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Opposition's shock at Orr's reappointment signals the end of an era of Reserve Bank independence, and that's ok because it was bound to happen post QE

Public Policy / opinion
Opposition's shock at Orr's reappointment signals the end of an era of Reserve Bank independence, and that's ok because it was bound to happen post QE

It's sad to see it happen, but it was bound to happen anyway. We'll just have to get used to life without it.

Reserve Bank independence has been like the air and the water in our political economy for over 30 years. An assumption and a certainty we took for granted and saw as essential to the 'new' New Zealand post the reforms of the mid to late 1980s. This week the independence ended, and that's not such a bad thing, in my view.

The Opposition's shock at Governor Adrian Orr's reappointment on Tuesday was the most public sign that the era was ending, but in reality, it's been dying for a few years. It's still worth documenting though.

In an unprecedented move in the modern history of our political economy, Finance Minister Grant Robertson yesterday defied the publicly stated objections of the Opposition and reappointed Orr as Governor for a full second five-year term. That effectively destroyed what remained of the bank’s record since 1989 of it being seen to be politically independent and above the partisan politics of the day.

That 33-year-long era of neither major political party either publicly attacking the bank or expressing a lack of confidence in its Governor is now over, leaving financial markets to hope that if National-ACT is elected next November that Orr either stands down immediately, or is dismissed and replaced without too much fuss before he has to make any big decisions that clash with the new Government’s views.

The fear is that during a more-than-awkward interregnum while the sitting Government holds an independent review into what it sees as a failing bank and Governor, that some form of economic crisis happens when the monetary and fiscal policy arms of Government are clearly divided and at odds.

The most recent example of that was in Britain last month where a new Prime Minister, Liz Truss, pursued a reckless and expansionary fiscal policy of unfunded tax cuts while the Bank of England was trying to tighten monetary policy to control inflation. The clash eventually ended when Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey threatened to stop printing money to buy Government bonds, forcing the ruling Conservative Party to remove Liz Truss as PM. Just last week, Bailey had to publicly deny having effectively staged a coup.

A less modern but more local and pertinent example is the constitutional crisis that happened in New Zealand on the Monday and Tuesday after the July 14, 1984 landslide election loss of then Prime Minister and Finance Minister Robert Muldoon. Treasury and Reserve Bank officials had to close currency markets on the Monday because Muldoon refused their advice to devalue the currency. The NZ dollar collapsed on the Tuesday when markets opened without certainty about who was in charge and what would happen. The situation was only resolved when Reserve Bank Governor Spencer Russell and Deputy Governor Roderick Deane approached senior members of Muldoon’s caucus on the Wednesday, who then held an emergency caucus meeting and forced Muldoon to devalue.

Those three days of turmoil led to the eventual creation of the 1989 Reserve Bank Act to ensure the Reserve Bank controlled monetary policy, rather than ministers, and that it was seen as politically independent. Arguably, we were the first in the world to create an independent inflation-targeting central bank that financial markets believed would run monetary policy for economic rather than political purposes.

So what just happened?

Given that history, the very real perception that our Reserve Bank and its Governor should be and are politically independent is foundational to Aotearoa’s modern political economy. Yesterday that perception collapsed under the weight and wear and tear of nearly three years of extraordinary events and stresses in and around Parliament, The Beehive and across the road at Number 2, The Terrace.

Robertson yesterday announced he had reappointed Governor Adrian Orr for a full second term that is not due to end until March 2028, well after the potential end of a first term of a National/ACT Government. Robertson said he accepted the unanimous recommendation of the board, but he did it after Willis formally wrote to him calling for only a one-year extension, and only after a fully independent inquiry into the bank’s actions over covid. ACT Leader David Seymour has also objected to Orr’s reappointment.

National began rattling its sabres on this publicly back on July 26 when it called for a fully independent inquiry into monetary policy and Orr’s actions before Orr's reappointment. That escalated yesterday to a full battle cry.

"We're quite shocked by it to be honest with you, because our view has been very clear and Nicola expressed that. I thought incredibly well in her letter to Grant Robertson saying, Hey, listen, we think it's appropriate that you follow convention, which would be to appoint for a year, and so we can get through the election period of time," Christopher Luxon said yesterday.

