29 February 2008


Hundertwasser – an iconic Northland product





What an interesting week it’s been. The Northland Chamber of Commerce has completed a submission to the Finance and Expenditure Select Committee regarding the Emissions Trading proposal as it stands, talk of a new Hunderwatsser museum in Whangarei and wholesale changes at the Northland Chamber Board.

Climate Change Emissions trading amendment

Our submission to the Government says that The Northland Chamber of Commerce opposes the Climate Change (Emissions Trading and Renewable Preference) Bill. We support action to reduce global emissions of Greenhouse Gases but we believe the government should not be imposing restrictive measures upon New Zealand businesses ahead of other countries. We have asked the Finance and Expenditure Committee To put aside these measures and reconsider once our trading partners implement. The reason for this of course is that it immediately gives non complying countries a competitive price advantage over us when trading internationally. Another Disturbing effect of the trading and emissions amendment is the potential for job losses in Northland which we would obviously like to avoid.

Hunderwatsser Museum

Every region in New Zealand can boast about parts of their region that entice visitors. Usually these are to do with physical beauty (Mt aspiring) or one off events (Wanganui masters Games).

Smart Regions are being very clever in the cultural Tourism industry. They are taking a local feature whether that be a person, place, event or thing and developing an iconic product around that. This makes sense on a few counts - the foremost being that a region can be very specific about what makes it special therefore giving itself a unique selling point (Just like a business).

We can see a great deal of common sense in the Hundertwasser proposal. Yes for Whangarei but more importantly for the wider Northland Economy. Unfortunately there has been some discord regarding the sighting of the proposed museum. If we are smart about this proposal every small town in Northland could work in with the Museum to have a Hundertwasser iconic piece or feature.

We know that the Cultural Tourism sector is very financially rewarding. We also know that art patrons that travel to NZ to see an iconic work such as the Museum in Whangarei will probably travel to Kawakawa to see the Hundertwasser work there. So why not Kerikeri, Kaitaia, Kaikohe, Dargaville and Ruawai capitalising on this and working in with the Whangarei Museum to get ‘Hundertwasser lovers to travel a circuit. Surely that would encourage these visitors to stay longer, spend more and come back more frequently.

The Northland Chamber of Commerce held its board meeting on 27th February. We have a new board and a few good challenges for the year ahead. Our new board are on our website http://www.northchamber.co.nz/

The Northland Chamber of Commerce is the networking, education, advocacy and marketing group for Northland business, and is part of a nationwide network of 30 and a world-wide movement of 21,000 chambers. Subscription to the free fortnightly chamber e-news can be arranged on info@northchamber.co.nz. Enquiries to 09-4384771 or www.northchamber.co.nz, www.kaiparachamber.co.nz and www.farnorthchamber.co.nz
You can have a say on this by going to the Northland Chamber of Commerce Feedback website on www.northchamber.blogspot.com

28 February 2008


Big Changes: Northland Chamber of Commerce Board

Eight new board members were voted on to the Northland Chamber of commerce board at the Chamber AGM on Wednesday night.

Chamber CEO Jeff Smith says ‘there was a lot of interest in standing for our board which concluded in a vote at the AGM on Wednesday’.

‘We had a few retirements during the year so it was good that there was a keen level of interest in the Chamber’

The new board sees 8 new board members and 6 of the current board.

We have an exciting mix among our board with experts in the fields that the Chamber advocates strongly for namely Town Planning, Employment specialists, Construction, tourism, project management with the WDC and NRC remaining represented through co-opted members Greg Martin and Bill Rossiter.

The Northland Chamber of Commerce is accredited to the International Chambers of Commerce, is a voluntary self funded organisation whose purpose is to protect the environment that businesses operate in within Northland.

Membership is made up of businesses, organisations and individuals all over Northland. 2007 has seen membership and involvement increase and in particular the Far north and Kaipara districts.

