Election About More Than Trust
New Zealand Centre for Political Research www.nzcpr.com
Election About More Than Trust
By Dr Muriel Newman,
New Zealand Centre for Political Research,
On Saturday
November 8th Helen Clark will be asking voters for their
support as she attempts to win an election that would
elevate her to the rarefied ranks of four-term New Zealand
Prime Ministers alongside Richard Seddon, William Massey and
Keith Holyoake. During the address in which she announced
the election date, Helen Clark explained that the 2008
general election will be about "trust" - whether the public
can trust a Labour Government led by her, or a National
Government led by John Key. The reality is, of course,
that an election should be about more important issues than
trust alone. The fact that Helen Clark wants to fight an
election on "trust" shows how little opportunity there is
for Labour to mount a credible campaign. After nine years in
power, one would have thought that Labour would have
campaigned on its record. Clearly their internal polling is
showing that their record is a weakness in the eyes of the
electorate, not a strength. The reality is that Labour has
now become an unpopular government and voters have grown
tired of state intervention without any visible benefits.
Labour's decision to ask the electorate to judge it on
trust must have delighted the National Party, given that
Helen Clark is now so closely associated with New Zealand's
most distrusted politician - Winston Peters. Unfortunately
that means we must expect Labour's campaign to be vicious
and dirty, typical of failed regimes that are only able to
remain in power by convincing the electorate that the
alternative is worse than they are. In such a vitriolic
campaign, the issues that are really important to the future
wellbeing of the country will be lost.
Such an issue is
whether bigger government really is the answer to society's
ills? Those who believe that more money, more bureaucrats
and more laws is the only solution to such critical social
problems as educational failure, rising crime and
intergenerational welfare dependency, must surely see that
as a result of nine years of an ever-expanding government,
the problems have grown bigger not smaller! This
expansion of government has created other problems that are
rarely mentioned, including the damage to our social fabric
caused by excessive regulation. The taxes needed to pay the
salaries, buy the cars and build the offices for the
additional 15,000 public servants hired since Labour took
office, is only a part of the problem. A bigger cost is the
waste of time, energy and money spent on the mountain of
compliance including the endless form filling, inspections,
assessments, reports and other deadweight costs of red tape
associated with each new wave of regulation. But even
more harmful is the damage to the Kiwi spirit as personal
responsibility, creativity and optimism are crushed by big
government. While hard working New Zealanders who
desperately want to get ahead are forced to shelve their
hopes and dreams - because the struggle has become just too
difficult - big government's ruling elite have, for example,
been able to hold a book launch extravaganza at which
"guests were served muttonbirds and oysters, washed down
with glasses of bubbly", reported to have cost taxpayers
$75,000! The point is that unfettered big government
creates its own life force. It grows like topsy and wastes
money like it is going out of fashion. In his book The
Economic State of the Nation, Professor Roger Bowden
describes the growth of bureaucracy in this way: "Once
started, managerial bureaucracy becomes a self-perpetuating
virus, to the point where it eventually gets out of control
altogether. Like some swelling flood, it gathers momentum as
it sweeps common sense from its path, and it becomes
overlain with empire building, careerism and other
supplementary agendas. By now the organization is being run
by the wrong people, and their mistakes are no longer micro,
they are mega". Universities, in particular, have become
hotbeds of bureaucracy with administrators now outnumbering
coalface staff - who do the teaching and research - by two
to one. To make matters worse, a new administrative system
devised by the Labour Government, is seriously increasing
the bureaucracy, threatening academic freedom and
demoralising staff. The Performance Based Research
Funding (PBRF) process uses arbitrary criteria to rank the
research outputs of university staff. The problem is that it
encourages the production of formulaic publications favoured
by the assessors, rather than unfashionable but potentially
groundbreaking original research. In fact, under the PBRF
system it has been estimated that much of the research
produced by both Isaac Newton and Albert Einstein would have
been graded as failures. As a result of this system, New
Zealand is in grave danger of losing high calibre staff fed
up with research assessments being ranked lower than they
believe they should be. This weeks NZCPR Guest
Commentator is Dr Ron Smith, the Director of International
Relations and Security Studies at the University of Waikato,
whose article The Tyranny of Facism: PBRF and other stories,
soundly condemns the system: "Performance Based Research
Funding fails on all counts. It fails to adequately or
equitably evaluate performance and it produces no (net)
funding. In part it fails to achieve its objectives because
it is conceptually flawed and badly administered". To read
the full article visit www.nzcpr.com Dr Smith has also
prepared a more comprehensive Research Report for the New
Zealand Centre for Political Research. PBRF on
Dr
Smith concludes with the advice that university staff should
view the PBRF "rather as national defence forces would view
the appearance of a hostile submarine. Keep an eye on it
and, if it gets too close, sink it". Clearly, the affects
of "big government" have spread through every public
institution in the country. In the public health system it
has got so bad that if all the managers were to get sick,
there wouldn't be enough hospital beds to put them in! And
with this massively expanded bureaucracy absorbing scarce
resources that could otherwise be going into service
delivery, these are surely the sorts of issues that
definitely need addressing during an election campaign.
As much as Helen Clark may wish to dictate what the
election issues are, the electorate is likely to take a more
considered view. This week's poll asks: Do you think
Helen Clark's strategy to campaign on TRUST will be most
beneficial to Labour or National? To vote visit
www.nzcpr.com ENDS