Scoop Feedback: Controversial New James Bond
The following is a selection of feedback and other unsolicited email received by Scoop recently. The opinions they
contain do not necessarily reflect those of Scoop.
They do not appear in any precise order.
Send feedback to Scoop: http://www.scoop.co.nz/about/feedback.html or editor@scoop.co.nz
*********
Great Song About Plight of Jammu/Kashmir------ Liquid Blue, an act from the United States that has performed in more
nations than any other act in modern history, has released a song called KASHMIR which may be one of the best songs ever
written in English about the region and its people. The track was produced by grammy winner Joe Chiccarelli and is
available on the bands highly acclaimed, multi~award winning album, Supernova.
The band would like to donate the song to charities that provide relief to the Kashmiri people. Please contact manager
Scott Stephens at manager@liquid-blue.com if your organization is interested in using this song to raise money for
Jammu-Kashmir on a compilation CD or other media.
Link to song-
http://www.broadjam.com/artists/artist_playlist.asp?artistID=13774
Link to lyrics and story behind the song-
http://www.liquid-blue.com/music/themes/01KashmirTheme.htm
Link to Liquid Blue website- www.LiquidBlue.net
Peace,
Scott Stephens
Manager
Liquid Blue
*********
[Possibly re: http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL0510/S00276.htm or http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/PO0510/S00179.htm]
Your blurb on the Prime TV Video of Paul Holmes' interview with Prime Minister Helen Clark [21 October] falls into the
common trap of dubbing Messrs Peters and Dunn centre-right politicians.
They have been and continue to be two politicians of the centre.
Only a misguided media desire to apparently maintain a first-past-the-post system [r.i.p] come what may, would locate
them either 'left'[Labour] or 'right'[National].
It's time to politically upgrade and catch up with the play.
What has been stitched together for the next three years is a new government that clearly has moved from the centre-left
to the centre. This is an accurate reflection of how all voting New Zealanders cast their ballots.
You could even call it 'mainstreaming,' possums!
*********
Hi there,
I see you carry a regular column of commentary from the Maxim Instutite. Where is the Scoop piece on the Bruce Logan
plagiarism affair? I've used you search engine but it does not bring anything up.
Regards
Geoff V
*********
To all of the synchophantic left-wing media who wrote off the possibility of a shift to the political right after the
election. Always make sure that your words are sweet and tender in the future, for one day (today being that day), you
will have to eat them. The dog control officers of United Future and NZ First have tamed the Labour hound. Now don't you
journalists be shy, when tucking into that humble pie!
Yours faithfully
Steve Taylor
*********
Regarding the comments of Judge Philip Recordon on domestic violence, I noted that he failed to recognise that women can
also be perpetrators of violence.....oh wait, that's right, nobody cares about that branch of domestic violence - only
women and children can be victims, not men. Until society recognises that domestic violence is perpetrated by both
genders, we will never be able to rid ourselves of this problem.
*********
Well, hopefully those who intended to vote Greens but didn't and went for Labour as a "defensive move" won't do that
again!
*********
Dear Editor
“Spending too much” NZ Herald, 15 October 2005
Whilst Alan Bollard is busy telling us we're "spending too much," on page-A8, the Commerce Commission are suing 50 small
credit providers for “failing to meet their obligations to customers.” Apparently for having their fees too high and
giving insufficient consumer information.
What hypocrisy! These criticisms have applied to the banking system for decades. These small providers aren't the only
ones “screwing the people at the bottom of the stack.” A friend was "fined" an accumulated $71 without warning for
overdrawing after the bank withdraw its fees. The five foreign-owned banks also produce credit, in the same way, out of
fresh air. There is little wonder that our overseas debt stands at $124 billion. While we live under this debt-based
monetary system, our associated economic despair will continue. Because of it, most Kiwis are of necessity “up to their
neck in mortgage debt,” that is unless unlucky enough to be a student, in which case they have two! As for a
Superannuation, isn’t that why we pay tax? How about Dr Bollard gets government to issue its own (real) money instead of
constantly going cap-in-hand to the foreign-owned usurers we call banks. It would cure Dr Cullen’s “fiscal loosening”
worries.
