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PREFU after-party report on the damage

  • October 7th, 2008

The PREFU underscores the wasted opportunity represented by the last 8 years. The most sustained period of peace and favourable terms of trade in my working life has been squandered. Instead of using the good years to help mitigate the effects of tough decisions New Zealand has focused on paying bright people to make then enforce new rules for everyone else. Our productivity growth has stalled. 

Just as in 1990 a National government is going  to have to do the unpopular tidy-up to get things working again. Quite apart from the budget blow-out there’ll be the management catastrophes in Immigration, Health, Defence, Corrections, De-forestation, carbon foot-print and Kyoto, local government over-reach, house prices, and many others.

It reminds me of what happens when adults leave their silly kids for a weekend. When the adults return the fridge is empty, bottles lie everywhere, lots of stuff has been broken, the credit cards have been stolen, and it will take months to get the smell of drink and worse out of the carpets.

Stoners and other losers keep turning up at the door asking about the next party, and the kids whine when they’re told they’ll have to help with the clean-up and do their homework before they can go to another party.

I contrast our feckless government’s performance (despite its masterful political management) with how Chile has dealt with its period of commodity price boom. Chile has salted away US$10bn against the time when copper prices fall.

The sad thing for H Clark is that her legacy may be no better than that of Muldoon. Both had superb political management skills. Neither used them to take on any really worthwhile political leadership project. They could have used that political skill to do something hard, like reform welfare, or education. instead neither has reversed New Zealand’s relative decline when compared with our neighbours and competitors.

Comments

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  • Paul
  • October 7th, 2008
  • 5:07 pm

Great analysis. Sad but true comments.
Only hope is that the socialists are crushed to oblivion in four weeks time.

[…] Original Stephen Franks […]

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  • Tom
  • October 8th, 2008
  • 9:09 am

Nice. Analogise your voter base as children.

Putting the political faux pas aside, could you go into detail?

– “Wasted opportunity”
– leadership never embarked on a “worthwhile political leadership project”
– “paying bright people to make then enforce new rules for everyone else”
– “unpopular tidy-up to get things working again”

Care to add substance to these claims?

Finally, “[r]eckless government’s performance” — this is in contrast to the rest of your claims, which comes across as saying the government has been too cautious. Could you please expand this comment?

Tom

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  • Andrew
  • October 8th, 2008
  • 10:03 am

“Stoners and other losers keep turning up at the door asking about the next party,”

Is that a reference to National turning up to be the next government??

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  • Paul Williams
  • October 9th, 2008
  • 4:06 pm

Don’t hold your breath Tom, Stephen’s strictly a huff-n-puff aspirant. Too cynical and too compromised to offer solutions.

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  • Chris
  • October 10th, 2008
  • 2:04 am

Tom, I think you’ll find the analogy was that the Labour govt = silly kids.

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  • Tom
  • October 10th, 2008
  • 9:07 am

Somewhat correct.

“It reminds me of what happens when adults leave their silly kids for a weekend. When the adults return the fridge is empty, bottles lie everywhere, lots of stuff has been broken, the credit cards have been stolen, and it will take months to get the smell of drink and worse out of the carpets.”
… the reference to Labour as “silly kids”. Let’s take a look at the next paragraph…

“Stoners and other losers keep turning up at the door asking about the next party, and the kids whine when they’re told they’ll have to help with the clean-up and do their homework before they can go to another party.”
… a reference to voters as stoners/losers/whining kids. A winning political move.

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