"The bigger issue is the government is not taking accountability or responsibility for its actions that has created the environment where banks have been able to make large profits. And that's why we say we need an independent review. We wanted that review before the re-appointment of Adrian Orr because we actually think there was monetary policy decisions, government spending decisions that have contributed to an environment where there has been massive asset price inflation, and banks have made big profits," Luxon said.

So is National justified in blowing up independence?

One challenge to the idea that the era of independence is now over is to say this is just a rogue Opposition Leader and Finance Spokesperson breaking a 33-year bipartisan approach to not singling out the bank or its Governor for such specific and personal criticism. Essentially, the criticism would be that National has recklessly broken the pact for short-term and selfish political purposes.

The problem for the Reserve Bank as an institution and the Labour Government is that their approach and actions since covid were far from normal, or at arms-length, and often by necessity.

Take for example, the multiple letters of permission and memorandums of understanding jointly signed by Orr and Robertson during and since the first lockdown started on March 26, 2020, including:

  • the permission for the Reserve Bank to launch and expand its Large Scale Asset Programme (LSAP) to buy up to $100b of Government bonds3 to lower long term mortgage rates; the Government’s indemnity for Reserve Bank losses on that programme, which by the way the Reserve Bank of Australia did not get from its Government;
  • the Government’s agreement to the Reserve Bank’s April 2020 removal of LVRs, which was a step other central banks did not take; and,
  • the Reserve Bank’s creation of a Funding for Lending Programme (FLP) of cheap lending for banks in December 2020 that is still open until the end of this year and has grown to $16.4b.

It was relatively easy for the Reserve Bank to remain independent when it only had one tool for managing monetary policy, the OCR, and its regulation of banks (and now insurers) was relatively uncontroversial. In essence, the Reserve Bank was ‘only’ running the economy in a politically neutral way that did not redistribute income or wealth, or obviously ‘punish’ or hurt particular parts of society or groups of voters. That is arguable, given the pain workers had to take in the early 1990s to beat down inflation, but it was at least a bi-partisan agreement and never contested in public by either the Government of the day or the leaders of the Opposition.

Central banks can’t be independent any more

But that simplicity started dissolving in 2013 when then-Governor Graeme Wheeler introduced the Loan to Value Ratio restrictions, which effectively discriminated against first home buyers and were eventually used to target rental property investors as well. Where once the central bank could at least argue credibly that its decisions were not discriminating against one group in society over another, the LVRs immediately became a political issue.

The then-National Government of PMs John Key and Bill English, who appointed Wheeler, begrudgingly approved of the first version of LVRs, but behind the scenes there was plenty of argy bargy. The Beehive felt blindsided and pushed back in 2017 when the Reserve Bank also wanted to impose debt to income multiple controls. In the end, English blocked the DTI plan and decided not to reappoint Wheeler for a second term, who was succeeded by a ‘place-holder’ interim Governor Grant Spencer, who, by the way, loosened the LVRs during his short time in charge.

But English never criticised Wheeler in public and Robertson was also wary in public of ‘playing the man’ by criticising Wheeler, albeit he was critical of the LVRs.

Luxon interpreted English’s decision to appoint Spencer as an interim Governor for a ‘caretaker’ period as a ‘convention’, but in reality, if English had wanted to reappoint Wheeler he could have. It’s clear from Cabinet papers that English and Key had decided as early as August 2016 not to reappoint Wheeler for a new term starting in September 2017, right at the same time as the election.

But the appointment timetables were engineered to ensure a caretaker. The excuse of a ‘caretaker’ period was easy to fall back on in February when the final decision was made, but it would have been much tougher if Key and English were happy to reappoint Wheeler. Even by then, the role was beginning to become more political.

Monetary policy made one class of NZers $1 trillion richer

By early 2020 when the prospect of near-zero percent interest rates beckoned and the Reserve Bank was looking at its options for alternative monetary policy tools, it was becoming clearer that monetary policy and prudential policy decisions were becoming much more political. Money printing exercises in the United States in particular were seen enriching those with assets and widening inequality, but those debates never took place here.