Sincerely
Robert Anderson
Tauranga
*********
See the replies to Roger Kerr interspersed in the
article below prefaced by MZ:
http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/BU0510/S00183.htm
Ideology And Pragmatism In Public Policy
Wednesday, 12 October 2005, 11:16 am
Speech: New Zealand Business Roundtable
11 October 2005
Ideology And Pragmatism In Public Policy
Roger Kerr Executive Director Wellington New
Zealand Business Roundtable
Delivered at Stokes Valley Rotary Club
An exchange at the meeting between representatives of the Green Party and the business community in Wellington a
fortnight ago stimulated the reflections in this talk. One of the Greens present described support for free trade as an
‘ideological’ position. What did the speaker mean by ideological, I wondered? After all, Adam Smith, Karl Marx and John
Maynard Keynes were all free traders. A pretty broad ideological spectrum, you might think.
That’s not the first time I’ve had occasion to reflect on the term ideology, of course. Critics of New Zealand’s
post-1984 economic reforms bandied it around freely. Indeed, as a recent book on globalisation put it:
It is close to a conventional wisdom that over the past two decades a group of ideological fanatics, called
‘neo-liberals’, have succeeded in imposing their creed on an innocent humanity, at the expense of democracy, prosperity,
equality, the environment, human rights, decent treatment of labour and, indeed, everything that is good and wholesome.
This view of the history of the past two decades is almost entirely mistaken.
First, while liberal ideas (not ‘neo-liberal’, since that is an incomprehensible piece of neo- Marxist jargon) have made
progress over the past two decades, they have not done so through the offices of passionate liberals. On the contrary,
the policy changes that go under the heading of ‘neo-liberal’ have been introduced as often by long-standing socialists
and communists as by parties that would be considered on the political right. The principal reason for this
transformation was failure of the alternatives, symbolized so powerfully by the collapse of the Soviet empire between
1989 and 1991. For a time, some theoreticians of the left, including some in New Zealand’s Labour Party, tried to find a
‘third way’ between socialism and a market economy. The project failed; we seldom hear talk of the ‘third way’ today. In
reality, the drive behind the market-oriented reforms in New Zealand was the practical recognition that alternative
policies had been tested to destruction. The focus of the reformers was on policies that worked – as demonstrated by
orthodox economic reasoning and results.
MZ: The economic aspect of any policy question is just one of many that are considered in policy making. Shared values
is another. Many aspects of economic development actually works against local business, agriculture and neighborhood
cohesion. Here in Albuquerque,New Mexico, USA some want to provide incentives for high-tech industries in spite of the
conflict that this raises with a limited supply of water. Housing is sought in outlying areas and undeveloped regions
that seeks to replicate the impact of the Megalopolis and surburban boom of the 50s. The social costs of inner city
decline, crime, and marginalized communities are disregarded. Because of their political influence at the local level
the economic interests of one group, the home construction industry and developers becomes the focal point for the
discussion. Wal-Marts are increasingly view by neighborhood associations with a Not-In-My-Back-Yard attitude for good
reason. Policies work for different segments of the economy for different reasons. Industrial Revenue Bonds work to
attract multi-national corporations, they do not work for local businesses that seek to grow. What works for
corporations is low wages. What results are wage levels for the entire work-force of the region are depressed wages and
importation of an outside labor force of technical experts. Likewise, deregulation of industries have worked to the
benefit of financial and corporate interests. The downside is a loss of public oversight and accountability, as was seen
in Enron and the Savings and Loan debacle in the US. Environmental laws that increase the cost of business were designed
to ameliorate the situation in cities such as Pittsburgh where the smog from the steel mills made it difficult to see
beyond a block at noontime. The experience of the Union Carbide poisoning of thousands in Bhopal demonstrate the real
danger in making the economy the sole criteria of policy-making. Similarly, the recent events in New Orleans
demonstrates that public infrastructure and conservation of the wetlands is not something that any city can take for
granted for the benefit of maintaining economic growth.