The 2008 Northland Chamber of Commerce Board is


Tony
Savage
President
Urlich McNab Kilpatrick


Tim
Robinson
Vice President
Gen-i


Dean
Subritzky
Treasurer
Sudburys Ltd


Vince
Cocurullo
Board
Cocurullo's Ltd


Richard
Engdahl
Board
Organisational Imagineering International Ltd


Nat
Davis
Board
Renov8


Darren
Mason
Board
Northpower


Jeroen
Jongejans
Board
Dive!Tutukaka


Heather
Tomason
Board
Griffiths & Associates


Noël
Jelsma
Board
Gen-i Northland


Paul
Neshausen
Board
Direction


Murray
Broadbelt
Board
Employer Services Ltd


Andrew
Bourke
Board
Konica Minolta Business Solutions


Alan
Wilkinson
Board
AK Consulting/Surveyors North


The Northland Chamber of Commerce is the networking, education, advocacy and marketing group for Northland business, and is part of a nationwide network of 30 and a world-wide movement of 21,000 chambers. Subscription to the free fortnightly chamber e-news can be arranged on info@northchamber.co.nz. Enquiries to 09-4384771 or www.northchamber.co.nz, www.kaiparachamber.co.nz and www.farnorthchamber.co.nzYou can have a say on this by going to the Northland Chamber of Commerce Feedback website on www.northchamber.blogspot.com






27 February 2008

Northland Chamber submission on the Climate Change Bill








28th February 2008.

Finance and Expenditure Select Committee
C/o Parliament Buildings
Wellington
By email carol.brouwer@parliament.govt.nz.

Submission to:
The Finance and Expenditure Committee

Submission regarding:
Climate Change (Emissions Trading and Renewable Preference) Bill - Bill No 187-1

Submission by:
The Northland Chamber of Commerce and Industry Inc.

General Nature of Submission


The Northland Chamber of Commerce opposes the Climate Change (Emissions Trading and Renewable Preference) Bill. We support action to reduce global emissions of Greenhouse Gases but we believe the government should not be imposing restrictive measures upon New Zealand businesses ahead of other countries.

Decision sought


To put aside these measures and reconsider once our trading partners implement
In place of these measure to implement a broad-based greenhouse gas charge accompanied by a corresponding reduction in income tax as an alternative to the emissions trading scheme.

The Northland Chamber of Commerce


The Northland Chamber of Commerce currently has 363 financial members that employ the equivalent of 5000 full time employees.

Since 1903, the Northland Chamber of Commerce has served the needs of the Northland business community through its public policy and advocacy initiatives and its business development programs and services.


The Chamber also works to ensure that Northland has a business-friendly environment where all businesses can grow and prosper. With this, also comes paying close attention to the quality of life the region offers our members’ employees and families. The Chamber works to make a difference in Northland’s future and to help Northland grow.


The Northland Chamber of Commerce generally favour well researched development projects that add value to the economy, community and infrastructure of the region especially those projects that undergo rigorous scrutiny to ensure that the community and environment are protected.


Our Submission


The Northland Chamber of Commerce opposes the Climate Change (Emissions Trading and Renewable Preference) Bill.


We support action to reduce global emissions of Greenhouse Gases but we believe the government should not be imposing restrictive measures upon New Zealand businesses ahead of other countries.

The measures proposed in the Bill, specifically the Emissions Trading Scheme and the limitation on thermal electricity generation, will result in significantly higher energy and transport costs for New Zealand businesses which our trading partners will not have to face.

These costs will reduce New Zealand’s international competitiveness and result in a loss of investment and jobs as companies contract activity, close down or relocate offshore.

If businesses do relocate offshore, this will do nothing to reduce global emissions. In fact global emissions might increase if that economic activity were to shift to another economy with more lenient climate change policies.

The impacts of supporting the Emissions Trading Bill are job losses and a diminishing of our economic base
The Government’s figures show that 1630 jobs would be lost in Northland alone – a 2.7% contraction.

An impact of this size on the economic base of our region would have devastating consequences and would be unacceptable. We urge you to reconsider this legislation.

We strongly believe that New Zealand should not introduce emissions trading or any other price based mechanism to reduce greenhouse gas emissions until our major trading partners face similar costs.

Putting aside the issue of New Zealand moving too far and too fast, we consider the emissions trading scheme to be a flawed way of reducing emissions.

We are concerned that without some sort of mechanism to temper market forces the proposed scheme will result in excessively high and volatile energy prices.

