Ditching regulations will favour the wealthy
A critique of the Government's Regulatory Standards Bill published by The Post
Kia ora
This is the first “Integrity Briefing” email newsletter from The Integrity Institute.
As I explained in today’s “News Briefing” email (formerly “NZ Politics Daily”), the Democracy Project is being retired and superseded by a new research and advocacy organisation, The Integrity Institute.
The Integrity Institute is dedicated to scrutinising and challenging vested interests in New Zealand politics. I have taken on the role of Director, and we have an ambitious work programme planned.
The “Integrity Briefing” newsletters will provide updates on the core political issues on which The Integrity Institute is focused. For example, when we get analysis published in the media, we will also supply it to our subscribers.
Below is our first one – I wrote an analysis and critique of the Government’s Regulatory Standards Bill, which was published today in the Stuff masthead newspapers, The Post, The Press, Waikato Times, etc. If you want to read how it was published in print and online by The Post, here’s the link:
Bryce Edwards (Post): The ‘ideological trojan horse’ of the Regulatory Standards Bill
Below is the complete text, with the original title I supplied. I might have got all sorts of things wrong in my analysis, so as always, I’m interested in feedback – including disagreement and agreement.
Kind regards
Bryce
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Dr Bryce Edwards, Director, The Integrity Institute
Ditching regulations will favour the wealthy
The Coalition Government has agreed to pass a Regulatory Standards Bill, proposed by the Act Party, which will further tilt the political playing field to advantage vested interests. Despite sounding rather dull, this legislation is potentially the most radical reform the Coalition will make this year, progressing an agenda to create a more pro-business environment in New Zealand.
Few people have heard of the proposed Regulatory Standards Bill. Partly this is because the Government put the proposal out for consultation over the summer holiday period. But it’s also because the Opposition, media and public scrutiny have been almost solely focused on the Treaty Principles Bill.
Unlike the always-doomed Treaty Principles Bill, National and NZ First have already committed to support Act’s Regulatory Standards Bill into law – even though the bill hasn’t been drafted yet. We do know what it’s about, though. It’s essentially the framework to underpin the work of David Seymour’s new Ministry of Regulation – an agency that should have been named the Ministry of Deregulation, as its focus, according to Seymour, is on “cutting red tape” and reducing rules for business.
The Regulatory Standards Bill sets up a process to scrutinise each piece of new legislation through a lens of concern to ensure that “property rights” aren’t unfairly impacted. Prioritising “property rights” over public interest means stacking the deck in favour of business owners and the wealthy.
Its proponents claim that it will simply set up a mechanism, a Regulatory Standards Board (RSB), appointed by the Minister of Regulation (currently David Seymour), with significant powers to assess and recommend changes to existing laws. This, they say, will help reform laws that are impeding economic productivity and growth. In their view, it adds to transparency and fairness because corporations will have a formal and streamlined process to get an official assessment from the new Regulatory Standards Board as to whether a particular regulation unfairly disadvantages their profits or property rights. This is constitutional change on a large scale.
In contrast, critics say it’s a thinly veiled effort to constrain the ability of governments to enact public-interest legislation. For example, the Council for Civil Liberties has warned that such provisions will lead to regulatory paralysis and make it prohibitively expensive for governments to legislate in the public good. The Environmental Defence Society warn that this could lead to poor-quality law-making that prioritises powerful corporations' interests over ordinary New Zealanders' rights.
Perhaps the biggest problem in the bill – the one that will really rig the legislative game in favour of wealthy vested interests – is its proposal of “compensation” for owners of property rights affected by regulations. The Act Party says that whenever new regulations inhibit companies' profits, the property owners should be liable to receive fair financial recompense. For reasons like this, the lobby group BusinessNZ has come out in strong support of the legislation.
