NZ pushing for deregulation, documents show
WikiLeaks
has released another batch of secret documents which critics say show
New Zealand is pushing for deregulation in world trade negotiations.
Prime Minister John Key: "We'll make sure in the end that we do the best deal we can for New Zealand."
6
June, 2015
They
said the documents showed the Government wanted to loosen its control
over public services such as transport, education and water, and in
the financial sector.
The
17 leaked documents are from the highly secretive Trade in Services
Agreement, which involves the world's most powerful countries.
The
agreement aims to set trade rules and decide how services are
regulated in 23 countries, including the US and Australia, and in the
European Union.
It
is part of what has been dubbed the 'T-treaty trinity', which
includes the Trans-Pacific Partnership and the Transatlantic Trade
and Investment Partnership.
Auckland
University law professor Jane Kelsey said the leaked documents showed
New Zealand had been the most aggressive nation in putting commercial
interests ahead of environmental, social, and cultural impacts.
"Part
of it's ideological, which is pushing the light-handed, risk-tolerant
approach to regulation, which we know has failed us here if we look
at areas like finance companies or Pike River or the aged care
system," she said.
The
Prime Minister said he would not discuss the leaks, but said
Professor Kelsey was usually off the mark when it came to free trade
agreements.
"If
you look at pretty much every FTA we've every done, they've always
out-performed and done better than we thought and ironically Jane
Kelsey has pretty much been opposed to all of them - her fundamental
position is opposition to trade," he said.
"We'll
make sure in the end that we do the best deal we can for New
Zealand."
Green
Party, CTU question secrecy
World
leaders have met 11 times over the past two years, but the
negotiations are supposed to remain secret until five years after any
agreement comes into force, or negotiations end.
Council
of Trade Unions policy director Bill Rosenberg said that was
ridiculous.
"They're
as important as any legislation, arguably more important than any
legislation that goes through our parliament," he said.
"We'd
be up-in-arms if any legislation could be put into effect without us
having any ability to have a serious look at what is in it."
Green
Party leader James Shaw said the cat was already out of the bag.
"We
have been saying for a long time that the Government should release
the texts," he said.
"When
the public - the only version they receive is via WikiLeaks - you
just don't know what version of the truth you're getting."
First
Union general secretary Robert Reid said the negotiations were a
backdoor to widespread deregulation.
"This
not only facilitates privatisation, but the deregulation of services
and gives carte blanche to big financial institutions and
multinational corporations to come in, buy up, charge what they
like... without the Government having any say any more," he
said.
The
next round of negotiating is set for a month's time in Geneva.
It is part of what has been dubbed the 'T-treaty trinity', which includes the Trans-Pacific Partnership and the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership.
Auckland University law professor Jane Kelsey said the leaked documents showed New Zealand had been the most aggressive nation in putting commercial interests ahead of environmental, social, and cultural impacts.
World leaders have met 11 times over the past two years, but the negotiations are supposed to remain secret until five years after any agreement comes into force, or negotiations end.
More corruption
Banker's $1.6m state house
Housing
NZ defends big payout for work on sales, but Labour says dual role
was conflict of interest
By
Matt Nippert
6
June, 2015
Housing
New Zealand paid an investment banker $1.6 million to help it sell
state houses, official documents show.
Low-profile
Auckland banker Andrew Body gave advice to the Minister of Housing
and secured lucrative contracts to implement the policy while also
advising potential buyers of state housing stock - a dual role
attacked by the Labour Party as a conflict of interest.
Housing
New Zealand (HNZ) and Mr Body say correct procedures were followed,
and conflicts were declared where required.
Mr
Body was appointed in 2010 by then-Minister of Housing Phil Heatley
to the housing shareholders advisory group, then later to an advisory
panel to help form government policy on social housing.
Part-way
through these appointments, at the end of 2011, HNZ contracted his
company, Andrew Body Ltd (ABL), to conduct work in the "asset
transfer workstream".
Its
job was to "provide advice in regard to scoping the transfer of
social housing stock from HNZ" to non-government and private
sector parties.
ABL
produced two reports for HNZ, including one in February 2012 titled
"Viability of social housing provision and the role of stock
transfers in New Zealand".
According to answers HNZ gave in reports to Parliament's social services committee, ABL received $431,905 for "specialist social housing advice" and $1,174,138 for "professional services" during the 2012 and 2013 financial years.
Housing
New Zealand said this week ABL was paid another $71,272 in the 2014
financial year.
The
amount paid during the 2013 financial year made ABL the sixth-highest
earning consultant or contractor engaged by HNZ during the period.
Only large consulting companies such as Oracle and Deloitte were
ahead of it.
