AS IF HE WASN’T IN ENOUGH TROUBLE, Matthew Hooton has now come out for Winston Peters’ New Zealand Futures Fund (NZFF). Not only that, but he is also calling upon Peters to lower the company tax rate:
“A 12.5% company tax rate, not the current 28%, would be a much better bet [when it comes to attracting foreign investors] than relying on his or any other Prime Minister’s sales skills, along with limos or helicopters from the airport and PowerPoint presentations for visiting funds managers.”
Hooton has been calling for a radical re-design of the New Zealand economy for some time now. But, as the above quotation makes clear, he holds out very little hope that the National Party – let alone its present leader – is either ready, willing, or able to accomplish anything resembling substantive economic change.
Hooton’s support for Peters’ NZFF not only reflects his own personal disillusionment with National, but the Radical Right’s newfound reluctance to bet everything on the efficacy of laissez-faire. Hooton is doubtful, now, that even an economy geared rigorously to the preferences of the market will automatically allocate resources in the most effective and efficient fashion. Judging from his latest NZ Herald column, this gadfly of the Right has grown sceptical even of Act.
It is, however, difficult to tell whether Hooton’s scepticism of Act is fuelled by his perception that the party is too radical, or not radical enough. After all, by roughly halving the company tax rate, the New Zealand state would be denying itself close to nine billion dollars of revenue. The size of expenditure cuts required to fill a fiscal hole that big would likely render the country ungovernable. It is important, always, to bear in mind the extremity of Hooton’s economic and political radicalism.
That political commentators of Hooton’s ilk are losing confidence in both the virtues of right-wing centrism, and strict free-market orthodoxy, indicates an ideological shift of some significance. Just how significant will be indicated by whether or not the USA once again embraces, or rejects, the leadership of Donald Trump.
A victory for Trump would represent not just a repudiation of Kamala Harris’s half-hearted social-democracy, but a rejection of the whole concept of self-regulating markets. It would signal that the intense personalisation of leadership, long a feature of the political sphere, has migrated to the economic sphere. Right-wing voters have long sought a leader willing to bang politicians heads together. Now, it would seem, those same voters are wanting, and expecting, a leader who will bang corporations’ heads together.
The loss of confidence in Christopher Luxon’s leadership, registered in the polls, and unmistakeable in Hooton’s column, may be a reflection of the Prime Minister’s failure to manifest the head-banging qualities so many right-leaning voters were anticipating. Luxon may believe himself to be the sort of guy who can bounce India into a free trade agreement because he “gushes at them or squeezes their shoulder” – to deploy Hooton’s withering phrase – but a surprisingly large chunk of the Right’s electoral base simply aren’t buying it.
Another indicator of this economic personalisation was the readiness of Chris Bishop, Shane Jones and Simeon Brown to assume personal responsibility for setting New Zealand on a “fast track” to economic growth and prosperity. Were they, like Hooton, registering the rising impatience of at least a sizeable fraction of the electorate with conventional decision-making processes? “Just get the bloody job done!” Was that the message being sent to the Government in National’s focus-groups? And, if so, why did the Coalition refuse to heed it?
The answer to that question was on display in RNZ’s “30 With Guyon Espiner” interview with Labour’s finance spokesperson, Barbara Edmonds. In the course of that unedited half-hour, Edmonds exposed the acute tension that now exists between the intelligent politician’s understanding of just how critical the economic situation confronting New Zealand has become; the radical measures required to address it; and the dispiriting combination of intellectual lassitude and political cowardice that more-or-less guarantees that nothing will happen.
Bishop’s, Jones’ and Brown’s enforced backdown on the Fast Track legislation simply confirms that, in National’s ranks, as well as in Labour’s, doing nothing will always find more takers than doing something.
Could this be why Hooton opted to sing Peters’ praises on the pages of the Herald? Whatever else he may represent, “Winston” has always stood for the idea that “the man in the arena” has more to offer the world than those content to be guided by process and convention.
Following the rules of the game was a sound strategy when the game produced a society in which those who worked hard and kept their noses clean could anticipate a comfortable life for themselves and (more importantly) for their children. But, as the imminent prospect of a Trump victory makes clear, that anticipation lost what little purchase it had on realism long, long ago. At a time when so many of the promises of the powerful are best read as threats, more and more people are abandoning the whole democratic idea in favour of putting a strong leader in command, and giving him the freedom to get on with it.
National’s problem is that Christopher Luxon is a successful, private-sector bureaucrat. He has little time for the man in the arena, seeming more at home with the persons in the boardroom. Fond as he is of invoking the waning “mojo” of New Zealanders, Luxon displays an equal deficiency of that quality in his performance as prime minister. For all we know, of course, Luxon may possess all the qualities needed to haul New Zealand out of the Big Muddy. It’s just that, to date, he has declined to manifest them.
There was time when, presented with a faltering capitalism, the electorate could turn leftwards towards the bright (if untried) promises of socialism. No more. Half-a-century has passed since a Labour Government even vaguely reflecting socialist principles held office in New Zealand. That said, if Edmonds’ responses to Espiner offer any guide, the Labour Party of 2024 is miles away from unleashing Rogernomics 2.0, but no nearer to raising the revenue needed to keep what remains of New Zealand’s welfare state on life-support.