The Business Roundtable’s approach has been based on the same principles, firmly grounded in experience. Nevertheless,
it is still sometimes put to me by critics that our proposals are ‘ideological’ as opposed to ‘pragmatic’. This contrast
is false. Everyone involved in the debate about public policy argues on the basis of some set of principles or ideas,
whether or not they are conscious of them or make them explicit. Conversely, those who want their ideas to have an
impact on public policy have to be ‘pragmatic’ in the sense that they must pay some regard to the practicability of
their proposals and the compromises that may be necessary in implementing them.
MZ: Practicality is not the same as “the greatest good for the greatest number” as a criterion for policy
implementation. What practicality should mean is whether there is within the proposed laws the accompanying measures to
raise the revenues necessary to implement them. Greens have long advocated tax reforms, carbon taxes and other measures
to begin to address the social costs of pollution and to pay for the research and development needed for a transition to
alternative energy sources. The Dutch chose to make a significant public contribution to the levees it needed to avoid a
catastrophe. ABC Nightline reported after New Orleans: Netherlands, Sept. 17, 2005 — Half of the Netherlands sits below
sea level, so the tragedy in New Orleans hits home with the Dutch. They have been through it themselves: In 1953, a huge
flood in the Netherlands killed nearly 2,000 people and left 70,000 homeless. The flood led to dramatic changes. The
Netherlands spent $8 billion over 30 years fortifying the coastline with a sophisticated system of dikes, dams and
levees. Dutch law now requires that coastal defenses protect against the worst storm imaginable.
The attempt to endow the term ‘ideological’ with unfavourable connotations and ‘pragmatic’ with favourable ones likewise
involves a certain sleight of hand. The Oxford English Dictionary (2nd edition) gives the following as the primary
meaning of ‘ideology’:
The science of ideas; that department of philosophy or psychology that deals with the origin and nature of ideas.
No problem there, then. As the secondary meaning it offers this:
Ideal or abstract speculation: in a deprecatory sense, unpractical or visionary theorizing or speculation.
Note that even this secondary meaning is not necessarily ‘deprecatory’. There is nothing intrinsically wrong, and much
intrinsically right, with ‘ideal or abstract speculation’, even though the word ‘ideological’ can be used in a way that
conveys disapproval of it.
What then about ‘pragmatism’? One Oxford dictionary definition is “matterof- fact treatment of things; attention to
facts”. That’s certainly something to aspire to. A further, political meaning is attributed to the term, and it’s this
that our critics have in mind: Theory that advocates dealing with social and political problems primarily by practical
methods adapted to the existing circumstances, rather than by methods which have been conformed to some ideology.
I see nothing wrong with employing “practical methods adapted to existing circumstances”, but the issue is the implied
contrast with “ideology”. That may or may not exist. An ideologue, to use the term in a pejorative sense, will use
methods sanctioned by an ideology even if they cannot be “adapted to existing circumstances”.
There is no sense in which a policy can be correct in theory but wrong in practice: if the practice goes wrong, the
theory is defective (as socialism demonstrated). But the deeper point is that, whatever practical methods are used,
there has to be some body of ideas that explains why they work, even if those who employ those 3 methods are unaware of
them. Understanding what works and what doesn’t – which we need to do if we are to improve our practices – involves
grasping the theory behind it.
MZ: It is not ideologically based to apply what is commonly known as the Precationary Principle in the evaluation of
policies, actions and inactions. “Although there is no consensus definition of what is termed the precautionary
principle, one oft-mentioned statement, from the so-called Wingspread conference in Racine, Wis., in 1998 sums it up:
"When an activity raises threats of harm to human health or the environment, precautionary measures should be taken even
if some cause and effect relationships are not fully established scientifically."
http://www.biotech-info.net/uncertainty.html It is no more or less than anticipating the impact of certain policies
given the real science- based potential for public harm that remains a distinct possibility. How do you make this
“practical” when it suggests that the interests of a few represents a distinct public danger to the many? Why are
nuclear waste disposal sites so far from populated areas? If Love Canal, NY has taught people nothing than we are doomed
to repeat scenarios of inaction followed by periods of crisis and devastation, such as New Orleans.
