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Bruce Wills bristles at the attacks on current farming success and their plans to push forward with modernisation and productivity

Rural News
Bruce Wills bristles at the attacks on current farming success and their plans to push forward with modernisation and productivity

By Bruce Wills*

There's one part of the New Zealand psyche that is ugly and that is the tall poppy syndrome. 

It may be envy, or jealousy, but there's some whose view on life is so black, you wonder if they know what happiness is.

You may have read some spite in the papers.

Take Sir Peter Jackson, a one man industry who has put New Zealand cinema on the global map.

That seemingly isn't good enough for the local literati who look down their noses at Hollywood or success.

No, much better he produces obscure taxpayer funded movies few will ever willingly part money with to see.

It must be about art and not filthy commerce.

In recent days I have read two attacks on Sir Peter. One from someone whose stardom was made by Sir Peter and another, who complained that Sir Peter’s success has ended the ‘golden era’ of New Zealand movie making.

It was said Sir Peter's been at the top of his game for '14 bloody years' and it cannot last forever.

Now where have I read or heard similar sentiments. Oh, it has been said of our primary industries.

Forget there's little public money or policy involved.

No, we must be taxed remorselessly to fund something, anything, to replace us.

This is where agriculture and Sir Peter share similarities. Both are the result of hard work and endeavour.  Both have gone out on the world stage and succeeded. Despite our tyranny of distance and size, both have put New Zealand on the map as commercial successes.  In the minds of some, success is a very bad word.

Take the recent budget. Rodney Hide in the Herald on Sunday had me nodding in agreement that the entire exercise is like theatrics. It seems bizarre that big spending is trumped by promises of even bigger spending.

As Hide wrote, “If you spent what you didn't have at home and bragged about it, your wife would dump you. If you did it at work, you would be sacked. Do it in politics and we vote for you. It's nuts.”

While we welcome a return to surplus we have been borrowing $200 million a week for much of the past six years. The budget is like a latter-day Circus Maximus. Considerable fruit is thrown to keep the mob somewhat happy or distracted while the political elite scrap.

Yet achieving surplus should not be underestimated given the Global Financial Crisis, remember that and then the Canterbury Earthquakes some politicians overlook.  Criticism of government spending since 2008 has side-stepped the concrete galoshes these two events put us in.

Now is not the time for a tea break or a spending spree.

If you have a mortgage what you pay in interest rates comes back to the $71 billion government redistributes into the economy.  If each dollar was stacked one on top of another it would reach 71 kilometres high well into the mesosphere.  Listening to talkback some felt “the rich should pay more” but here’s the truth.

The top 23 percent of taxpayers already pay 69 percent of all income tax revenue, while the ‘two percent’ on $150,000 plus contribute a mere 22 percent of all income tax.

So if you want to keep interest rates and the dollar in check it starts and stops at the Beehive.

Since our collective debt swelled to smooth the ‘rough edges of recession’ like keeping student loans interest free as well as working for families, repaying debt should be the number one priority.  Spending should also be focussed in those things that'll light up the economy, like infrastructure, R&D, and building skills.

Restarting New Zealand Superannuation Fund payments also deserve a look at too.

While the $40 million budgeted for irrigation investment is welcome, in the pantheon of government spending, it is more likely less than what the state sector spends on photocopier paper. 

And if you want to make the economy go faster then just add water, if policy allows us to.

It makes the $8.5 million more for agriculture tuition at tertiary institutions a positive but compared to other areas, still a drop in the bucket. It perhaps reflects the fact we are most keen on a hand up and not a hand out.

Sir Peter got public backing as he'd tapped into the movie making super league. Thousands of local jobs and profile for New Zealand was the real payback. Meanwhile the primary industries only generate 72 percent of our physical exports and support 138,000 jobs.

While we will hit wobbles along the way we are unlike Australia.

Minerals can be left in the ground until better days but everyone has to eat and the world's human population isn't getting smaller.

As voters you can expect barking mad statements and anti-farming ‘dog whistle’ rhetoric too.

Yet the number of kiwis returning from overseas proves to me the grass isn't always greener.

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Bruce Wills is Federated Farmers President

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6 Comments

I miss the point of this article - is it to say that Agriculture is as scary as Peter J's movies and that all farmers want private jets?

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I think the point he is trying to make is no matter how bad something is if it makes money in the short term nobody should criticise it

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Perhaps it's about a shared interest in spewing out crap without being restrained by environmental regulation or editorial judgement.

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Kakapo, are you saying there is no environmental regulation in regards to farming?

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He's saying we should support our tall poppies even if the odd one or two, or even three or four could be sociopaths

http://www.businessinsider.com/questions-that-diagnose-whether-youre-a-…

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Rather than a fairly abstract attack on "tall poppies" that doesn't distinguish between attacks on success and legitimate criticism of questionable practices, here is something that would have made a much better base for the article

http://www.stuff.co.nz/the-press/10079036/NZ-milk-venture-target-of-sme…

But that might involve acknowledging some aspects of corporate behavior that would be criticizing tall poppies in Bruce Wills' article. 

 

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