The assumption was that these alternative tools would be ‘distributionally neutral’, which is true between home-owners, but not between home-owners and renters. We knew that money printing worked as a monetary policy tool by making the wealthy wealthier and hoping they’d spend some of their ‘wealth effect’ to boost the economy.

The $55b of money printing, the removal of the LVRs and the creation of the FLP combined with existing housing shortages and existing tax advantages to thrust house prices 45% higher in 18 months and wipe out another generation of renters hopes for the home ownership they know they need to build healthy and secure futures for their kids.

The Reserve Bank wasn’t just doing monetary policy and prudential policy. It was doing redistributional and social policy, and not in a good way. The lack of self-awareness or contrition was the final straw The Reserve Bank’s decisions essentially added $1 trillion to the wealth of home-owning households and it was clear in public to everyone except the Reserve Bank, Treasury and the Finance Minister’s office.

The repeated denials that anything much had changed or was wrong became laughable. A range of Treasury and Reserve Bank papers even went so far as to say it was not clear that Quantitative Easing had widened inequality, even though both Robertson and Orr were advised in those frantic days at the beginning of covid that QE would make the wealth much wealthier.

The refusal of both Adrian Orr and Grant Robertson to acknowledge any mistakes or publicly have any regrets about the wealth redistribution they engineered has been the final straw.

The Labour Government’s additional decision to give $20b in cash to businesses during covid, but not to give significant extra cash support to beneficiaries and poorer working families, as recommended by its own Welfare Experts Advisory Group, simply added to the weight on that straw.

Inflation’s breakout to 7% meant there was no way back

The moment the bank's independence broke in public was earlier this year when inflation refused to cooperate with the plan and blew out to 7.2%. It is not expected to get back down into the legislated and agreed target range of 1-3% for another couple of years.

When a supposedly independent financial institution works hand in glove with a politician to change the wealth distribution of a nation AND fails to achieve its one clear legislated target, then it has a social license and a credibility problem.

The Reserve Bank’s recent annual report and statement of intent don’t even mention the failure to hit the bank’s inflation target. It’s as if it never happened. It also wasn’t mentioned in Robertson’s reappointment letter. The Opposition’s increasingly alarmed public statements should have been red flags to the board of the Reserve Bank and to Robertson that the perceived independence of the bank was at stake.

Was this inevitable anyway?

But could this fracture in the landscape of our political economy have been avoided? To be fair to the Reserve Bank and Orr, it was clear by early 2021 that there had been too much stimulus and the rebound was dangerous. The Reserve Bank stopped money printing before other central banks and started hiking interest rates before others (although this makes the continued operation of FLP even more nonsensical). But by then the horse had bolted and Orr’s ‘no regrets’ approach in public and select committee hearings since then became jarring and abrasive for both the politicians and the Reserve Bank’s grandees, such as Arthur Grimes, Graeme Wheeler and Grant Spencer, who have been shockingly critical in public.

I think the Reserve Bank and Robertson could have retrieved the situation with a lot more humility about what happened, and a franker assessment of what it meant for the Reserve Bank’s future. Apologies matter and help to heal relationships, even if they don’t change the facts on the ground. Simply pointing, Trump-like, and saying black is white and that inequality has not widened, is just asking for trouble. Failing to achieve your core role and then not acknowledging it in public is beyond credible.

Would National have done it differently? Probably not.

Another way to approach this issue is to ask if a National Government and a different Governor would have done it differently and allowed the independence to be maintained. The slightly awkward thing for National at least (ACT did pipe up at the time), is that it never truly challenged the money printing, the removal of the LVRs and the FLP when the Reserve Bank and Government agreed to launch them in those dark early days of covid.

I doubt a Finance Minister Willis and a different Reserve Bank Governor would have been able to do or have done much different. I think the removal of the LVRs was the outlier that created the most damage, but I doubt Willis would have fought to keep them if a different Governor also wanted to remove them. I also doubt National would have been able to stare down the Reserve Bank in its desire to print money, given the Fed, Bank of Japan and European Central Bank had already being doing it for more than a decade, apparently without too much damage (for asset owners that is). We all know differently now.

So what now?

