Cheese On Toast: Not for New Zealanders the reckless, ideologically-driven fiscal mayhem that Joe Hockey saw fit to visit upon their Australian cousins. Here in the Shaky Isles, Finance Minister Bill English delivered up a steady-as-she-goes financial statement so wholesome and tasty that even Labour’s own supporters could not resist giving it a big tick when the pollsters came calling.
FINDING A CONTRAST more dramatic
than the respective receptions of the Australian and New Zealand budgets would
not be easy. With hardly a sector of Australian society spared the heat of Joe
Hockey’s fiscal blowtorch, a bushfire of dissent has erupted across a broad
political front. Not surprisingly, Australian public opinion has turned
decisively against the Liberal-National Coalition. So much so that, according
to the New Zealand National Party’s pollster, and well-known blogger, David
Farrar:
“I don’t think the question anymore is whether Tony Abbott has lost the
next election, and the Coalition will be a one term Government. I think the
question is now how many terms in opposition will they have?”
What has angered Australians the most are the crude ideological
justifications offered up by Tony Abbott’s government. Treasurer Joe Hockey’s
swingeing fiscal cuts were, he insisted, a necessary response to a genuine
fiscal crisis. Rescuing Australia from the long-term economic imbalances
inherited from the previous Labor Government would require sacrifices from
every sector of Australian society.
Hockey’s
economic justifications have been greeted with scorn by just about every
Australian economist not infected with the Australian Centre for Independent
Studies’ (CIS) uniquely virulent strain of neoliberalism. These resistant
economists have pointed out that Australia’s economy is more securely foundationed than most comparable countries, and
that bringing the deficit under control in no way necessitates the social
carnage Hockey’s budget threatens to create.
So why did Abbott, Hockey and their colleagues sign up to such a
self-defeating document? To answer that question it is necessary to examine the
Australian neo-liberal virus more closely. Cultured for nearly forty years in
its New South Wales laboratory, and marketed under the “Classical Liberal”
brand, Australian neoliberalism not only features all the usual justifications
for restoring to the ruling elites as many of the powers stripped from them by
successive waves of progressive reform as possible, but it also insists that
this can be done without incurring a democratic backlash.
Much like the ACT Party here in New Zealand (which maintains close
personal and philosophical associations with the CIS) the far-Right faction of
the Australian Liberal Party purports to believe that if its policies are
explained calmly and rationally to ordinary voters, then eventually the scales
will fall from their eyes and they will understand that policies which hitherto
had appeared to be directed against their interests are, in fact, aimed at
propelling them into prosperity.
Joe Hockey: Expecting ordinary people to vote for their own impoverishment.
In spite of all historical evidence to the contrary, these neoliberals
simply refuse to give up their belief that ordinary people, rationally
propositioned, can be made to vote for their own impoverishment. It is an
ideological affliction which both Labour and the conservative parties on both
sides of the Tasman have struggled to confine to the margins of electoral
politics since the early 1980s – not always successfully.
The Australian Labor Party negotiated the international neoliberal surge
of the 1980s and 90s with particular skill (and thus avoided the decade-long
civil war that so debilitated the New Zealand labour movement). The Australian Liberals under the
(mostly) pragmatic John Howard were similarly successful. (Setting aside the
brief reign of the arch-neoliberal ideologue, John Hewson.)
The equally pragmatic National leader, Jim Bolger, was unable to drive
his own arch-neoliberal, Finance Minister Ruth Richardson, out of his cabinet
until the fall-out from her “Mother of All Budgets” had driven National to the
very edge of destruction and contributed substantially to the demise of New
Zealand’s First-Past-the-Post electoral system. The resurrection of
arch-neoliberal extremism under Dr Don Brash came very close to unleashing fiscal savagery of the sort
Abbott and Hockey are currently perpetrating. With a little bit of luck,
however (not to mention the Labour voters of South Auckland) National and New Zealand managed to dodge Dr Brash’s bullets.
Which brings us to John Key, Bill English and New Zealand’s 2014
“Cheese-on-Toast Budget”. Not for New Zealanders the reckless,
ideologically-driven fiscal mayhem that Joe Hockey saw fit to visit upon their
Australian cousins. Here in the Shaky Isles, Finance Minister Bill English
delivered up a steady-as-she-goes financial statement so wholesome and tasty
that even Labour’s own
supporters could not resist giving it a big tick when the pollsters came
calling. With increases to paid parental leave, and free doctor’s visits for
children under 13 years, how could they not?
Which is not to say that English’s budget is entirely ideology-free – it
isn’t. It’s just that the history of the past thirty years in New Zealand (if
not in Australia) has taught the more thoughtful and moderate elements of the
Right that it is better to give a little than to take a lot. The protection of
elite power, conservatism’s fundamental mission, is best achieved by surrounding
the privileged with crowds of contented citizens munching cheese-on-toast – not
with angry mobs waving pitchforks.
This essay was originally published
in The Press of Tuesday, May 27, 2014.
7 comments:
Nordmyers Black Budget was the right thing to do but politicians learnt that doing the right thing makes you lose elections. I don't know about Abbot?
At last you openly nailed it.
The powerful retain power while the rest of us get fed bread, circuses, free child medical care.
Howard, Abbot, Key do not support Australian or New Zealand interests.
(
They support US corporates. (Check TPPA)
The Nats, ever since their trouncing in the 1930's have learned to appease the so called middle ground.
the latest Budget is clearly an electioneering one.
If the Nats rule after the next election Key will simply keep implementing policies to appease his Wall Street and Washington masters (possibly Mistress if Clinton makes it).
Aussie has panicked. They are very worried the change to gas worldwide means less and less for their coal. Very few coal mines planned or opened worldwide in the last few years. It is on the way out slowly.
Also their iron ore is not so in demand any longer and there is plenty of it elsewhere around the globe. Plenty of scrap iron too. All those cars which will soon be made of carbon fibre & plastic. Even engines will be alloy & ceramic soon. Their dollar is strong still so they are expensive. They cannot see the light at the end of the tunnel.
So they are unhappy, at last!
Watch out though, they will be blaming us for stealing their talent before too long. People like Norman.
Yeah right eh cobber. Take him back.
According to economists' consensus in NZ at least, austerity only works if you're the only one doing it.
Cheese on toast has in part been offered because the power of lotto, casinos, cheap Chinese consumer goods and reality TV/cooking shows are all beginning to loose their magic ability to disguise the real outcomes of the neoliberal agenda.
Austerity doesn't work even if you are the only country doing it. Sometimes countries get lucky and can export their way out of recession but that can just as easily happen without the austerity at home as with. As the euro zone has shown quite clearly austerity doesn't improve economic efficiency and countries which imposed austerity lost ground on Germany in efficiency measures over the last few years even in the few cases where they didn't become less efficient due to austerity.
Actually we are a very very small fish caught up in an imperial struggle between USA, China, India, Russia and Islamist fanatics.
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