I conclude by saying that 2012 will no doubt be another challenging year.
As a country we’ve had some tough things thrown at us.
But New Zealanders have shown great resilience.
Together we’ve come through a difficult period.
Looking ahead, I am very confident about New Zealand's prospects.
We're actually in good shape to meet the challenges that will continue to come our way.
There are huge opportunities out there for New Zealand.
We are a food-producing country in a world that is demanding more high-quality food.
A growing middle class in China, India and across Asia is tuning in to the goods and services New Zealand can supply.
And we’re a country that offers great opportunities for our young people.
So I’m unashamedly positive for New Zealand. I think we’ve got a great future ahead of us.
But we need to get out and seize that brighter future – it won’t come delivered on a plate.
That is the task my Government has embarked on.
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21 December 2011
Speech from the Throne
Honourable Members of the House of Representatives. It is my privilege to exercise the prerogative of Her Majesty the Queen and open the 50th Parliament.
E nga Mema o te Whare Paremata o Aotearoa, tenei aku mihi mahana ki a koutou, tena koutou katoa.
Following the General Election in November, negotiations between political parties have resulted in the formation of a National-led Government with a majority in the House on confidence and supply.
Confidence and supply agreements have been signed between the National Party and, respectively, the ACT Party, the Maori Party, and the United Future Party.
These agreements will enable the Government to operate in an effective, stable and inclusive manner.
Beyond these agreements, my Government anticipates co-operating with other parties in Parliament on issues of mutual interest.
Honourable Members. The driving goal of my Government is to build a more competitive and internationally-focused economy with less debt, more jobs and higher incomes.
A strong economy in turn provides the resources necessary to protect the vulnerable in society, maintain the rule of law, provide high-quality public services, look after the environment, and provide opportunities for young people.
Good progress has been made already, despite some very testing times. New Zealand has experienced three challenging years, including a major recession, the worst global financial crisis since the Great Depression, and a devastating series of earthquakes that destroyed whole parts of Christchurch.
But in the worst of times we have seen the best of New Zealanders, as they have risen to these challenges.
The economy is recovering, having grown in eight of the past nine quarters, and 63,000 more people are employed now compared to two years ago. This recovery is forecast to continue.
Looking forward, the biggest risk to the New Zealand economy is from the European debt crisis. The outcome of this crisis is uncertain and, as a result, the economic outlook for the whole world has deteriorated.
However, New Zealand is in a relatively good position to deal with any fall-out in the near term, and my Government is firmly focused on improving New Zealand’s longer-term productivity and competitiveness.
Honourable Members. My Government has a comprehensive policy agenda, and a substantial legislative programme that it intends to put before the House in the forthcoming session.
My Government intends to return to an operating surplus in the 2014/15 financial year and start to reduce net core Crown debt as a proportion of GDP. This will be achieved through tight fiscal discipline, including new operating allowances of only $800 million in each of the next two Budgets.
As agreed with the ACT Party, legislation will be introduced to limit the growth in core Crown operating spending, with some adjustments, to a rate no faster than the combination of population growth and inflation.
Once in surplus, a KiwiSaver auto-enrolment exercise will be initiated.
My Government will maintain a new, lower cap on the number of staff in core government administration. It will be focused on achieving results, seeking new and better ways to deliver public services, and continuing to contain and reduce costs. Particular attention will be paid to the recommendations of the Better Public Services Advisory Group.
My Government will extend the mixed ownership model, under which Air New Zealand currently operates, to four State-owned enterprises – Meridian Energy, Mighty River Power, Genesis Power and Solid Energy – and will reduce its stake in Air New Zealand.
In each case, the Crown will retain at least 51 per cent of the company, and New Zealanders will be at the front of the queue for shares.
Proceeds from extending the mixed ownership model will go into a new fund – the Future Investment Fund – to pay for capital projects that help grow the economy and improve public services.