We are also concerned that the free allocation of emissions Units to protect the energy intensive companies will disadvantage smaller businesses relative to larger ones.

We believe a broad-based greenhouse gas charge accompanied by a corresponding reduction in income tax should be considered as an alternative to the emissions trading scheme. This would result in much more stable energy prices.

We would appreciate an opportunity to speak to our submission at the Select Committee hearing.


Yours faithfully

Jeff Smith
Chief Executive Officer
Northland Chamber of Commerce

18 February 2008


Graffiti crackdown fantastic but lets not forget the responsible retailers in Northland

Its great to see central Government cracking down on those that wantonly and recklessly inflict their trash on private property and in doing so attempt to drag our regions public face and into the dysfunctional cesspits that these people appear to wallow in.

We wonder about the wisdom in fining perpetrators $2000 for desecrating property when history has shown the NZ justice system only too willing to ‘write off’ fines of people once they rack up $30000 or more in fines.

Our solution is to ‘tag’ these people with their fines that follows them for life until they are no longer ‘drawing an income’ or earning a living with an amount extracted each week as reparation to society.

We must however point out that we have in Whangarei a group of businesses that are often overlooked by media, who have already taken measures to protect our community by signing up to a voluntary code of ethics proposed by the Northland Chamber last year.

Last year we asked retailers involved in the sale of ‘graffiti type material’ if they were doing anything and what they would be prepared to do to assist with this problem.

The following retailers (MITRE 10 Regent, Placemakers, Colourplus Kamo and Wynn Fraser paints) agreed various initiatives put forward by the Chamber to assist in the stem of sales of paint to taggers. Not only did these retailers agree on self imposed ethics but they had already put systems such as security, restricting sales Policies and a responsible attitude in pushing for a solution to stop the tagging scourge.

It is also interesting to note that these businesses have a local content in other words the franchise or business is owned locally and therefore have more than a financial stake in our community with most of the staff being local.

In last weeks announcement from Government one of the crackdowns was to impose fines of up to $1500 on businesses for not having special security arrangements in place. Once again Government has picked the ‘easy’ target, Business, to pick on when societies ills such as tagging appear on the agenda. Why should businesses be fined $1500 because your offspring or cousin can successfully steals spray paint from them?

The message is this. Support these businesses. They are run by people who by there creativity and initiative risk their capital to provide jobs and services to our community. They are also part of the most ‘compliance imposed upon’ groups in New Zealand and the ones that put back into your community in a various number of ways.



The Northland Chamber of Commerce is the networking, education, advocacy and marketing group for Northland business, and is part of a nationwide network of 30 and a world-wide movement of 21,000 chambers. Subscription to the free fortnightly chamber e-news can be arranged on info@northchamber.co.nz. Enquiries to 09-4384771 or www.northchamber.co.nz, www.kaiparachamber.co.nz and www.farnorthchamber.co.nz
You can have a say on this by going to the Northland Chamber of Commerce Feedback website on www.northchamber.blogspot.com

14 February 2008

2008 Budget Personal Tax Package – Northland Chamber of Commerce



As the Northland Chamber of Commerce we sometime s get quite pre-occupied with business issues….. and quite rightly so as we are a predominantly business group.


Recently the Chamber of Commerce along with a number of other business groups submitted a proposal to the Government on their 2008 Budget statement which focussed heavily on aligning the top personal tax rates to the company rate.


The reason for this being the personal tax rate is more important than the company rate for many small and medium-sized businesses, and there is a strong case for alignment of the top personal, company and trust rates in the interests of simplifying the tax system and reducing compliance costs.


The government has said that promoting economic growth is a top priority objective reducing high effective marginal tax rates.


The Hon Peter Dunne who came and spoke to the Northland Chamber in 2006 and alluded to aligning personal and company rates has now proposed to align the personal, company and trust rates at 30%. We think that this is commendable and given the government’s fiscal position, this could readily be implemented provided firm control is exercised over government spending.
In the medium term, personal and other income tax rates should be lowered further to make New Zealand more internationally competitive and attract investment.


