Cabinet Manual

 

Overseas travel

2.100 Overseas travel by Ministers or Parliamentary Under-Secretaries can provide important benefits to their portfolios and to New Zealand generally.

2.101 To ensure that their travel is approved properly and undertaken in an appropriate manner, Ministers must follow the principles set out in paragraphs 2.103 - 2.116, and the more detailed procedural guidance contained in the Ministerial Office Handbook and the CabGuide.

2.102 This guidance applies to all Ministers (inside and outside Cabinet) and Parliamentary Under-Secretaries. References to Ministers include Parliamentary Under-Secretaries.

Purpose of travel

2.103 Ministers' travel should usually be for one or more of the following purposes relating to their portfolios:

  1. to attend specific conferences, meetings, and events;
  2. to familiarise themselves with specific issues;
  3. to meet international obligations.

Approval of travel

2.104 Travel proposals, including proposals to attend Australian Standing Council meetings, require the preliminary approval of the Prime Minister. A Cabinet paper proposing the travel must subsequently be submitted to and approved by Cabinet. Ministers must seek the agreement of another Minister or Ministers to act for them during their proposed period of absence. (See paragraphs 2.39 - 2.42.) No commitments or understandings regarding overseas travel are to be entered into before the Prime Minister's preliminary approval is given.

2.105 Where there is any doubt about travel to a particular destination (for example, for international relations reasons), the request for the Prime Minister's approval must be supported by a recommendation from the Minister of Foreign Affairs.

2.106 When considering proposals for overseas travel by Ministers, the Prime Minister will take into account the numbers of Ministers overseas at any one time. Usual practice is for no more than four Ministers in Cabinet to be absent from New Zealand on official business at any one time, although the Prime Minister may approve exceptions to this limit in special circumstances.

2.107 The Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade coordinates arrangements for Ministers' official visits overseas, and circulates guidance from time to time concerning the support provided by New Zealand's overseas posts. Early contact with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade should be made through the office of the Minister of Foreign Affairs to ensure focused and coordinated programmes overseas. Ministers' offices should not contact overseas posts directly.

Travel costs

2.108 Any proposal that a Minister accept the payment of international airfares or other travel-related costs by another country or international organisation must be approved by the Minister of Foreign Affairs and the Prime Minister, and included in the Cabinet paper.

2.109 Any proposals for bodies other than government organisations to fund any of the travel, accommodation, or other expenses incurred by Ministers should be assessed in light of the guidance on the public duty and personal interests of Ministers. See in particular paragraphs 2.56, 2.60, and 2.61, and the guidance on gifts (paragraphs 2.78 - 2.82 and 2.93). The Secretary of the Cabinet is available for advice.

Accompanying family members, staff, and officials

2.110 It may be appropriate for a Minister to be accompanied by a spouse, partner, or family member as a member of the official party. Approval is not given automatically; the Prime Minister will consider requests on a case-by-case basis.

2.111 Ministers may be accompanied on overseas visits by staff from their own offices or officials from their departments. The number of accompanying staff must be kept to an absolute minimum, and should be determined in light of the nature of the visit.

Reporting on overseas travel

2.112 Within a month of their return, Ministers must report to Cabinet on the achievements and outcomes of their overseas travel.

Personal travel overseas

2.113 Subject to parliamentary or portfolio requirements, and with the prior approval of the Prime Minister, Ministers may occasionally extend overseas visits outside the formal itinerary for personal reasons, provided no additional costs are incurred by the government as a result.

2.114 Ministers may make personal visits overseas if they obtain the Prime Minister's prior approval, which will be subject to obtaining leave to be absent from the House. Ministers must also obtain the agreement of another Minister or Ministers to act during such periods of absence. (See paragraphs 2.39 - 2.42.) The Cabinet Office should be advised of any such arrangements.

Visits by Ministers from other countries

2.115 The Prime Minister and the Minister of Foreign Affairs should be consulted if a visit by a Minister from another country is proposed. Guidance about the arrangements for a visit by an overseas Minister is available from the Visits and Ceremonial Office at the Department of Internal Affairs. (See www.dia.govt.nz.)

2.116 The New Zealand government does not usually offer payment of international airfares for Ministers from other countries who are visiting New Zealand, although it may provide some assistance with internal costs.

Travel within New Zealand

2.117 Details of the procedures and entitlements governing ministerial travel within New Zealand are set out in the Ministerial Office Handbook.