As agreed with the United Future Party, legislation will be introduced to limit any sale of public assets – that is, of State-owned enterprises and Air New Zealand – to no more than 49 per cent of the shares in the company, together with a limit on ownership by a single entity.
Honourable Members. My Government believes in a more active welfare system which supports people who can work, back into work, and does not trap them in a life of limited income and limited choices.
Legislation will be introduced to reform the current system of benefits. New benefit categories will be created, and a greater proportion of beneficiaries will be required to make themselves available for work. Changes will also be made to clamp down on beneficiaries whose recreational use of drugs affects their ability to work, and those who commit benefit fraud.
As agreed with the Maori Party, a separate appropriation and governance structure will be established for Whanau Ora.
The Government will introduce changes to support disengaged young people back into education or training. It will also have a more hands-on approach with 16- and 17-year-old beneficiaries, and with 18-year-old teen parents, including wrap-around support from third parties, and an expectation that they will be in some form of education or training.
As agreed with the Maori Party, a Ministerial committee on poverty will be established to improve the co-ordination of government activity in alleviating the effects of poverty.
Honourable Members. My Government believes that high-quality education is vitally important. It provides the opportunity for children from all backgrounds to make the most of their lives, and is an essential requirement for a skilled and productive workforce.
The Government’s focus will be squarely on raising achievement, in particular for those groups of students who have historically underperformed.
The Government will work to lift participation rates in early childhood education, with a target of 98 per cent of new entrants in school having previously attended an early childhood centre.
Performance measurement and accountability in schools will be strengthened. In addition, the Government will work to improve the quality of initial teacher education, introduce more effective appraisals of teachers and principals, and reform and strengthen the Teachers Council.
$1 billion from the Future Investment Fund will be invested over the next five years to build new schools and modernise existing buildings, including with new, 21st Century teaching spaces. It will be easier for schools to employ trades specialists to deliver courses, and to set up trades or service academies.
As agreed with the ACT Party, the Government will allow for the formation of charter schools in areas where educational underachievement is most entrenched.
Tertiary education providers will be funded in a way that takes into account their performance against indicators of achievement. It will continue to drive better value for taxpayers from the interest-free student loan scheme, including an expanded campaign to recover overdue debt from borrowers living overseas.
Honourable Members. My Government believes that a competitive economy, trading successfully with the world, is the best way to build sustainable economic growth that creates jobs and grows incomes.
The Government will restructure and expand Industrial Research Ltd into an advanced technology institute to work alongside the high-tech manufacturing and services sector. It will also invest in a series of national science challenges, in areas where science can address some of the most important longer-term challenges to New Zealand’s development.
The Government will continue its programme of investment in modern infrastructure. On current forecasts, $12 billion will be invested over the next 10 years in new State highways. The most immediate priorities will be the construction of the Waterview Connection and the completion of Auckland’s Western Ring Route.
KiwiRail’s Turnaround Plan will continue to be supported and there will be an investigation into the use of Clifford Bay as a new sea freight terminal.
Ultra-fast broadband and the Rural Broadband Initiative will continue to be rolled out. A Crown-owned company will be established to invest in irrigation and water storage, drawing on the Future Investment Fund.
The Government has set aside $5.5 billion in the Canterbury Earthquake Recovery Fund to pay for its share of rebuilding essential local infrastructure in Christchurch and its surrounds.
It will provide certainty to affected homeowners in Canterbury by finishing the red zone classification process. It will continue to release land for residential subdivision and ensure there is an adequate supply of land to rebuild on.
My Government will allow for choice in accident insurance covered through the Work Account, including an expansion of the Accredited Employer Scheme. It will consider the feasibility of introducing choice into accident insurance covered through the Motor Vehicle Account and the Earners’ Account.
Legislation will be introduced to implement a new “starting-out wage”, set at 80 per cent of the adult minimum wage, to ensure young people are not priced out of the job market. Legislation will also be introduced to extend flexible working arrangements and to improve collective bargaining.