Cuts in rates are also preferable to adjustments to tax thresholds, and we are opposed to measures such as the introduction of a tax-free threshold. The Submission set out below is affordable and could be implemented without creating ongoing inflationary pressures and without cutting real spending.


Recent tax moves have not been generally focused on growth, and they have increased the tax burden for many businesses and working people. The relative simplicity of the income tax system has been sacrificed in the process.


The wage gap with Australia cannot be closed by redistribution – it requires growth. A bold package that aligns all income tax rates at 30% or below would increase productivity and economic growth, be very positive for business, reduce unnecessary compliance costs, help stem the outflow of enterprising New Zealanders, and greatly improve New Zealand’s economic outlook.


Our Submission - Introduction


Economic growth is a priority objective of the government. Growth requires improvements in productivity and workforce participation. Both would be assisted by lower taxes.
The reduction in the rate of company tax from 1 April 2008 is a welcome move. However, personal tax rates are more important for many small and medium-sized businesses and professional organisations, and for new equity invested in companies by resident taxpayers. A coherent, medium-term strategy for personal taxation is needed which is consistent with the decisions on business taxation in the 2007 Budget. At present New Zealand’s tax policy is lacking in strategic direction and vision.


The Tax Review 2001 (McLeod Review) remains a sound guide for such a strategy. A key recommendation was the adoption of a lower, flatter income tax structure. This would reduce the deadweight costs, complexities and other inefficiencies of the present system.


Proposed tax package


To have the maximum benefits for growth, reductions in the highest effective marginal tax rates are needed, ie those that most influence the productive effort of taxpayers. The top two personal rates (39% and 33%) should be lowered and aligned with the company tax rate and related rates. This would foster greater work effort, including investment in education and training, and encourage unincorporated firms to use resources more efficiently. A reduction in the effective rate of tax (business and personal) on new equity-financed investment could be expected to increase the proportion of investment that is financed by residents.
From a growth perspective, reducing tax rates is preferable to adjusting thresholds because incentives to work, save and invest at the margin are increased. Threshold changes only change marginal rates for a relatively small number of taxpayers. (If the two top brackets were indexed for inflation since 2000, only around 15% of individual taxpayers and about 12% of taxable income payable by individuals would be affected.) Also, as the Inland Revenue Department has documented, tax thresholds induce many taxpayers to arrange their affairs in ways that enable them to avoid higher tax rates, which does little for growth.
Nevertheless, fiscal drag (the increase in revenue collected as taxpayers move into higher tax brackets) is a problem with the present scale. This is best dealt with by flattening the tax scale, as many countries around the world are doing, but adjustments to thresholds, which could benefit lower income taxpayers and others, could form part of an overall package.
This analysis suggests that aligning the top personal, company and trust rates at 30%, as the minister of revenue has suggested, in one or two steps would have major benefits for the economy and New Zealanders.


The case for not reducing higher rates (the 33% and 39% rates) on equity grounds founders when looked at alongside recent tax initiatives (eg the lower company tax rate, tax concessions and the Portfolio Investment Entity (PIE) rules) which will reduce the tax rate on much taxable income to 30%. The Working for Families and KiwiSaver schemes also provide significant tax relief for many taxpayers who earn incomes that are subject to the top personal rate of tax. Reducing and aligning the personal, company and trust rates would significantly reduce the incentives and costs of avoiding the top personal tax rate. It would also restore equity between self-employed persons and those subject to PAYE who have less scope to avoid the higher tax rates. The Working for Families scheme should also be adjusted by reductions in assistance to higher income earners (many of whom would benefit from a tax cut), a reduction in the abatement rate and possibly by introducing a universal element.


Fiscal headroom


There is scope, over time, to implement a much larger tax package than that implied in the 2008 Budget Policy Statement (BPS). The BPS forecasts suggest that core Crown operating spending will increase by 0.9 percentage points of GDP by 2011/12. Slower growth in operating spending and a lower provision for new capital spending could help fund additional tax reductions. A somewhat higher proportion of capital spending could also be funded from debt without any significant change in forecast debt ratios. The BPS forecasts take no account of the impact on growth over time of improved incentives that arise from lower effective marginal tax rates. Over the medium term, perhaps up to 40 percent of tax revenue initially forgone might be recouped from higher growth and less tax avoidance. We think that net tax reductions of up to $2.5 billion annually could be responsibly implemented in stages over the next few years.