Our central bank can’t be truly independent any more when it now makes decisions all the time that redistribute income and wealth in such a fundamental way. That era of Reserve Bank independence effectively ended in those frantic weeks of March and April of 2020. Now we are just keeping the score and waiting to see who has more points at the end. It would make much more sense to acknowledge that a Finance Minister and a Central Bank Governor should be simpatico enough to work together and we just have to hope we don’t get another Muldoon, and that our other checks and balances help avoid that.

The awkwardness of five year terms for Governors and three year terms for Governments always had the capacity for conflict. It’s sort of remarkable this hasn’t happened before. The fact it hadn’t, even when Don Brash worked from 1999 to 2002 with Michael Cullen and Helen Clark, shows how foreign the situation is that we find ourselves in now.

That anomaly of a five-year term for Governor being out of step with the three years for a Government needs to be fixed, potentially by making Reserve Bank Governor’s terms either six years or three years, with a limit of two terms.

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47 Comments

I think we are also seeing the culmination of year after year of RBNZ and various Finance Ministers sending letters to each other about the housing market while affordability got worse and worse. Substantive action it was not, but it has been the accepted level of intervention for some time. 

Covid and the response really just set things off on a much quicker time-frame. Should we be surprised things ended up the way they did when the heat went on and the quality and speed of actual decisions really mattered? The fact we still have an ongoing FLP while the OCR gets hiked suggests a return to previous form, which is not a whole bunch happening despite the worsening of the issues at hand.

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7

To still have an ongoing FLP is utterly nonsensical and it is just another (of the many) reasons why Orr should have never been reappointed. 

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29

To still have an ongoing FLP is utterly nonsensical and it is just another (of the many) reasons why Orr should have never been reappointed. 

As the mighty Audaxes has pointed out, FLP is largely irrelevant: the banks don't need it in terms of liquidity and in terms of cheap capital.

Which does make me wonder why it was actually created. Perhaps because the ruling elite had no idea what was going to happen to the financial system.  

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Why have they (the banks) then been drawing down from FLP?

 

Back in July 2022...

Interest.co.nz asked individual banks how much they've borrowed. Of the big banks, ASB has borrowed $3.8 billion, BNZ $2.1 billion, ANZ $1.75 billion, and Kiwibank $1.1 billion.

https://www.interest.co.nz/banking/116767/asb-biggest-user-public-money-offer-reserve-banks-funding-lending-programme

 

 

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Why have they (the banks) then been drawing down from FLP?

Yes, my thoughts exactly. And I don't think Audaxes has really answered that question. 

The CEO of ASB said that FLP is an "investment in NZ", whatever that is supposed to mean. 

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The CEO of ASB said that FLP is an "investment in NZ", whatever that is supposed to mean. 

Probably means "Please don't call us out on profiting massively from taxpayers subsidising us!"

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Yeah.. Banks just need capital to lend and reserves for liquidity. 

How can we learn the theoretical reasoning behind FLP ?

May be loan bypassing capital requirements??

Time to bring in Audaxes . 

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As the mighty Audaxes has pointed out, FLP is largely irrelevant: the banks don't need it in terms of liquidity and in terms of cheap capital.

Yes, but maybe the Government wanted the higher contribution to GDP uplift and hence taxes the banks would return given its profitability boost?

You know how much every government and RB the world over wants to avoid the 'R' word.  

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Where else are they getting the money to make their zero interest (Wesptac) or 1% interest (ASB, ANZ) loans that they are currently offering punters, to go buy cars with?

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Croaking Cassandra has pointed out about 20 reasons.

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6

I am amazed the FLP was not ended 6 months ago. The only saver is that the interest rate will be 4.25% in 2 weeks, and 4.75 or 5.00% in Feb.

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A very good piece Bernard, well done!  

I lament the loss of independence and government interference in so many fields, since the Ardern government took office.

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34

... this government is like a greedy guts in a bakery ... shoving their fingers into every pie they see , wanting a slice of everything they spot ... and paying for it by stealing some poor kids' lunch money ....

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17

Old fashioned word is interventionist, but this government has brought it right back into play with gusto. In fact it’s about the only action about which they have demonstrated eagerness and energy. Another three years of this would see that heavy handed intrusion entering all our homes and private lives. They are absolute meddling control freaks and they must be banished next year and stay that way for long to come.