What many critics are doing, however, when they draw a contrast between the ‘ideological’ and the ‘pragmatic’ is to use
these terms as codes respectively for ‘less government’ (meaning that it’s bad) and ‘more government’ (meaning that it’s
good). For example, David Skilling of the New Zealand Institute is reported in the National Business Review of 6 August
2004 as advocating a move away from a policy of avoiding distortions in the private sector to a policy of selective
intervention. He is quoted as saying: This is a less pure, more pragmatic approach to economic policy that is aimed at
crowding-in economic activity and assisting New Zealand business to create wealth, and is less concerned about the
possibility of crowding out.1 It isn’t obvious why a policy of greater intervention should be “less pure”, “more
pragmatic” or more desirable than one of less intervention. Surely the focus should be on which works better? Answering
this question requires some theory about how government intervention affects the economy and society. As the saying
goes, there’s nothing so practical as a good theory. What matters is which of the alternative theories is the sounder,
and that comes down to which of them is more consistent with the evidence, as well as the values that they embody or
promote. I’m happy to defend the Business Roundtable’s proposals on those terms. But let’s get away from the false
notion that certain policies are somehow ‘pragmatic’ by definition, as if we know in advance that they will work,
whereas others are ‘ideological’, as if they are supported regardless of whether or not they work.
MZ: The position of the Business RoundTable contradicts the claims of the author of this piece. It prefers not to
integrate the social costs of private investment as a contributing factor in reviewing policies. In other words,
government is fine when it comes to providing mechanisms that enables corporations to build a new facility, but it is
interfering when it requires they pay for the use of the region’s resources that they deplete that can’t be renewed.
British Columbia is spotted with regions that were clear-cut by Taiwanese and Japanese timber companies without
replanting or restoration of the forests. This raises the moral issue as to why corporations are permitted to damage the
common resources of the people of a region or a nation without just compensation. Due process than becomes, “I own it, I
do what I want with it”. This is not practicality at all. Nor is it “the greatest good for the greatest number”. The
RoundTable prefers to blame GreenPeace and a worldwide consensus on the medical impact of DDT. It points to the cost in
lives of malaria to demonstrate its point. They are not two mutually exclusive propositions, but they are made so by
those who met with the Green Party in New Zealand in an article posted at this same website:
http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/BU0510/S00118.htm DDT is not the only possibility to limit mosquito populations. In New
Orleans they have used the insecticide Dibrom (also known as naled), after the flood, that has fewer demonstrated health
risks associated with it.
Once we have agreed that all positions about the role of government rest on some general idea, or ‘theory’ if you like,
about how government works, to characterise policy proposals as either ‘ideological’ or ‘pragmatic’ is at best a
confusion and at worst a rhetorical trick that appeals to antiintellectualism as a substitute for serious argument.
Of course, there is always a market for anti- intellectualism, that is, an impatient insistence that 1
http://www.nbr.co.nz/home/column_article.asp?id=9796=18=Opinion 4 we don’t need theories because the facts, once we have them, speak for themselves. But facts never speak for
themselves. Even the simplest combination of data gives rise to controversy about how it should be interpreted (just
consider, for example, the endless debate about the link between gun control laws and gun-related crime). Interpretation
involves drawing some general idea, whether sound or not, about how the world works. Serious policy debate cannot
proceed unless these ideas are articulated and tested.
MZ: Interpretation also implies that there is in fact agreed upon standards for cumulative impacts on the public health
and safety of certain policies and actions whether they be governmental or corporate-based. Chernobyl took place in the
absence of such standards and represented a public policy that did not integrate the worst case scenario into the
development of the nuclear industry in the Soviet Union. Sound policy cannot be structured on pseudo-science, whether it
is the denial of global warming or the belief that the groundwater under Albuquerque, New Mexico amounted to the
equivalent of Lake Superior.
