“ROGERNOMICS” didn’t just transform New Zealand’s economy and society, it profoundly changed its politicians. Members of the “political class” of 2024 display radically different beliefs from the individuals who governed New Zealand prior to 1984. The most alarming of these post-1984 beliefs dismisses Members of Parliament and local government politicians as singularly ill-qualified to determine the fate of the nations they have been elected to lead.
This paradox is readily explained when the core convictions driving the political class are exposed. The most important of these is that ordinary voters have absolutely no idea how, or by whom, their country is governed. The ordinary voter’s conviction that “the people” rule – as opposed to the “loose affiliation of millionaires and billionaires” whose worldwide corporate interests are protected by globally organised media and public relations companies – is offered as proof of their all-round imbecility. Politicians might just as well be guided by baboons as by the ordinary voter!
This contemptuous view of the people who elect politicians to public office is, naturally, kept well-hidden from the electorate. Indeed, these disdainful “representatives” are forever celebrating in public what they denounce privately as dangerous, “the principles of democratic government”. Why? Because the alternative to perpetuating the myth that the people (demos) rule (kratos) – i.e. by making it clear to them that they don’t – is much, much worse.
Ruling a country by force, rather than by consent, not only turns most of the population into the rulers’ enemies, but also leaves the political class acutely vulnerable to the institutions responsible for perpetrating the violence that keeps it in power. All too often these “men with guns” decide to cut out the political middlemen and rule directly. Historically-speaking, this is the royal-road to graft, corruption, extortion, and, ultimately, to the formation of a brutal kleptocracy. NOT a situation conducive to either making, or keeping, one’s profits!
That feudalism, and the absolute monarchies that grew out of it, were, in essence, arrangements predicated on the maintenance of well-organised bodies of armed and violent men might, given contemporary capitalism’s distaste for such regimes, be considered ironic. Living under the sway of these “gentlemen”, and being required to pay
The popularity of democracy, as a system designed to reduce sharply the power of bullies and extortionists, tends to be greater the nearer in time its beneficiaries are to the oppressive political regimes from which “people-power” liberated them. Even as capitalism began to hit its stride in the nineteenth century, such democratic (or quasi-democratic) legislatures as existed (and there weren’t many) proved remarkably reluctant to bow before the doctrine of laissez-faire. (French for “let the capitalists do what they like’.) The Victorians who founded New Zealand, and wrote its Constitution Act, were impressively unconvinced that a man with a plan (women were yet to be included in their discussions) could not improve the lives of his fellow citizens by persuading them to elect him to Parliament.
This conviction that politicians could make a positive difference to the lives of ordinary people took root more tenaciously in New Zealand than just about any other country on the face of the earth. The radical reforms of the Liberal government (1890-1912) and the first Labour government (1935-1949) earned New Zealand the title “social laboratory of the world”. Politicians who were similarly determined to make a difference came from Europe and America to observe first-hand New Zealand’s own special brand of “socialism without doctrines”.
The people who rendered making a difference unsafe were, of course, the socialists with doctrines. The unfortunate Russians and Chinese would pass from feudalism to communism without any extended period of democratic government in between. From noblemen with swords, they passed into the hands of commissars with pistols. The taxes were just as swingeing, but at least Communism’s bullies and extortionists contrived to paint Paradise in colours more exciting than white.
Lest their workers decide to paint their own countries red, Western capitalists were persuaded, very reluctantly, to let them be painted pink. The problem with social-democracy, however, was that if you conceded it an inch, it would, albeit incrementally, take you many miles down “the road to serfdom”. Such was the grim thesis of the Austrian, arch-capitalist economist, Friedrich von Hayek, founder of the Switzerland-based free-market think tank, the Mont Pelerin Society, and spiritual father of neoliberal political economy.
Labour’s Roger Douglas was a member of the aforesaid Mont Pelerin Society, as was National’s Ruth Richardson, along with quite a number of the bureaucrats and businessmen who first set New Zealand on the road to neoliberalism. At the heart of their project was a very simple imperative: Don’t let politicians near anything even remotely important. Leave all the important decisions to the market, or, at least, to those who own and control the market.
Those who struggle to understand why neoliberals are constantly presenting mild-mannered social-democrats as fire-breathing communists should view their behaviour as pre-emptive ideological law enforcement – pre-crime-fighting. Politicians determined to “make a positive difference” may begin by building state-houses, the neoliberals argue, but they always end up creating gulags. Better by far to create a society in which “making a positive difference” is restricted to capitalist entrepreneurs. Don’t let the political do-gooders get started.
Clearly, no one sent the memo to Jacinda Ardern. Or, if they did, she profoundly misunderstood it. Making a positive difference was what New Zealand’s young prime minister all-too-evidently believed the Labour Party had been established to enable. But, when she said “Let’s do this!”, all those around her, either gently, or not-so-gently, said “You can’t do that!”
It may have looked as though there were levers to pull to set up a light-rail network, build 100,000 affordable houses, end child poverty, and combat global warming, but they weren’t attached to anything. “Jacinda” could pull on them all she wanted, put on a good show, but the cables linking politicians’ promises to real-world outcomes had all been cut decades earlier. She didn’t appear to understand that disempowering politicians was what Rogernomics had been all about.