Conversely, opponents say that the compensation focus of the Regulatory Standards Bill will mean that profits are protected over public interest considerations. If, for example, in public health, a government decides to introduce further restrictions on alcohol, tobacco, or fast food, the logical implications of the Regulatory Standards Bill would be that the state should financially compensate the companies that sell those products. Likewise, for prohibitions on pollution or emissions impacting climate change. One critic, Professor Jonathan Boston of Victoria University of Wellington, says this would be akin to giving slave owners compensation when slavery was outlawed, instead of compensating the former slaves.
Unlike the Treaty Principles Bill, this new legislation hasn’t seemingly come out of nowhere but relates to a long-standing determination on the neoliberal right of New Zealand politics to see more significant deregulation for business. Such deregulation first occurred under the Fourth Labour Government, pushed by Roger Douglas, and continued under the next National Government, primarily influenced by Ruth Richardson.
New Zealand quickly became one of the least regulated economies in the world. However, letting businesses self-regulate themselves had many predictable outcomes, mainly in making the rich richer and the poor poorer. There were also all sorts of tragic case studies of market failure in areas like the building industry with leaky houses, the mining sector with Pike River disaster, and the financial investment sector with finance company bailouts.
Increasingly New Zealand has learnt from such mistakes, seeing the value of quality regulation of business. However, on the neoliberal political right, there is ongoing frustration that the deregulation agenda has stalled. The Act Party-adjacent Business Roundtable started to advocate for further deregulation in 2001, commissioning Bryce Wilkinson to write his report, “Constraining Government Regulation”, which advocated rules to constrain what new laws could do in terms of regulating business.
The Roundtable (which later morphed into the New Zealand Initiative) drafted an early version of the Regulatory Standards Bill. This was then introduced to Parliament by Roger Douglas when he returned as an Act MP, as the Regulatory Responsibility Bill. After failing then, it was reintroduced in 2011 by Rodney Hide as the Regulatory Standards Bill, but blocked by National. In 2021 David Seymour tried again, and it failed for a third time.
This “zombie bill” now looks to be revived, but with even bigger teeth, as a gift to corporate interests. When enacted, it will help entrench economic libertarian values in the policy-making process. Although its supporters emphasise that it won’t be a straitjacket on future governments, as politicians will be able to override it, there should be no doubt that the Regulatory Standards Bill will indeed tilt politics more in favour of wealthy interests.
Policy making will be even more one-sided, with the influence of corporate lobbyists further enabled. In this regard, it’s worth noting the submission on the proposal from the Parliamentary Commissioner for the Environment, Simon Upton. He’s rather scathing about the bill, suggesting it’s unlikely to achieve its stated goal of improved productivity, but instead it will produce poor social and environmental outcomes. He has also highlights that in the absence of “adequate rules to manage lobbying” – made worse, he says, by the 2024 Fast-track Approvals Act – vested interests will dominate decision-making even more.
Other critics allege that this bill, with its additional layer of bureaucracy, and its dangerous concentration of power in the hands of unelected officials (and a new regulatory body stacked with political appointees), will open the door to more political interference and favouritism. The dice will be further loaded against the democratic will of the public.
This is a huge problem. As New Zealand grapples with issues like climate change, economic inequality, and ethnic inequity, the last thing the country needs is legislation that ties the hands of its government and prioritises profit over people. The Regulatory Standards Bill should be rejected in its entirety, and efforts should focus instead on strengthening existing mechanisms for good governance and regulatory stewardship. The stakes are too high to allow this ideological Trojan horse to pass unnoticed.
Dr Bryce Edwards
Director of The Integrity Institute
Your chosen title - The Integrity Institute - implies objective and unbiased writing with views from both perspectives presented. You chose only to highlight three problems, which were not due to lack of regulation , but no examples of the problems caused by NIMBYs, Maori and naysayers against certain projects, which have cost jobs and growth.
Poor effort.
Next time, for the sake of Integrity, present both sides view points equally
The Regulatory Standards Bill will turn capitalism into a protection racket, pure and simple. "You must pay us not to do you harm" is the new cry of the "property owners" aka the capitalists. That inverts the already problematic basic principle of neo-liberalism "You can do whatever you like so long as you do no harm to others" and makes a farce of the whole neo-liberal ideology.