We can see why arguments for less government attract the label ‘ideological’ and those for more government ‘pragmatic’.
The case for less government often rests on chains of cause and effect that may be long and even invisible, whereas the
case for more government typically moves swiftly (if often deceptively) from problem to intervention to solution in an
uncomplicated way.
MZ: The issue of “more government” is not what is at issue here. It is the matter of the public health, safety and
welfare that is at stake. So far, corporations have demonstrated a consistent unwillingness to voluntarily accept their
responsibilities as members of their communities in providing the measure to ensure public safety. Instead, they prefer
to invest in policy-makers who seek to minimize their oversight and accountability. The billions of corporate donations
to political candidates is their demonstration of their disregard for the public good. This willingness to circumvent
their own obligations, in favor of undermining sound policies that are based on sound science exposes the corporate
community as reckless and irresponsible in their approach toward their impact on the ecological systems that surround
them.
For example, the protectionist can point to the benefits of import controls in terms of the jobs that have been saved
(at least for the moment), but the free trader can’t so easily point to the costs of protectionism by identifying the
jobs that protection destroys or prevents being created. Understanding the case for limited government requires a
certain effort of analysis and a willingness to evaluate a wide range of evidence.
Not everyone is prepared to make such an effort, yet there is a theory (or idea) behind protectionism just as there is
behind free trade. Interestingly, free trade is a case of a policy that is ultimately justified more on practical than
theoretical grounds. To be sure, it rests on the fundamental economic principle of comparative advantage, but there are
a number of theoretical arguments for departing from that principle: optimum tariff notions, strategic trade theory,
infant industry arguments and the like. As a matter of practical policy, however, the vast majority of professional
economists put aside these theories as unworkable and come down on the side of free trade, and the evidence is
overwhelming that open economies outperform closed ones. The Greens, however, seem impervious to facts: their opposition
to free trade does seem to be a matter of pure ideology.
MZ: Saying the issue is “free trade” does not mean that in the absence of these treaties corporations lack the
capability to trade freely across national boundaries. Saying it is “free trade” just says that multi-national
corporations are now free from national standards that have been established by duely constituted governments. These
laws have been passed as a result of the acknowledgement of nation’s policy- makers that problems exist that need to be
addressed. Undermining the laws of our own nations to facilitate the corporate interests of other nations puts the cost
of such decisions on the backs of the people and prevents them from developing policies in the appropriate governmental
entities to represent their interests and concerns.
For reasons I’ll explain in a moment, it is ironic that Keynes, arguably and unfortunately perhaps the most influential
economist of the twentieth century, should have stressed the importance of ideas, even for self-styled pragmatists. As
he wrote:
The ideas of economists and political philosophers, both when they are right and when they are wrong, are more powerful
than is commonly understood. Indeed, the world is ruled by little else. Practical men, who believe themselves to be
quite exempt from any intellectual influences, are usually the slaves of some defunct economist. Madmen in authority,
who hear voices in the air, are distilling their frenzy from some academic scribbler of a few years back . . . Sooner or
later, it is ideas, not vested interests, which are dangerous for good or evil.
The irony of this is that Keynes himself became a major example of those “defunct economists” who enslaved “practical
men”. It was Keynes’s prescription that the balanced budget rule should be abandoned in times of recession that, more
than anything else, facilitated and legitimised the socalled ‘pragmatic‘ growth of government after World War II by
appearing to release policy makers from so-called ‘ideological’ constraints. That was emphatically not Keynes’s
intention; he argued that budgets should be balanced over the economic cycle, and that deficit financing during
recessions should be followed by surpluses during booms. But, as he himself said, “ideas . . . are dangerous for good or
evil.”
Once the idea that governments could routinely borrow to cover current spending had gained ground in the wider society,
why should they hold back? It took years of inflation, recession and generally disappointing economic performance to get
that particular genie back into the bottle, and even now one wonders how secure the cork is. To make it more secure, New
Zealand is one country that implemented a Fiscal Responsibility Act to require governments to follow Keynes’ rule that
budgets should be balanced over the economic cycle. Finance minister Michael Cullen has recently re-enacted that
legislation: he obviously doesn’t regard the balanced budget provision as ideological or undemocratic.