A
HNZ representative declined to disclose ABL's hourly rate "to
avoid prejudicing the commercial position of that supplier" and
said the work was untendered as this was not required when work
needed specialist skills or was on tight timeframes.
Labour's
housing spokesman Phil Twyford, whose party made the initial Official
Information Act requests, described the consulting deal, particularly
the amount paid, as "distasteful".
"Housing
NZ, whose job it is to provide decent housing for some of the poorest
people in New Zealand, is throwing millions of dollars at highly paid
consultants to tell it how to sell off state houses," he said.
The
selling of state houses to "social housing providers" has
become flagship government policy, and publicly owned real estate
worth up to $5 billion has been tagged for possible sale over the
next two years.
Questions
asked of Social Housing Minister Paula Bennett about Mr Body's advice
and ABL's consulting were forwarded to Finance Minister Bill English.
He issued a one-line statement distancing himself from the matter. "Questions about Housing New Zealand contracts are matters for Housing New Zealand," the statement from Mr English's press secretary said.
The
HNZ representative defended the work done.
"Andrew
Body Ltd - and the staff the company employs - was uniquely placed
with its skillset, experience and knowledge of Housing New Zealand to
undertake the work required."
According
to the Companies Office, Mr Body is the sole director and shareholder
of ABL.
The
company does not list employees other than Mr Body on its website,
and no individuals have listed work for ABL on professional
networking site LinkedIn.
Asked
for comment, Mr Body was unwilling to discuss his work for clients,
but said his company was a "specialist property and
infrastructure corporate finance and asset adviser" that had
been operating for more than a decade.
Mr
Body declined to give details about the work he did or who did it.
"I
don't comment on work that we do for our clients," he said. "But
when I talk about 'we' I mean it."
Twyford wants probe into 'clear conflicts of interest'
Phil
Twyford has called for a state housing investigation.
Phil
Twyford has called for a state housing investigation.
The
Labour Party's Phil Twyford is calling for an investigation into the
Government's handling of Housing New Zealand consultants, claiming
"clear conflicts of interest" where they simultaneously
formulated the policy to sell state houses, as well as advising
potential buyers.
According
to documents released under the Official Information Act, investment
banker Andrew Body had declared in June 2011 when appointed to a
ministerial advisory panel that his company Andrew Body Ltd was an
adviser to the United Kingdom-based investment fund John Laing that
"may seek to become involved in the provision of social
housing".
John
Laing is also part of the SecureFuture consortium that built and
operate the new privately-run prison at Wiri.
This
declaration was not made to Housing New Zealand, even though at the
same time ABL was earning more than $1 million under a contract to
scope state house sales.
A
spokesperson for HNZ said Body and ABL were not required to disclose
the interest.
"The
work Andrew Body Ltd carried out for Housing New Zealand was separate
to [the work on the advisory panel] and therefore no conflict of
interest was required to be declared," the spokesperson said.
Body
was unwilling to discuss his work, citing commercial sensitivity, but
said he followed all guidelines and had done nothing wrong.
Twyford
said the HNZ response was "pure spin" and the interest
should have been required to be declared and should have disqualified
Body from the contract.
After
his work with Housing New Zealand ended in late 2012, Body is
understood to have advised other organisations considering buying
social housing stock from the Government, and his company ABL had
advised Treasury on the partial sale of state-owned power companies.
Twyford
said the role of consultants in the state house sell-off, including
probing declared conflicts of interest, should be investigated.
"The
Office of the Auditor-General should look into this," he said.
Meanwhile, the reality on the ground
Meanwhile, the reality on the ground
Otara state houses 'damp, full of cockroaches' but Govt defends HNZ after death
SUPPLIED
New Zealand's "rock star economy"- a lie
Dairy prices will pressure banks - agency
An
international credit-rating agency says a second year of low milk
prices will put pressure on New Zealand banks as farmers struggle
with rising debt.
Low dairy prices could open the door for new sharemilkers.
6
June, 2015
Fonterra
last week lowered its forecast milk payout for the current season to
$4.40 a kilo of milk solids, and its opening price for the new season
is $5.25, below the break-even point for many farms.
Fitch
Ratings says if dairy prices stay low, banks with a high proportion
of dairy loans could face problems.
Rural
loans make up between eight and 15 percent of all loans at the four
biggest lenders, and most of those are to dairy farmers.
The
agency says the full impact will depend on future interest rates, the
level of the New Zealand dollar and how long it takes prices to
recover.
Banking
analyst David Tripe said the report was a warning that Fitch may
lower the credit-rating for some banks, which could start making it
tougher for farmers and others seeking loans.
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