John Key looks on as Julia Gillard briefs the media on an asylum-seeker deal between New Zealand and Australia in Queenstown. Source: Getty Images
JULIA Gillard and John Key have met for talks in Queenstown, announcing greater co-operation on people smuggling and closer economic ties.
Thirty years of close economic ties between Australia and New Zealand have been cemented with a series of new agreements, but NZ's prime minister is the first to admit they're not on an even footing.
Prime Minister Julia Gillard took part in bilateral discussions with New Zealand Prime Minister John Key in Queenstown on Saturday, ahead of the 30th anniversary of the Closer Economic Relations trade deal, signed in March 1983.
That deal has paved the way for several new announcements, including a crackdown on exorbitant mobile roaming rates in both countries, further streamlining trans-Tasman travel through SmartGate, simplifying investment in each other's country, and recovering student debt.
Ms Gillard and Mr Key also announced greater co-operation on people smuggling, with New Zealand allocating 150 places in its annual refugee quota of 750 to refugees processed in Australian detention centres, from 2014.
While the leaders talked up the mutual benefits of the new arrangements, Mr Key openly admits it's an "asymmetrical" relationship.
"There's an argument that we need them more than they need us, given they're our largest source of tourists, our biggest export market, our largest investor," he said.
"We do have to work hard with that relationship, because there's lots of options for Australia and they could just choose to ignore us if they wanted to."
Ms Gillard was saying nothing of the sort during her time in the picturesque South Island's town, describing the relationship as "one of family" - a point she first made when in 2011 she became the first foreign leader to address New Zealand's parliament.
"There is a bond between Australia and New Zealand that is different to any bond that we share in any other part of the world," she says.
"The very fact that it's fundamental to our soul and how we perceive ourselves - the legend of ANZAC is part of us and it's part of New Zealand forged in history, here in contemporary times, and always here for the future."
It was fitting, then, that Ms Gillard on Saturday announced a new Australian memorial at New Zealand's National War Memorial, currently under construction in Wellington, ahead of the Anzac centenary in 2015.
Ms Gillard flies back to Australia on Sunday morning.
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