But when the Business Roundtable suggested, on largely pragmatic grounds, that because of New Zealand governments’
tendencies to excessive and wasteful spending, the rule should be supplemented by a tax and expenditure limitation,
whereby spending growth should be constrained to the rate of population growth plus inflation unless a government got
support from taxpayers for higher spending via a referendum, Dr Cullen denounced the proposal as ideological and
undemocratic.
MZ: Clearly, the author is not suggesting a similar proposal for limitations on capital investment where the corporation
is required to get public support for the additional infrastructure requirements incurred by economic growth. Impact
fees in American cities remain a target of developers who seek to abolish any acknowledgement of the additional costs of
their economic activity to the rest of the community. The fact is that many public services and infrastructure needs are
virtually subsidized by local governments, while health costs are forced on a declining public health infrastructure
here in the US and schools consist of portable buildings in place of new building construction needs. Instead, business
invests in public campaigns during issues such as the living wage proposals leaving people to fend for themselves with
no social safety net. This did not work in New Orleans, and it will not work in New Zealand.
Yet in response to democratic pressures, many US states and several countries with governments of different political
persuasions have adopted such a rule or variants of it. As the Americans say, go figure! Another area where those who
bandy around the term ideology should look at themselves in the mirror is the ownership of commercial enterprises.
Socialist ideology embraced the notion of “public ownership of the means of production, distribution and exchange”. Our
current government is against privatisation of state-owned enterprises, and indeed has moved down the path of
nationalisation. Yet the evidence is now compelling that – not always, but on average and over time – privately owned
enterprises outperform state-owned enterprises in competitive environments, and it is the general rule that should
inform sound public policy. Governments should not bet against the odds with taxpayers’ money. Thus while a body of
economic literature has grown up explaining why private ownership of commercial enterprises is generally superior to
state ownership, the fundamental argument for privatisation is pragmatic: it works. Another point to make is that, just
as ideas are inescapable, as Keynes argued, so too is pragmatism, in the sense that in all walks of life we have to make
compromises. Business people compromise and do deals the whole time.
MZ: Privatization is like deregulation, the promises it holds for a certain segment of the business community has no
mechanism associated with it for the transition period. In the US, steel workers won a Trade Readjustment Act in 1974
that provided transitional support due to the dislocation of steel mills moving overseas. But, now even that is only
maintained for a 26 week period after unemployment compensation runs out. Greens have worked tirelessly to develop a
policy regarding renewable energy conversion that addresses the economic impact that this will have on both businesses
and the general public. Businesses have resisted such policies in disregard of the oil peak and global warming,
preferring to continue as things are with no policy to address changing circumstances.
Yet in a business setting, pragmatism without an eye to principles and long-run goals (for example, maximising
shareholder value) can be ruinous. The same is true in politics. Politics has been described as the ‘art of the
possible’, and that is true as far as it goes. Yet we need to add two qualifications that preserve a role for ideas in
politics.
First, in making political compromises politicians should still observe certain principles: they can avoid what we
recognise and condemn as expediency. For example, in the war on terror that some Western governments are waging,
politicians may be tempted to scrap all the normal safeguards against the abuse of state power and to lock up terrorist
suspects indefinitely subject to minimal procedures or none at all.
Alternatively, even where they suspend habeas corpus and detain suspects without charging them, they can set up
procedures to review cases and hear appeals. These are matters of practical judgment. Sometimes politicians get it
right, sometimes they don’t, but the point is that we do expect them to marry necessity with principle so that certain
important values are preserved. Even in a dire emergency, it isn’t necessary for governments to arrogate to themselves
absolute power and entirely evade the rule of law. Thus we need to distinguish between principled pragmatism and
unprincipled expediency. The importance of that distinction, rather than the one between ideology and pragmatism, is
perhaps the central message of this talk.
