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CHRIS HIPKINS : BREAD AND BUTTER WON'T BE ANY CHEAPER UNDER HIS GOVERNMENT

While Prime Minister Chris Hipkins might claim he wants to focus on economic issues that are important to people, there's little indication that anything significant will change in the coming months. Instead, this week he announced some further middle class welfare in the form of an extension of the fuel tax cut. 


CHRIS Hipkins has been quick to stake out his territory. He will, he claims, be a Prime Minister who will focus on the 'bread and butter' issues. His declaration that he will address working class concerns and, in particular, the steeply rising cost of living has probably delivered him some kudos from an electorate that was becoming increasingly fed up with the middle class dalliances of his predecessor. But Hipkins has also raised expectations that he's actually going to do something to help folk and if he doesn't deliver Labour will be in more trouble than it already is. 

If Hipkins was really serious in his intention to reconfigure Labour and its economic policies, then he would be making it clear that tackling the cost of living crisis means offering an alternative to our existing and failed economic model. But Hipkins is a dedicated centrist and he is entirely relaxed about an environment where corporate profits continue to soar while most of us struggle just to keep our heads above water,

Chris Hipkins simply doesn't recognise that capitalism is an inherently unstable system that resolves its crises on the backs of working people.

But this week the Prime Minister claimed that extending the Fuel Tax Cut of was all part of his focus on 'bread and butter issues'. The extension will cost a further $718 million, which means that the Labour Government will have spent $2.1 billion subsiding fuel costs. Think about what that $2 billion could have been spent on. 

The extension of the fuel tax cut though is little more than further middle class welfare, designed to shore up support among wavering middle class Labour supporters who might be thinking of giving the National Party a go. Economist Brad Olsen has crunched the numbers and says the country’s highest-earning 10% of households will save about $42 a month from the petrol tax cut, while the lowest-earners will only save about $14 a month.

Olsen told the media: 'Further extending the reduction in [petrol tax] is extremely dumb economic policy, as it provides three times as much support to the top income decile as the bottom income decile. However, it’s a politically popular move, given inflation remains high, at 7.2% per annum, and 91-octane petrol prices would be about $2.75 a litre with the full excise duty reinstated.'

While Hipkins might have grabbed some positive headlines for extending the fuel tax cut, less media attention has been paid to other statements he has made this week. 

Perhaps the most significant is that he ruled out taking the GST off food. This is in despite of a 1News Kantar Public Poll this week revealing that 77% of people believe the government should make reducing food price inflation their number one priority. 

Hipkins also displayed little enthusiasm for raising benefit levels in order to provide struggling beneficiaries with a standard of living that is a little more than subsistence. It looks like there won't be any more bread and butter for beneficiaries. They will have to continue to survive on the thin gruel this Labour Government has dished out throughout its term in office.

Chris Hipkins, despite all his huffin' and puffin' about being a man of the people, represents the continuation of the neoliberal orthodoxy. And, in an election year, we are once again faced with the familiar prospect of not one of our parliamentary parties offering anything that even approaches a left economic agenda - an agenda that provides a vision for a different kind of economy, one based on human need rather than corporate profit.




This post first appeared on AGAINST THE CURRENT, please read the originial post: here

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CHRIS HIPKINS : BREAD AND BUTTER WON'T BE ANY CHEAPER UNDER HIS GOVERNMENT

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