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18

I think interventionism can be quite effective, look at Singapore. But our government has done the worst type of interventionism.

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Perhaps but intervention has layers of infiltration and I would strongly suggest this government has pursued a policy of politicising senior public servants. For instance the previous director of health. That relationship in my opinion was over cosy and appeared to me  to be compromised to the point his role was skewed more to protecting the government than the health system for the people. And I would wager that the incumbent RBNZ governor has fallen into the same category whereby he and the government are reliant on each other to cover each other’s backs.

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5

This week the [RBNZ's] independence ended, and that's not such a bad thing

Agree with the first part, but not the last. The point of central bank independence is to prevent them being subject to political whim, which puts short-term interests of the Government ahead of long-term interests of the general economy at large. Without this independence, we lose stability, and along with it the confidence of international investors.

When money markets lose confidence in an economy, well... the FX and swap rate graphs are going to need bigger Y axes. Our Government's obsession with controlling everything and everyone is causing untold damage.

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23

Precisely, it is all a control game. Can anyone say they have seen the level of control exerted by any government in NZ in their lifetime? Big call as it is I would love to hear opinions to broaden my understanding and view. My interest would also fall in the question of just how long it will take to unwind the control mentality that has infiltrated work culture government-wide, as currently we can see that the influence comes from the top and boundaries have been broken. Having first hand experience in the changes and culture shift within the Ministry of Health over the last 2 years it was nothing short of frightful. Them or us, do as we say as there is only one way, if you don't agree with what we say you are not welcome, and you need to leave, we'll find you the door in one way or another.

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Can anyone say they have seen the level of control exerted by any government in NZ in their lifetime?

Sure - under first-past-the-post.  I recall really well the whole-scale sale of our public assets in quick-time in the first term of Lange-Douglas government.  TINA - there is no alternative - become the accepted response to any concern brought about over the BBQ.  Same in terms of the overnight dropping of tariffs and licensing - and the subsequent decimation of engineering/factory works and many exclusive distribution channels across the country.

Shock and awe - before shock and awe :-).

 

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Reserve Bank independence just ended and now it's time to accept that central banking is a failed experiment that exists only to enrich those closest to the money printer at the expense of those further down the chain. Money is not something to be manipulated at the whim of a select few and at the stroke of a few keyboard keys. A return to sound money is needed. 

Fix the money, fix the world. 

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Gold Silver and Farmland

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4

Perhaps we are about to see how independent the RBNZ is. Or(r), better, how independent it wants to be.

New 5-year term; any semblance of the raison d'être - Inflation Control - gone, and animosity at every turn?

Adrian Orr has nothing to lose later this month, and everything to (re)gain.

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Yeah, big new idea needed.  Reality is the globe is going the opposite way

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The Tax Payers Union have just awarded their annual " Golden Pig " award for wasteful spending to Adrian Orr ...

... it must've been won by a nose , just ahead of Robbo  ... 

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13

No Robbo breathed in at the finish line. Otherwise it would have been a photo finish won by a … !

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Next step will be to raise the inflation target band to 2-4%. Wages and prices will rise at a more steady pace. Mortgage rates will settle in 5-6% range. Targeted assistance for first home buyers. Targeted resistance to small scale  property investment. House prices will eventually bottom out start rising in line with CPI as higher incomes make loan servicing easier and people can start to transact again.

All of the existing excessive property debt will be slowly inflated away.

Or alternatively Goldilocks gets a good kicking from the 3 bears.

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"All of the existing excessive property debt will be slowly inflated away."

That's the bit that's the problem.

It 'appears' it was, last time, right? So tell me, why has the ratio of Income to Purchase price gone from 3 times Income to (pick a number) 9 times gross household income today?

Answer: Because not only wasn't the Debt Inflated away, it was actually increased at each subsequent purchase (ie: even those that started with 3 times, leveraged up into the next place at 4 times, 5 time until they got to where they are today). That's why we are in the mess we are.

 

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14

We can but hope!

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The problem isn't with the Reserve Bank's Independence, but rather with it's Zero Accountability

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21

Didn't need an article to explain illusion that is RBNZ independance... what do you expect when appointment is made from the government of the day!