Tax criteria


We consider the proposed package would meet the criteria laid down by the minister of finance:
· it need not involve increased borrowing for operating purposes;
· it would allow expenditure on public services to be maintained in real terms;
· it would not exacerbate inflation, which is a monetary phenomenon. Firm monetary policy is necessary and sufficient to control inflation. Growth-oriented tax cuts would have a smaller impact on prices than redistributive measures because they would increase output (reducing the problem of ‘too much money chasing too few goods’). At most, tax cuts could have a one-off, not ongoing effect on the CPI; and
· it would be unlikely to have a measurable effect on income inequality since, as the McLeod Review demonstrated, the difference between the impact on the distribution of income of a flatter tax scale compared with a more progressive one is small. Moreover, as their incomes rise, lower income people benefit from facing a flatter tax scale, and it is misleading to look at immediate (static) impacts alone. In addition, prices and wages adjust to changes in complicated ways (for example, the increase in the top tax rate to 39% in 2000 appears to have pushed up house prices) so it is difficult to say which groups might ultimately benefit from tax cuts. A general proposition is that the burden of taxes (in the form of higher prices for goods or lower wages) falls on those who have the least ability to avoid these effects, for example, by emigrating or raising their prices or wage rates. These are more likely to be the poor with limited skills than the wealthy.


Other issues


We do not support the introduction of further tax concessions. Recent moves in this direction have added to the cost and complexity of the tax system. Existing concessions should be removed or reduced.
A general tax ‘dividend’, possibly of a one-off nature, would have no incentive effects.
A tax-free income threshold should not be introduced because the revenue cost of such a move would be substantial and other tax rates, including effective marginal rates for most taxpayers, would have to be set at higher levels than otherwise. This is the Australian experience. The low income rebate is a better means of helping those in need. The case against a tax-free threshold was well argued by the McLeod Review.


A ceiling of 30% on personal, company and trust rates should be lowered in future, having regard to countries in our region such as Singapore and Hong Kong which have top rates of 20% or below.


The Northland Chamber of Commerce is the networking, education, advocacy and marketing group for Northland business, and is part of a nationwide network of 30 and a world-wide movement of 21,000 chambers. Subscription to the free fortnightly chamber e-news can be arranged on info@northchamber.co.nz. Enquiries to 09-4384771 or www.northchamber.co.nz, www.kaiparachamber.co.nz and www.farnorthchamber.co.nz
You can have a say on this by going to the Northland Chamber of Commerce Feedback website on www.northchamber.blogspot.com
Opportunities and Tax Cuts


Last week Michael Cullen gave a speech to the Auckland Chamber of Commerce. Most of the Media comment around this has focused on Tax Cuts and Auckland Infrastructure. In dissecting Minister Cullen’s Speech we actually recognise a couple of positives and opportunities for Northland as well as recognizing some warning signs in the promise of tax cuts.


The Positives


The Minister talked about seizing the enormous business opportunities that will be created by growing consumer awareness of environmental issues. Whether you do or don’t buy into the climate change theory the effects in policy and the way New Zealand Inc does business has to adapt to this changing business environment. From the Ministers Speech we recognise that there are potential opportunities for Northland to actually lead the way in promoting ourselves as the first Carbon Free Region in New Zealand. What opportunities would this lead to for your business? Do your customers – insist and deal with ‘environmentally responsible’ businesses? There are power companies in NZ now that are seeing a raft of new consumer accounts simply because they have taken steps to explain how environmentally aware they are.
The Northland Region has already signed the Sustainable tourism charter which basically says that we will provide first class visitor experiences in Northland however not at the cost of our environment now and more importantly in the future.
Another opportunity the minister alluded to was the willingness to enter into Public Private Partnerships to ensure major infrastructure is carried out. Could this assist Northland in bringing decent data connections up this way? Further roading improvements? Rail links?

In our recent local body elections the number of councilors supporting the PPP model were in the majority.

