Maxim Institute - real issues - No. 257
Maxim Institute - real issues - No. 257
Maxim Institute - real issues - No. 257 14 June 2007 www.maxim.org.nz
Losing our identity Free trade closer for the Pacific The challenge of decentralisation IN THE NEWS A code of conduct? Family Group Conferences Receive International Award
LOSING OUR IDENTITY
The philosopher Richard Rorty died last week at the age of 75. His life was one of major impact and influence, his place in history is assured. Rorty questioned the very nature of identity, of truth and of knowledge, attempting to kill any basis for certainty. In short, he is held to have destroyed the notion of an objective reality and in so doing removed the basis for any sound intellectual thought.
Following in the wake of Immanuel Kant and Friedrich Nietzsche as part of the post-modern movement, Rorty solidified the idea that we cannot know anything with certainty. Therefore, there is no purpose in searching for truth, since knowledge and identity are simply social constructions. If accepted the implications of Rorty's proposition are both profound and terrifying as he removed the grounds for truth.
Rorty also famously claimed that a person lost in a forest has no identity, as a person's identity can only exist in community. When people are isolated they lose themselves. Yet, the irony is that as community is emphasised, togetherness can be lost. As we lose our idea of self, we lose our concept of common humanity, of that which unites us, and instead we are segregated into our own little community. Consequently, our ability to have meaningful engagement with those from other communities is lost and group differences--rather than what we share in common as people--become what defines us.
Rorty left us a lonely world. The impact of his thinking can be seen in universities where debate rages over the status of ethnic science and maths, where cultural relativism is endorsed and universal knowledge denied. As academics struggle to find their feet again they flounder. Rorty's life shows that good intentions can destroy and that one man's ideas can have a tremendous impact over the course of his lifetime.
FREE TRADE CLOSER FOR THE PACIFIC
The Minister of Trade, Phil Goff, has announced this week that New Zealand and Australia will be seeking to progress free trade with the member states of the Pacific Islands Forum. Specifically, the two countries have asked the Forum Trade Ministerial Meeting, which is due to meet in Vanuatu in August, to explore ways that trade barriers, like tariffs, can be reduced and eventually eliminated. However such moves could result in significant economic and social costs for the Forum island states.
The coming conclusion (by 1 January 2008) of negotiations between the Forum and the European Union to establish an Economic Partnership Agreement, that would see the two regions liberalise trade barriers, has triggered the latest call for talks. Any regional free trade agreement made by the Forum and the EU would mean the Forum would be obligated, due to prior agreements, to also reduce trade barriers with New Zealand and Australia.
One reason why Europe, New Zealand and Australia support reducing trade barriers with the Forum is so that goods they export to the Pacific would not be subject to tariffs. In theory, reducing trade barriers also allows trade to become more economic, as countries can import goods and services from the lowest cost producer and in exchange export goods and services they are most efficient at producing. Organisations such as the WTO also consider regional trade agreements like the ones planned as useful stepping stone towards the goal of multilateral free trade. While this is generally true, the logic of regional economic integration does not hold up as well in the Pacific.
Trade economist Robert Scollay has suggested trade liberalisation in the Pacific is problematic as the exports of Forum island states do not amount to more than five percent of the exports of any other and because Forum island states do not have enough goods to trade. What is more, reductions in tariffs would remove a substantial source of government revenue and make Pacific producers uncompetitive, leading to job losses.
The WTO, Europe, New Zealand and Australia all need to be more mindful of the timing and scope of the trade barrier reductions they are proposing. Such drastic change could raise huge dilemmas for the welfare of Forum island states. Whereas moves, such as allowing non-Pacific primary products to have tariffs applied when they enter Pacific markets, could help to boost the island economies. This would result in a situation where free trade would be more advantageous.
Read the Minister
of Trade's Press Release, Preliminary Discussions on Pacific
Trade Agreement
Read
a recent discussion paper on regional integration in the
Pacific, Toward a New Pacific Regionalism
THE
CHALLENGE OF DECENTRALISATION As part of a comparative
study being conducted by the OECD, the Ministry of Education
has released, this month, a report Improving School
Leadership. The report provides background information on
the current state of schooling in New Zealand, with
particular emphasis on what is being done to improve
leadership in New Zealand schools. Education reforms
introduced a decentralised model of leadership into New
Zealand schools in 1989 that differs substantially from
other countries. With that comes a number of advantages but
also challenges. The report raises a concern over the
future supply of quality school leaders. One of the Ministry
of Education's findings was that 72 percent of new
principals 'had no prior experience as a deputy principal.'
The finding of another report was that '40 percent of
principals described their current stress level as 'high' or
'extremely high.'' The danger is that being a principal can
easily become overwhelming given the tension of the
job. While decentralisation provides schools with
significant freedom, allowing them to address the challenges
that are unique to their community, the flipside is that
current policy expects principals to manage extra
administrative responsibility. Their experience as teachers
may not have thoroughly prepared them for this. An added
tension is that principals are accountable to two very
different bodies; the government and the community.
Effective leadership requires principals to manage this
tension. A programme known as the First Time Principals
(FTP) scheme is attempting to address the problems, however,
by offering training to lessen the administrative knowledge
gap that comes from a change in role and to help schools to
support 'newly appointed, first-time principals,' for
example, by showing ways to spread out the workload of
running a school through middle management positions. It
will be interesting to see how the New Zealand model of
decentralised management compares against OECD countries
with a more centralised model of school leadership when the
full study is complete. Read the report, Improving School
Leadership
IN THE
NEWS A CODE OF CONDUCT? A group of smaller 'MMP parties'
has come together to sign a 'code of conduct' for MPs.
Concerned at deteriorating behaviour in Parliament, ACT, the
Green Party, the Maori Party and United Future have all
pledged to abide by the voluntary code. It includes
commitments to, amongst other things, work 'for the public
good,' show 'respect for Parliament,' and 'refrain from
personal attacks.' MPs' conduct is traditionally guided by
Standing Orders, and National, Labour and New Zealand First
have not signed on to the new code, arguing that the code is
superfluous and may even undermine the current Standing
Orders. Read the Code of Conduct
FAMILY
GROUP CONFERENCES RECEIVE INTERNATIONAL AWARD New Zealand
has received the American Humane Association Award in
recognition of our Family Group Conference model. The system
was set up under the Children, Young Persons and their
Families Act 1989. It was a revolutionary idea, owing much
to Maori culture, and is now being used in varying forms in
over 20 countries. It has most noticeably been used with
young offenders in our justice system and aims to help bring
families into the process, rather than just deal with
individuals. TALKING POINT 'Truth is simply a compliment
paid to sentences seen to be paying their way.' Richard
Rorty A registered charitable trust, funded by donations,
Maxim Institute values your interest and
support. ENDS