Not to be outdone Federated Farmers, as David Cart3er quoted before, claimed that households up and down this country would be paying $1,000 more per year as a result of freezing these tariffs. I am afraid that Mr Lambie did not come up with any figures to justify that claim. The truth is that if New Zealanders buy imports their clothing costs will remain as they are now, and, in effect, in 5 years time would be around $25 more per person per year than if the tariff reduction programme had continued, and shoes would be around $8 more per person per year than if the tariff reduction programme had continued; a fraction more than if the tariff reduction programme had continued; a fraction of what the scaremongers have been claiming. But the good news is that the cost of New Zealand made clothing remains the same. Compare that small cost with the benefits of reversing this tariff reduction programme. At least 10,000 jobs will be saved. Opposition members scoff but I remind them that many of those 10,000 jobs in the apparel and footwear sectors are in provincial towns; the very towns where those members still cling on to their seats. Many of those jobs are held by women; many of those jobs help to keep families together because they bring in a second income. I submit that those jobs are definitely worth saving. So I find it extraordinary when we hear the likes of Mr Luxton claiming that workers will suffer if we freeze tariffs. Quite frankly we all know that workers suffered because of National's tariff reduction programme. What is the point of those workers being able to save $25 a year each on clothing if in the process they lose their job in the clothing factory, and, therefore, do not have the discretionary income to buy clothes in the first place. That is the common-sense view that workers up and down this country have come to. They would rather pay a little bit more for New Zealand - made clothing and keep their job to enable them to pay for it. They do not want to be forced into buying cheap imports from sweatshop economies because they lost their job through stupid Government policies. Quite clearly the appeal to greed that this National party relied on for so many years did not wash with the people at the last election. People voted in droves against the free market ideology that the previous National Government inflicted on this country. National's fixation with free trade destroyed tens of thousands of jobs in New Zealand. People not only want to keep the jobs they have but they want new jobs again. Free trade has had its day and it is time for the new government to face up to the failure of free trade. It is time, in fact, to look at new tariffs - -to just freezing the existing ones. New tariffs are a step towards reducing our dependence on imports and a step......
(Interjection from Gerry Brownlee)
Mr Brownlee should go to Reefton and talk to the 18 women who lost their jobs because of his government's tariff reduction policies. They lost their jobs because Lane Walker Rudkin closed down their Reefton factory because they could not compete with $2 Chinese T shirts imported because of tariff reductions.
I am looking at ways to help this Government, in terms of increasing tariffs, by considering a possible amendment to this bill. When we come to the committee stage I will let members know how I got on. In the meantime, I would like ht Government to reflect on what the previous Government's policies were doing to our balance of payments situation and why they need to look very closely at increasing tariffs. Our balance of payments deficit is now in the order of $8 billion - 8 percent of our gross domestic product. That is because our imports have increased out of hand. The March trade figures tell an extremely sorry story, the consequences of National's policy. We had a trade deficit of $3.5 billion for the year to March - the fifth year in succession. It was the worst in New Zealand's history. Exporters simply cannot keep up. Of course, our exports are rising but they cannot keep up with our insatiable appetite for imports. Those imports are coming from countries like China, up 27 percent for the March year to $6.7 billion; the ASEAN countries, up 22 percent to $2 billion. We are importing the vehicles that we used to make here ourselves, until the National Government callously closed down the vehicle assembly industry, we are importing increasing quantities of clothing and textiles, for the year to March up 12.7 per cent to $1.5 billion. Those are all goods that we used to make here in this country; all goods that used to employ New Zealand workers. They represent tens of thousands of lost jobs from this economy; jobs that deserve to be recreated.