The Warnings

Recently the Chamber of Commerce and other business associations provided a submission to the Government on what they would like to see come out of the 2008 Budget in regards to taxation.

The joint proposal was based on the view that the main outcome of the budget should be a narrower gap between the top personal and company tax rates. Aligning the top personal, company and trust rates at 30% would have major benefits for the economy and New Zealanders.


The main criteria adopted by the Chamber in developing this submission were to reform business taxation in a way that would benefit New Zealand’s Economic Growth and make New Zealand Tax structure internationally attractive especially in line with Australia.
In speaking to the Chamber of Commerce last week Michael Cullen said “Labour will deliver tax cuts because it is fair - money that we do not need to meet our obligations to New Zealanders should not be held indefinitely in crown accounts”. Unfortunately Dr Cullen could not give specifics around his proposals. Therefore no indication of the amount of tax cuts, for whom and by when. In fact the ‘tax cut ‘ announcement is conditionally made on the premises of four underlying ‘catch 22 type’ principles each of which should give any Government an out of the promise over the coming years.

The Northland Chamber of Commerce has to ask this simple question. If the same Finance Minister from the same party is saying roughly the same things and pushing the same message as before the 2005 election and the result was a very timid movement on business taxation then why should the business community and industry believe that the Finance minister has any other intention other than past performance?

The Northland Chamber of Commerce would like to see BOLD commitment from our future political leaders and reemphasise the call from a multitude of business groups from the past few years namely an alignment of the top personal tax rates with the company rate of 30%.

We encourage all political parties to specifically outline the tax (cut) policy well in advance of the 2008 election so that reasonable people may be able to make decisions based on solid data as opposed to vague promises.


The Northland Chamber of Commerce is the networking, education, advocacy and marketing group for Northland business, and is part of a nationwide network of 30 and a world-wide movement of 21,000 chambers. Subscription to the free fortnightly chamber e-news can be arranged on info@northchamber.co.nz. Enquiries to 09-4384771 or www.northchamber.co.nz, www.kaiparachamber.co.nz and www.farnorthchamber.co.nz
You can have a say on this by going to the Northland Chamber of Commerce Feedback website on www.northchamber.blogspot.com

01 February 2008


Competition for positions in Northlands biggest advocacy/networking group

The Northland Chamber of Commerce has found for a second year running an ever increasing number of business people wanting to become involved in assisting the organisation with Governance and Direction.

‘Subject to an audit on the nomination we have around 19 people vying for 14 positions on the Chamber of commerce’ said Chamber of Commerce CEO Jeff Smith.

‘We have had enquiries form businesses all over Northland including the Far North and Kaipara wanting to become part of what they believed is an organisation on the up and up’

‘Membership numbers, Income, Advocacy Roles have all increased through the 2007 year’.

‘Our AGM is happening on 27 February as we now need to look to 2008 and beyond and how the 105 year old organisation can best add value to the Whole Northland Community.

We are looking for significant growth in all areas of the Chamber operations in 2008, including membership, income, events, training and the strengthening of our far north chamber and Kaipara chamber brands. It is heartening to see so much interest among our members to assist and govern the organisation.

We encourage all our members to come along to the AGM, try out the Northland Chamber iconic signature dish, Kumara and Mussell Fritters, and vote for those people you see as best being able to lead the organisation to assist make Northland a healthy, vibrant and prosperous place to raise our Tamariki

NZ Chambers of Commerce are the countries biggest networking and advocacy bodies. Enquiries on the Northland Chamber of Commerce can be found online by going to our websites at
http://www.northchamber.co.nz/ http://www.farnorthchamber.co.nz/ and http://www.kaiparachamber.co.nz/


277 Words

The Northland Chamber of Commerce is the networking, education, advocacy and marketing group for Northland business, and is part of a nationwide network of 30 and a world-wide movement of 21,000 chambers. Subscription to the free fortnightly chamber e-news can be arranged on info@northchamber.co.nz. Enquiries to 09-4384771 or www.northchamber.co.nz, www.kaiparachamber.co.nz and
http://www.farnorthchamber.co.nz/

You can have a say on this by going to the Northland Chamber of Commerce Feedback website on
http://www.northchamber.blogspot.com/