The bogey men in question here are property owners living overseas, which Prime Minister John Key has now signalled will be subject to a land tax.
Act leader David Seymour was the first to call foul, pointing out National had introduced two new taxes and was heading toward a third: the capital gains tax on properties sold within two years, the proposed land tax and a border levy for air passengers.
Labour has found five: the aforementioned three plus the extension of a levy on telco providers to pay for rural broadband and the "Netflix" tax, charging GST on online products and services from overseas.
National will argue about whether these are new taxes until it is blue in the face. Too bad - National made a rod for its own back when it opted to define new taxes as including an increase to income tax and a proposed water levy on high water users. What is good for the goose is good for the gander.
Whether the general public actually care about this bickering over taxes is questionable. There are good taxes and bad taxes. As a general rule, good taxes are those other people have to pay and bad are those you have to pay yourself.
Key is making the fairly safe bet that a land tax will have more fans than aggrieved voters - not least because very few voters will have to pay it.
The primary target is foreign investors. Key has indicated it will only apply to New Zealanders who stay overseas for more than three years. Oddly enough, that is the same timeframe after which New Zealanders overseas lose their right to vote.
The land tax is being handled by the Key modus operandi. Key tosses an idea forward in a non-committal fashion, lets people get used to it and then goes ahead. It has been this way with everything from the flag change referendum to partial asset sales.
Key began by raising a land tax as something National will look at if an upcoming release of Land Information data shows a high proportion of sales to foreigners. It is safe to assume he already knows it will be higher than people are comfortable with.
He is in the process of trying to pirouette without detection. He knows the U-turn will be politically popular - there has long been unease about foreign property investors. But he also knows he is effectively admitting to something he does not want to admit to: that Labour was right all along.
Key is trying to skip the painful part of acknowledging that by instead debating whether a land tax is better than Labour's recipe of banning foreign buyers. He has developed selective amnesia about the fact that not so long ago in the process of trying to capitalise on Labour's campaign against housebuyers with Chinese-sounding surnames, he did not believe any measure was warranted because there was no problem.
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