|
Friday 29th November 2002 |
Text too small? |
"You can't get a single currency because the politics aren't right," foreign affairs and trade secretary Simon Murdoch told a Wellington briefing.
He said there was scope for more harmonisation of business law across the Tasman in response to a question from
TelstraClear's government relations manager, Rose Hart.
But there were too many political obstacles on both sides of the Tasman for a full currency union, he added.
"And you won't get a customs union because we've got a lot of the advantages of that already."
But Mr Murdoch said the two countries could well move closer to becoming a single market and he expected progress next year.
The Closer Economic Relations agreement with Australia was signed in 1983 and the 20th anniversary is seen as being something of a "hook" that a raft of new moves could be hung on.
"There has been a harmonisation of the rules that businesses in both places can operate by there is now a single food authority and we're talking about a single therapeutic goods regime."
The moves to harmonise the business laws should cut compliance costs for businesses, he said.
No comments yet
MEL - Meridian Energy monthly operating report for June 2026
Devon Funds Morning Note - 15 July 2026
BIT - Transaction in Own Shares
Summerset Welcomes Alison Barrass to Board
LIC - Full Year Results 2025-26
VHP - Full Year Results Announcement Date and Webcast Details
AIA - June 2026 Monthly traffic update
CHI - Q2 2026 Operational Update
RYM - First quarter trading update
July 14th Morning Report