But, as is so often the case in history, the story was changed by something its author’s had failed to imagine, or anticipate. The onset of a global pandemic made it absolutely necessary that the lever labelled “Keeping New Zealanders Safe” was at the end of a cable that was very firmly attached to the real world, and that the person pulling the lever was empathically qualified to make a real and positive difference.
Before the neoliberals could come up with a plausible reason for letting thousands of their fellow citizens perish, the Ardern-led government, backed by the almost forgotten power of an unapologetically interventionist state, was producing changes in the real world – changes that were, very obviously, saving the lives of real New Zealanders.
It couldn’t last. Neoliberalism, like rust, never sleeps, and in less than a year the lever Ardern and her colleagues had pulled on with such energy had been quietly reconnected to less effective – but more divisive – parts of the state machine. But, not before “Jacinda” and her party had done the impossible. Not before Labour had won 50.01 percent of the Party Vote in the 2020 General Election.
There’s a lesson in there somewhere. Maybe, just maybe, politicians, acting in the interests of the people who elected them, aren’t always ill-qualified to lead? Maybe, just maybe, it is still possible for men and women of good will to make a positive difference?
This essay was originally posted on The Democracy Project substack on Tuesday, 20 August 2024.
The author has had an epiphany?
ReplyDeleteStrangely I agree with most of your article Chris. Chris Luxon will be popular with those who promote business and who profit by it. Call it neoliberal if you like. It's easier to stay in power if those who have power agree with your strategy. That doesn't make Luxon wrong or evil and he may end up saving this country from oblivion, or not, depending on your POV. The remarkable thing about Ardern was that the people were looking for change and a different approach. What sunk her ship was a deceitful agenda not exposed until after her election as PM, and her ability to talk but not form a government capable of achieving anything other than separatism. I agree that big business and companies are a huge influence over governments everywhere, including China. Why, because the economy is the only way a socialist or neoliberal government can function. Good and successful leaders understand that regardless of collar colour, and bad leaders don't. IMO socially minded people generally see the economy to be used rather than nurtured. It's a huge mistake. Ardern may have been able to achieve her goals without the financial drain of Covid and the divisive nature of Maori separatism but I doubt it. She could've made a difference but didn't. Luxon believes he can make a difference and is. I believe that his overall achievements will do more good than harm. If Arderns' agenda had come to pass would it have produced more good than harm. That will be a matter of opinion but I'm glad those policies weren't implemented. Regardless of big business, Leaders and governments can get elected and make huge changes. Those leaders are a rare breed and are special people.
ReplyDelete1. While autocratic governments might have imposed swingeing taxes, they were usually so inefficient they could never collect them. The merchant class at least has always been pretty damn good at avoiding them. Swords were simply a badge of office, or a symbol of rank and of very little to no use in any form of rebellion or revolution. They also prescribed what sort of clothes you could wear at various times didn't they?
ReplyDelete2. The logical conclusion of the system we now have, is the US system where billionaires can contribute as much as they like to political campaigns, and where politicians – at least those at the top of the ballot, have to collect hundreds of millions of dollars in order to not only win, but survive.
3. To which end, we could add to woke = anything anyone does that I don't like – communism = anything the government does that I don't like. Because let's face it, the capitalist class will take advantage of any government largess going, even though they will scream loudly at any of it going to the poor. And to be honest, I think I prefer Wokeness to hypocrisy.
4. Whenever conservatives are made aware of the fact that "Cindy was 'ruining' the country because there was a pandemic", they stick their fingers in their ears, and forget about the 20,000 people who would have died if she hadn't. Presumably in the realisation that luckily none of the dead people were close to them.
5. Even now we have billionaires who despise democracy trying to influence the US election, and we managed to let one - Peter Thiel - become a New Zealand citizen without being remotely qualified, which smacks to me of corruption somewhere. He is one of a number of very rich people who are buying places in New Zealand as bolt holes in case things turn to custard in their own country – either with the election of someone a bit more democratic and willing to tax them, or authoritarians like the Russian or Chinese or Hungarian governments confiscating their stuff if they annoy them. These people could buy and sell New Zealand governments – and we seem to be relying on the honesty of politicians, particularly Conservative politicians to keep us democratic. People I have no faith in at all.
“ROGERNOMICS” didn’t just transform New Zealand’s economy and society, it profoundly changed its politicians. Members of the “political class” of 2024 display radically different beliefs from the individuals who governed New Zealand prior to 1984. The most alarming of these post-1984 beliefs dismisses Members of Parliament and local government politicians as singularly ill-qualified to determine the fate of the nations they have been elected to lead.
ReplyDeleteI see that in terms of their decision to (attempt) to create post-ethnic societies. Ethnicity is based on commonality that (at an intuitive level) says "one of us"; "one of them".
As Eric Kaufmann puts it, majority ethnic groups (throughout history) form the basis of nation states. If the majority ethnic group is self-confident, they welcome new comers, (which explains: "Yellow Peril").
Ethnic Groups absorb other ethnic groups, as in One Hundred Crowded Years: "but what of our Maori people . Unbelievably, Labour , is following the logic of the post-colonial; post-modernist that says that if you believe Maori culture did not evolve in response to modern industrial society you are racist.
Of course you may argue (that) "xenophobia is so passé", but in that absence of us as an intuitive response you have to show tangible benefits: oh, I know! Lets get TVNZ (in association with Massey) to make a programme about it.