And, right there, the grim reality of New Zealand politics reveals itself. Labour has nothing to offer but process and convention, a failure of imagination and courage that it shares with the National Party. Act can only suggest that neoliberalism’s so-far-unavailing remedies be applied with increased rigor. The Greens and Te Pati Māori display nothing but messy ideological incontinence.
NZ First may not, in the end, have what’s needed to lead New Zealand into the “broad sunlit uplands” that Winston’s namesake promised, but, as Hooton’s column suggests, it still has “a man in the arena” shrewd enough to point the way.
This essay was originally posted on the Interest.co.nz website on Monday, 21 October 2024.
11 comments:
Ever since the political Hindenburg demise of Hooton's boy, Todd Muller, Matthew has hated on the National Party. To some extent, with good cause. He clearly had little time for the wasted John Key years of smile and wave, where the only objective in town was to win elections. A lot of the malaise we find this country in is firmly rooted in that era, worsened by Labour's weak leadership, incompetence and critical theory policy.
Luxon is justifiably unappealing. He, like a fair chunk of National, are still in the - win elections but don't do anything that may even slightly concern the horses mode. Exceptions are Simeon Brown, Erica Stanford, Mark Mitchell and the ever independent Judith Collins. The rest are as inspirational and as vanilla as Luxon and equally risk adverse. His spineless effort to address the Solicitor Generals racist guidelines, while being interviewed by Mike Hosking, was an excellent example of how few kahuna's he has. The treaty principles bill, he's so afraid of, another. His default - don't want to offend anyone or anything - stance, gives credence to the rumour he is not prime minister material. So yes, Hooton has a point.
But Rome wasn't built in a day. Were it not for NZ First and ACT, it's abundantly obvious a National government would have had us slightly less full steam ahead but on the same course into the iceberg Labour had us set on. For different reasons, for fear of upsetting someone. But the same net result.
I think it will take another election with reduced National vote and an increased ACT/NZ First, to turn this ship safely around. But that will also require Labour to remain in denial and its partners to keep behaving exactly the way they are and to genuinely change, something I think none of that three are capable of!
"(in Hawaii) a wise man or shaman.
informal•North American
an important person; the person in charge.
"one big kahuna runs the whole show"
informal•North American
(in surfing) a very large wave."
Or do you mean cojones?????????
Perhaps Hooton has discovered that libertarians are among the most ignorant politicians on earth. Who could forget 'what's a leppo?' Well I guess most of THEM are trying to forget it.
I'm not at all sure what the solution/s for New Zealand's problems is/are, but I don't think any of the present political parties in this country have one.
Austerity doesn't work except under certain very strict circumstances that don't apply here at the moment. The Brits had 14 years of it and it only made things worse – although brexit probably helped that. Neoliberalism doesn't work, as the World Bank has finally figured out, but both the major parties + act seem wedded to it.
Winston isn't, but Winston is a bit like Trump and that he only cares about Winston. As shown by his courting the nutty anti-VAX vote . If the Greens were to get off their fat backsides and push Labour further to the left, it might shake something loose.
But the present situation is enough to make me give up on politics altogether. I'm beginning to find a certain sympathy with those people who don't vote because "they're all the same." It's not totally true, but there's enough truth in it to be quite a valid reason for sitting out elections.
In 1967, Rob Muldoon became the New Zealand Minister of Finance for all bit three years through to 1984 Muldoonist economics were in place. In 1996, Peters' party came into a coalition agreement, and through to today has insured Muldoonist economics reappear in each coalition agreement he entered. Essentially, since decimal currency was introduced, this hybrid economic policy has never let us.
Please don't get me wrong, I am putting no positive or negative weight on those policies. It is part interventionist, heavy on economic development, a view of government as the mediator between workers and business, rural and regional focus and a view what we used to provide we can do so again. Clearly, Peters has compromised all of these. It is arguable whether for power, or for small part delivery. This is highlighted as he has in coalition surfed through economic policy that directly contradicts his stated ideology.
So what to make of Hooton's road to Damascus? A wish for Muldoonism without the pear-shaped economic interventionalist pragmatism? Business tax becoming negligible? Matthew is smart enough to know it has been done before. The Bolger government fronted by a remnant of Muldoonism, while Richardson shattered the veneer with extreme market economics.
I am sure Matthew Hooton is equally aware why Peters resigned and formed NZ First.
Kahunas is slang for the nether regions that I won't print here!
Little Keith
Kahuna is what indigenous Hawaiians call a priest/ knowledge expert. In New Zealand a kahuna is a tohunga/tohuka, depending on your dialect.
I believe the rude Spanish word you were searching for is cojones, meaning balls of a testicular nature.
Of course Kahuna is Tohunga in Hawaiian. The repurposing of the term in American slang is insulting to the indigenous. Perhaps innuendo regarding bishops metaphors would be better if you want to mix religious leaders with genitalia.
Over the years my opinion of Hooton has changed. I used to listen to what he says but not anymore. Just something I don’t like. A fair weather friend or is anyone his friend. For a while maybe.
Of course Kahunas means what i said. Try the internet for reference. An amazing source of information.
Chur
https://kathleenwcurry.wordpress.com/2018/08/08/easily-confused-words-kahuna-vs-cojones/
...and what part of my response denied it was American slang, but like many things thr Americans use language that should not be used.
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