MZ: The government that is not based on the “consent of the governed” is not the one that has “absolute” power. It is
the one that represents only a small segment of the national community at the expense of the rest. The business
community should not presume that it represents the needs and concerns of an entire nation. It may make nifty mottoes,
such as “The business of America is business” or “What’s good for General Motors is good for the nation”, but it does
not promote sound, well-rounded policies that address the national interest. The national interest consists of a
multitude of stakeholders with a multitude of issues relevant to governmental statutes and regulations. Further,
“unprincipled expediency” can also be demonstrated through the implementation of restrictions and denial of legal rights
to a small segment of the population. Witness the execution style murder by the police of the commuter in the London
subway following the subway bombings. Dare we say that this is acceptable, pragmatic policy. At what cost?
The second qualification to the idea of politics as the ‘art of the possible’ that preserves a role for ideas is that
politicians can be guided by long-term goals as well as short-term ones. Any government is inevitably preoccupied with
winning the next election, as indeed is the opposition.
But it’s possible to do this with an eye on longer-term political achievements. Politicians who leave a positive mark on
history are those who can make the necessary skills of everyday political survival serve the higher purpose of achieving
long-run benefits for their nations. In recent history Margaret Thatcher is an outstanding example of such a politician.
She won three successive elections but also carried out a counter-revolution in British economic policy that greatly
expanded conceptions of what was ‘politically possible’ in other countries as well.
What is perhaps less well known is that Thatcher was also a cautious politician who usually knew when and where she had
to compromise. She avoided the inevitable showdown with the coal miners’ union by making concessions to it where
necessary over several years, and stood firm against it only when she was certain to win. Whether reforming governments
of the 1980s and 1990s could have gone further without destroying their bases of support is debatable. Sir Roger Douglas
has always argued that it was when they called off their reform drives that such governments lost support.
But their success in maintaining political and electoral support as they abandoned failed economic policies testifies to
the ability of ordinary democratic politics to accommodate necessary change. Those who like to label the reforms of the
Lange-Douglas government as anti- democratic conveniently overlook the fact that it was re-elected in 1987 with an
increased majority.
Traditionally, the acceptable visions in democratic politics have been placed on a left- right spectrum that signifies
positions on the desirable size of government and degree of redistribution. As these positions represent value judgments
they cannot ultimately be proved or disproved, but they can be rendered more or less plausible or practical in the light
of evidence and argument.
Political parties that want to see their values successfully embodied in public policy have to be open to new ideas.
Much of what is ‘ideological’ in politics, in the pejorative sense of being impractical, comes from institutionalised
attachment to means rather than ends; more exactly, the adoption or retention of particular measures (like state
ownership of enterprises) becomes an end in itself, regardless of whether those measures have the effect that is claimed
for them.
I would argue, for example, that if the political ‘left’ is seriously committed to social justice it has to generalise
from the experience of economic reform to reform of the welfare state.
Centrally planned and controlled education and health systems have no more chance of realising egalitarian aspirations
than did our old economic regime of regulations and state ownership, because they too inevitably operate primarily in
the interests of their employees (such as the members of teachers’ and nurses’ unions) rather than the general public.
MZ: Experience in the US indicates that failing to ensure public education and public health does not provide an
alternative mechanism needed to educate the children of a nation and does nothing to secure health care that is
accessible and affordable. Instead, it assures that the next generation will not be provided with the education needed
for governing a nation and sustaining the economy. It assures that the older generation will live in fear at the
prospect of trying to survive when health care is not affordable.
Correspondingly, those on the political ‘right’ who favour a greater role for the private sector need to attend to the
issues of corporate governance raised by cases of corporate wrongdoing, primarily by ensuring that existing laws are
enforced and by strengthening the property rights of shareholders against the possibility of malpractice by management.
They should also seek to overcome the old-fashioned, debilitating employer-employee divide by promoting fully
contractual relationships in which all aspects of life in the workplace can be negotiated.
