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Cullen Labels NZ Business Community As Latent Tax Cheats
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8 June 2000 Edition
Previous Edition
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According to our Finance Minister, Michael Cullen, I, and the many thousands
of other New Zealand entrepreneurs and businessmen, are a bunch of scheming,
plotting would-be criminals who, if given half a chance, would enjoy
nothing more than to rip off the taxpayer by committing tax fraud on
a huge scale.
That is the justification
he gave yesterday
for going back on a pre-election
promise to give NZ's industries tax parity with their overseas peers in the area
of research and development expenditure.
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It seems that Mr Cullen believes that we're all going to see such tax parity
as a giant loophole to be exploited to the detriment of New Zealand.
I wish Mr Cullen wasn't so ill-advised as to judge the rest of New Zealand
by his own standards of honesty and integrity -- or the lack thereof.
Quite frankly I, and no doubt a huge number of other Kiwi businessmen, feel
highly offended by the Minister's remarks -- and are extremely disappointed, albeit
not particularly surprised by his blatant breaking of a contract forged with
voters.
If anyone is committing a fraud on the nation's coffers then surely it's this
bunch of failed school teachers and career politicians who are paid to represent
the citizens of this country -- but who instead have chosen to totally ignore the results of
referenda such as those held at the last election.
Were it not for the fact that I'm now very busy exploring the option of
relocating myself and my business activities to the USA, I would likely
drum up support for a class-action defamation suit against Mr Cullen for
the slur he has cast against the business community.
But why am I preparing to abandon NZ? It's not just because I don't like
being told that I and my peers are just latent criminals, it's more because
I now hold very little hope that this country will successfully transition into the
21st century while it remains in the hands of politicians with a 1950's mindset.
Cullen had the chance to honour a commitment given to voters while simultaneously
giving the business community a glimmer of hope that this government was prepared
to do more than spew rhetoric over the matter of creating and fostering
a new economy -- but he chose the dishonourable and "easy" way out.
So now, instead all NZ businesses enjoying a level playing field with their
competitors in the USA and Australia, Mr Cullen has labeled us criminals
and decided that it's better to dip into the taxpayer's purse and play favourites
by handing out "grants" to those deemed worthy of such favours.
Under Cullen's system, an agency, or agencies of the very government that
doesn't bother fund its own website properly and which is populated by a raft
of ministers who can't even reply to an email, is going to decide who is most
entitled to a hand-out. Given the long list of covert dealings, incompetence, and impropriety
that has been uncovered in NZ's political system and state-run bureaucracy
over the past few years can we really be sure that these grants are going to
be handed out on merit rather than on the basis of political debts which need
repaying, special handshakes or the old school tie?
Cullen is quick to accuse the business sector of potential criminal acts --
how is he going to ensure that the agency(s) handling these grants isn't
going to get involved in an INCIS, WINZ or Lottery-board type of bungling that
disadvantages the taxpayer -- as they have done before!
My God! Instead of a nice simple system that would provide all players with
a level playing field, they're going to start playing favourites with taxpayers
money and put anyone wanting a break through God-knows how many hoops and
hurdles in order to get one of these grants.
Neither I, nor many of my peers have ever asked for government hand-out. We
haven't even asked for full equity with those countries that actually offer
a tax credit on R&D expenditure -- all we wanted was for R&D costs
to be treated like any other legitimate business expenses and be considered
non-taxable.
Let me tell Mr Cullen -- the vast majority of R&D is being done by small
businesses or individuals who simply don't have the time to fill in endless
forms and deal with mountains of red tape just in order to secure one of these
"grants" they didn't want in the first place. The one thing many entrepreneurs
have even less of than money is time!
This means, despite what Mr Cullen says, that the vast majority of these grants
will doubtless go to the larger business and CRIs who can afford to simply
allocate someone on their staff to deal with the processes and frustrations
of doing all the paperwork, battling the bureaucrats, and jumping through the
hoops -- the little guys who need the level playing field the most will miss
out completely. Rather strange for a government that is widely seen as being
opposed to big business don't you think?
Eighteen months ago I seriously considered moving to the USA out of fear that
NZ's government was completely ignorant of what the new economy could offer
the country and its citizens. I chose to stay -- and in the process my business
created jobs for several hard working Kiwis and contributed around a quarter of a
million in tax to the nation's coffers.
To be frank -- I was bloody stupid!
If I had gone with my gut instinct and not been stupid enough to hope -- in the
face of overwhelming evidence -- that maybe, just maybe, the government would wake
up in time to get this country moving, then I have little doubt that I'd now
be one of the many "dot com millionaires" living in California and driving
a Porsche. Instead, all I've done is work my
arse off and pay lots of tax while constantly trying to cope with the bureaucracy,
red tape and trip-wires that this and the previous dim-witted governments
have insisted on retaining or adding to the already perilous terrain Kiwi
entrepreneurs have to negotiate.
Do you think I'm wrong? How many new Kiwi Net-millionaires do you know of --
and almost all of those who have made it (such as Steve Outram who is now
worth a couple of hundred million dollars) have had to leave the country to do it.
Trust me... it's a mistake I am not prepared to make again.
I still have a list of good ideas as long as your arm and I've already had
some strong interest from the USA. Some of these ideas will make 7am.com
look like a personal homepage in terms of their commercial potential. It's
a shame that it will be the poor and underprivileged in some other country
that benefit from the huge tax dollars these ideas will undoubtedly generate.
I would have loved to have stayed here and let these businesses earn wealth
for this country and help NZ's poor and disadvantaged -- but Mr Cullen has
decided he'd rather play silly political games than honestly consider the best
interests of this country and its people. He is shooing our most skilled,
talented and motivated people out the door at a time when the country can least
afford to lose them. The man is either incompetent or stupid -- I suspect he's
both!
Heaven help those who are left behind -- they're going to need it. I give
New Zealand just three years before something rather major, even terrible
happens at a political level (coup anyone?) as the population becomes
increasingly driven to despair by a falling standard of living and increasing
divide between rich and poor -- produced solely by our hopeless politicians
and their self-serving greed, ignorance and scheming.
As always, your feedback is welcomed.
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