No matter how much in the way of cosmetics National applies
to pretty up its plan to sell shares in some state assets,
the policy is never going to be popular. John Key is doing
his darnedest to make it so, however.
He even thinks National can turn the tables on Labour on the
one issue that finds the opposition party firmly on side with
majority public opinion.
This is wishful thinking on the Prime Minister's part. Key
will have done well enough if he manages to persuade voters
that National's partial privatisation intentions have nothing
to do with ideology, but are a very necessary unlocking of
spare capital in straitened times.
That was the main objective of Key's speech at National's
campaign launch yesterday in which he announced that $5
billion to $7 billion that the Government expects to reap
from selling 49 per cent of the shares in power generators
Genesis Energy, Mighty River Power and Meridian, the state
coal company Solid Energy plus a chunk of Air New Zealand
will be placed in a special ring-fenced fund.
Rather than paying off debt, the money will be used to
modernise and upgrade state assets, with the first $1 billion
already designated for building new schools.
What stops this being little more than an accounting exercise
is that the fund will have to be transparent in detailing
money in and money out so the public gains confidence that
the proceeds from asset sales are actually being retained to
spend on new public assets.
The device is classic John Key. The Prime Minister does not
like to feel vulnerable on any front. Instead of the macho
posturing in which politicians indulged during the
privatisations of the 1980s and 1990s, Key's tendency is to
sweeten something for which the great bulk of voters have no
appetite.
This ploy also allows Key to argue that because there is no
money allotted in this year's Budget for spending on capital
assets, Labour would have to borrow to build new schools and
hospitals because it would not have the $5 billion to $7
billion flowing from the part privatisations.
National is pulling out the stops to stigmatise Labour as a
bunch of borrow-aholics, while portraying its own "mixed
ownership model'' as win-win in terms of investment
opportunities for New Zealanders.
That the first tranche from the fund will go to education is
no accident. It will be difficult for Labour to criticise the
proceeds from asset sales being spent on new schools,
especially if they are low decile ones.
It is clever tactics on Key's part. But his cunning plan may
still not convince voters. While the fund may be transparent,
so are Key's motives. He is trying to solve a political
problem _ one with which National has made little headway
since earlier this year when it flagged the sell-offs should
it win the election.
Taking the seemingly less politically sensitive option
whereby the Government would retain majority control while
still picking up half of any dividends does not seem to have
worked.
When push comes to shove, it seems most voters simply don't
like privatisations, partial or otherwise.
- New Zealand Herald
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