Sunday 1 April 2012

John Key named as bankster PM

I will have to swallow my distaste for Alex Jones to listen to Max.
NZ Prime minister named as a bankster plant



Via Aotearoa: a Wider Perspective

Here is an interview with Max Keiser in which the New Zealand Prime minister is named as one of the international banker plants.

Just in case you still think that we are actually a democracy it is more and more clear that Europe the US and Anglo Saxon countries such as New Zealand are part of an oligarchical global system and it should come as no surprise that like in the US and Europe that Oligarchical elite gets richer and richer while you and I get poorer and poorer.







Here Is an article by Bernard Hickey on John Key.

Numbers reveal National disgrace



1 April, 2012

I like chart porn. That's looking at charts that help explain how the economy and government operate.

But looking at the charts from Treasury's Monthly Economic Indicators pack just made me angry.

They show how irresponsible John Key's Government has become in the pursuit of pleasing its wealthy backers.

It is clear now that the Government has effectively cut the income tax rate and paid for it by borrowing money overseas, in large part from China. It is an act of economic treason and generational selfishness when a government has decided an already-wealthy part of the population deserves higher incomes paid for by loading foreign debt on future generations of taxpayers.

The charts reveal the results of the cut in the income tax rate from 39 to 33 cents, which was in theory partly paid for by an increase in the GST rate from 12.5 to 15 per cent. They also reveal a massive reversal in a decade-long trend of improvement in New Zealand's public debt position.

Our tax-to-GDP ratio has crashed from almost 34 per cent in late 2008 to 29 per cent last year, which means yet more borrowing on the horizon.


At the same time, the tax from individual incomes has fallen from around 32 per cent to around 24 per cent.

This is a direct result of the cut in the top personal tax rate and consumers' shift to spending less and saving more. This means the higher GST rate is not collecting the revenue expected.

Meanwhile, interest-free student loans and Working For Families are deepening budget deficits. That is being paid for with increased Government borrowing to the tune of 15 per cent of GDP.

A collapse in the corporate tax take is only partly responsible and is largely due to the recession rather than any change in policy. It is now rebounding but the tax-to-GDP ratio is worsening.

This is unsustainable without an immediate and extended surge in economic growth, which few expect.

Voters will have to repay this debt in decades to come. Why are they not revolting at this national act of selfishness?

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