This brings us back to policy think tanks like the Business Roundtable. Precisely because the pressure on politicians to
compromise with immediate interests for short-term gain is so great, their job is to frame and publicise the
‘first-best’ versions of policies for politicians to work with.
MZ: The premise that regulations of corporate entities are sufficient is repeatedly challenged by their abuse of power
and privilege. If the Greens can sustain a base of voter support of people unwilling to accept this, more power to them.
It is time to demonstrate that business is just as accountable as the general public in its conduct and behavior. They
do not represent a greater good in and of themselves.
They do need to make pragmatic judgments about which new policy ideas are likely to be entertained by public opinion,
and to present them in imaginative and appealing ways. However, their mission must be to expand the politically
possible, mindful that what today is accepted as conventional wisdom yesterday seemed controversial and radical. In
principle, they act as conduits between, on the one hand, the pure theoreticians, researchers and academics who are
professionally committed to the pursuit of knowledge wherever it takes them, and, on the other hand, the politicians who
introduce the policies that embody new knowledge. The Business Roundtable has seen its role as being to engage in
advocacy that is accessible to lay people (as the products of original research are likely to be) and is not diluted by
the pressure to placate special interests that politicians are subjected to all the time. By taking ideas and evidence
seriously, it aims to make it easier for politicians to introduce new and better policies.
Politicians, for their part, are the ones best placed to judge what is politically possible, and the practical ways of
implementing better policies. But the most admired politicians are not those who timidly preside over the status quo;
they are the political entrepreneurs with the will and ability to persuade voters why changes will benefit them and
future generations. In doing so, they will invariably need to be armed with a body of ideas that explains why the
changes will work. Principled pragmatism of this kind, with a sound conceptual base, is the best strategy for advancing
good public policy.
MZ: “Principled pragmatism” does not preclude public policy predicated on a precautionary principle. It does mean that
business, as well as all segments of the national community, are accountable for their actions and the long-term
ramifications they may have. Ask California utility users what they were dealing with, while the brokers at Enron
cracked jokes over the phone.
*********
[Re: http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/AK0510/S00101.htm - Ultimate fashion experience up for grabs: Aucklanders are being offered the chance to win the ultimate Auckland City
Fashion Experience… To be eligible for the competition simply buy something from any participating fashion retailer in
Newmarket, Ponsonby, Heart of the City, Parnell or K' Rd between 9am Monday 17 October and 5pm Monday 24 October.]
Just the sort of excuse I need!!
*********
Am I the only one,who is having a problem with this new Bond or what? Let's tell the truth. Piecre Brosnan is the only
one who has truely done the role proud since Sean Connery. If you people think Dan Craig is young,handsome and good
looking then,I'm Liz Hurley! Maybe it slipped your memories, but it took several years more, than it should have, to get
Pierce in the role to begin with! They originally wanted him for the role back in the 80's but, he was still under
contract to the ABC TV show "Remington Steele" and the role went to Timothy Dalton. While Dalton is a fine actor, he
seemed to myself, as well as many others,to fall short of the bar set by Connery. Finally after several years, and an
equal number of mediocre Bond films later, the "True Heir To The Throne" assumed his 00 duties and the world was safe
again. I saw the last film,"Tommorrow Never Dies", Pierce looked Great! Much younger than his years! Daniel Craig does
not! We all should DEMAND Pierce's Immediate Return to the role! Whatever he wants give it to him Barbara, for
crissakes! He earned it! Mock my words, replacing Pierce is going to cost you dearly, more so than if you had appeased
his wishes. Whatever He wanted, to continue in the role, certainly couldn't have been beyond reason, considering how
much more he draws at the box office over Dalton's version. I personally will boycott the new film "Casino Royale" and
urge other true Bond Fans to do likewise and further let EON Productions know by Post of their disapproval! This will be
just a cheap, sad immitation of a great character in motion picture lore! Barbara, Micheal boy did you guys screw up on
this one!
BRING PIERCE BACK NOW!
A FORMER Lifelong Fan
*********
Send feedback to Scoop: http://www.scoop.co.nz/about/feedback.html or editor@scoop.co.nz