The Government will progress legislation to overhaul securities law and to criminalise anti-competitive behaviour. It will introduce tougher consumer credit legislation to target loan sharks and protect consumers.
Honourable Members. My Government believes that balanced and sensible management of our resources will protect the environment while promoting stronger economic growth.
The Government will continue to advance the Fresh Start for Fresh Water programme, and will introduce new environmental reporting systems. Legislation will be introduced to set a six-month time limit for the consenting of medium-sized projects, and to improve the Resource Management Act as part of the second phase of reforms.
As agreed with the ACT Party, legislation will be introduced to ensure there is only one resource management plan in each district.
The Government will also introduce legislation to amend the Emissions Trading Scheme. This will include moving to full obligation in three equal steps for the energy, transport and industrial sectors. It will also introduce offsetting for pre-1990 forest land owners to enable greater flexibility of land use.
My Government will encourage oil and gas exploration with a competitive new system for processing permits. It will also progress legislation to better manage the environmental effects of activities in New Zealand’s Exclusive Economic Zone, and will introduce legislation to reflect the updated Liability for Maritime Claims Protocol.
As agreed with the United Future Party, legislation will be introduced to stop helicopter hunting on the conservation estate involving the shooting of game animals from helicopters and the herding and hazing of game animals as part of the hunt. The Game Animal Council Bill will be progressed.
Honourable Members. My Government will continue to maintain an independent and bipartisan foreign policy. It will further focus New Zealand’s aid efforts on the Pacific, and will campaign to win New Zealand a seat on the United Nations Security Council for a two-year term starting in 2015.
The Defence White Paper and Capability Plan initiatives will be implemented, and legislation will be introduced to ensure the three services of the Defence Force are able to work together more effectively.
The Government will continue to pursue high-quality trade agreements, ensuring as it does that New Zealand’s best interests are always served. There will be a comprehensive programme of Government-led trade delegations to China, India, and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations.
Honourable Members. My Government will continue to deliver high-quality public services.
It will work with local primary care networks throughout the country to provide free after-hours general practitioner visits to children under six. A comprehensive after-hours telephone health advice service will be developed.
The Government’s target is that 95 per cent of all eight-month-old children will be fully immunised with three scheduled vaccinations. It will also roll out a nation-wide rheumatic fever programme targeting vulnerable communities. Alcohol and drug treatment services for young people will be expanded, as will specialist mental health services for young offenders. The Voluntary Bonding Scheme will be extended.
More people will get elective surgery, and waiting times will be reduced for cancer treatment, first specialist appointments, diagnostic tests, elective surgery, and for people waiting in emergency departments.
As agreed with the Maori Party, further work will be done on plain packaging and other anti-smoking initiatives.
My Government will continue to ensure that State houses are located in the areas of greatest need, and are going to families who need them most, for the duration of their need. It will work to increase the supply of social housing, including progressing options for iwi housing providers.
The current home insulation and clean heating programme will continue, with a specific focus on low-income households, as agreed with the Maori Party. Every State house built before 1978 that can be insulated, will be insulated.
My Government will introduce legislation to strengthen sentencing, parole and bail laws. It will be harder for those accused of the most serious offences to get bail, the penalties for child pornography will be increased, and Civil Detention Orders will be introduced.
The Search and Surveillance Bill will be progressed, as will the Victims of Crime Reform Bill. The penalties for breaching a protection order will be doubled, and funding will be available for security improvements in the homes of family violence victims.
My Government will continue to progress the review of constitutional arrangements.
It will also continue to make the full and final settlement of historical Treaty of Waitangi claims a priority.
Over the course of the forthcoming Parliamentary session, other measures will be laid before you.
Honourable Members. The fact that this is the 50th Parliament gives us cause to celebrate. New Zealand can boast of an unbroken parliamentary democracy stretching back to the 1850s, and universal suffrage from 1893.
My Government is privileged to have won the trust and good will of New Zealanders for a second Parliamentary term.
It will seek to earn anew that trust and good will every day over the next three years.
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