There could be a dozen companies that have approached the current government asking for financial support due to the economic downturn over the last three years, Finance Minister Bill English said.
Government only intervened in failing companies that it considered posed large-scale, systemic risks to New Zealand if they had been allowed to go under, English said.
Appearing on TV1's Q&A, yesterday English answered questions on the government's allowance for Mediaworks to defer a $43 million licence payment, along with a $1.7 billion bailout for South Canterbury Finance under the retail deposit guarantee scheme last year, and last week's bailout for insurer AMI, which early estimates show could cost the government up to $1 billion.
"The companies that have had any kind of support from the government are a fraction of those that have approached the government over the time that we've been in government," English told interviewer Guyon Espiner.
"From very early on we had a number of companies approaching us for support," English said.
"It could be a dozen, if I went back and added them all up," he said.
Government followed "some pretty straightforward principals" for whether it would intervene in private companies.
"Which is, we should not get involved at all if there's any kind of commercial solution that's available, [and] that they'd have to represent some kind of large-scale, systemic risk to New Zealand for it be considered at all," English said.
"And you'll remember the discussion about Fisher & Paykel early on, which was fairly high profile," he said.
Government had been driven by not over-reacting to the recession while helping the country through it, protecting the vulnerable and maintaining jobs where it was possible, English said.
"I think the government's been pretty pragmatic. If anything, people would have expected that we would be completely hands-off," English said.
"That's not John Key's style, that's not the National Government's style. Where there's a strong case we've taken some action, but we do clearly want to get out of this situation. As the economy picks up [is] where this is going to happen," he said.
Meanwhile, in response to further questions on the names of the companies that approached the government, and what type of companies they were, a spokesman for Bill English said they had nothing to add to what the Finance Minister said on Q&A.
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Dozen companies wanted Govt financial help, says English
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