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Is it an independence issue or a competence issue?

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2

Good question. Might well be more worthwhile  to all of us , and the nation, to have the role as dependent and competent.

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I think the removal of the LVRs was the outlier that created the most damage.

I still fondly remember being reprimanded for insinuating that somebody was a moron over this action.  In hindsight that was too far eloquent and a four letter word should have been used.

Lets hope for the sake of the country that both tweedle dee and tweedle dumb are removed from office before too long.

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As Hickey points out, unlikely National would have done any different. And now policies are in place that will hamper residential property speculation, they plan to remove them. And increase migration levels to make sure the slumlords have plenty of warm bodies to farm.

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It's all about the bigger picture.

 

Government getting ready for CBDC's

 

> Nationalized Kiwi Bank

 

> Reserve Bank under it's control

 

Just another Domino in the line up for full financial control of the peeps. 

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9

The thing in favour is that it would decimate the drug trade.

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I’d question whether adding LVRs was anti first home buyer. Especially when you later raise issues of inequality with removing them.

The problem with a review is it happens in hindsight and humans are incapable of objectively evaluating such situations.

I think the Reserve did stuff up, not in terms of the money printing, but in reacting too late. But then they reacted before almost every other central bank. So is that a mitigating factor in evaluating Orr? It is reasonable for it to be one.

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" think the Reserve did stuff up, not in terms of the money printing, but in reacting too late. But then they reacted before almost every other central bank. So is that a mitigating factor in evaluating Orr? It is reasonable for it to be one. "

Possibly , applicable to that one mistake ( initial bout of excessive money printing ).   It is much harder to see any mitigating factors for continuing FLP and complete lack of willingness to face the mistakes made - or even acknowledge that mistakes might just have been made. 

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LVRs from FHB were, as pointed out at the time, a bit of a problem because you could quite freely roll equity over in other properties you already owned in order to satisfy the LVR for investors, while FHBs did not have that luxury. Likewise uncorking them, less of an issue for FHB, but uncorking them for investors during the covid response had extremely predictable consequences that many here did in fact predict. 

I think there isn't much room to hide on this because a lot of the policy expertise the RBNZ could draw on when it comes to this stuff is specifically off-limits, given the rules around monetary policy researchers and the MPC, which is surely getting harder to justify continuing on with. 

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7

Is it possible that Mr Orr has some documents or information in his defence, which if it  comes out may be embarrassment for the government, hence.......

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9

RBNZ was never totally independent. That is a myth created by politicians of any type and MSM. It's just that politicians did not know  (my view) what was available to the Minister of Finance under the terms of the  RBNZ Act or knew but continued the myth of independence.  Robo found out and so amended an existing or brought in a new remit for the RBNZ governor to carry out. A poorly written remit at that.

This means that any govt can introduce a new or amend an existing remit as they please.

The board of the RBNZ recommends a governor. The MoF then accepts or rejects. The boards bar one or two is hotchpotch of suitably orientated political appointees. A high majority of the board were appointed in Jul22. One or two been round the block before. Smacks of a nudge nudge wink wink between the board and Robbo before any public announcement.

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RBNZ independence just ended - Not True as RBNZ was never independent.

Can say that RBNZ is not independent, was known but today stands exposed. Nexus between Politicians and many so called independent agencies like rbnz.

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Straw poll: who has damaged NZ more in the last two years?

Ardern

Orr

Robertson

Damaged-define as you will

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Under this govt nothing has been independent. Everything is under a mandate of communist/socialism & we are all inside the bottle whether we like it or not. After 5 years living under the Marxists, capitalism is starting to look pretty good once again.

She has got to go to the UN surely? And quickly.

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5

When a supposedly independent financial institution works hand in glove with a politician to change the wealth distribution of a nation AND fails to achieve its one clear legislated target, then it has a social license and a credibility problem.

Nailed it.

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That's a fantastic historical review.  Thanks Bernard and interest.co.

 

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Less than 12 months ago

https://www.interest.co.nz/public-policy/113665/simon-bridges-changes-h…

Luxon: “We don't want it to get politicised because we don't want to undermine the independence and the trust that it has both with the government and the public.”

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