The FIRE Economy: New Zealand’s Reckoning - By Jane Kelsey
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The FIRE Economy: New Zealand’s Reckoning
By Jane Kelsey
Introduction - An Extract
The global economy imploded in
2008 and confirmed a stark reality. Entire nations and
billions of people are captives of an unstable and amoral
economic system powered by finance, insurance
and real estate – FIRE. [1] New Zealand
included. ‘The FIRE economy’ is a metaphor for the
fundamental shift in global capitalism since the 1970s.
Finance has replaced industry as the driver of wealth
creation in affluent countries – a transformation known as
financialisation. Neoliberal ideology, rules and
institutions acted first as the midwife and then as the
guardian of this new economic order. The Global Financial
Crisis (GFC) showed the world’s richest countries, notably
the US and the nations of Europe, that the globally
integrated economy they had created, and from which they
have prospered, could also bring them to their knees. Faith
in the neoliberal ‘orthodoxy’ that shaped and sustained
them seemed shattered. The fallout was fast and furious, and
quickly spread to many other parts of the world. A cursory
look might suggest that little has really changed.
Neoliberalism remains deeply embedded in most countries. The
finance industry is resurgent and those who profit from it
are unrepentant. Conservative parties with pro-market and
pro-austerity mandates have been elected to govern some of
the countries hardest hit.
Appearances are, however,
deceptive. Confidence in the FIRE economy has faltered since
the GFC and the hegemony of the neoliberal model is in
decline. Core tenets of neoliberal ideology are being
repudiated, even in institutions like the International
Monetary Fund (IMF). Social inequality and poverty in and
between countries are now recognised as symptoms of a sick
system. Popular unrest in Europe has intensified, and new
political parties from neo-Nazi fascists to the socialist
left have gained ground. There are credible predictions of
further crises. The United Nations Conference for Trade
and Development (UNCTAD) warned in its flagship Trade and
Development report for 2014, six years after the GFC
erupted, that the ‘world economy has not yet escaped the
growth doldrums in which it has been marooned for the past
four years, and there is a growing danger that this state of
affairs is becoming accepted as the “new normal”’. [2] That ‘new normal’ is
not sustainable. The world is entering a period of
transformation equivalent to the epochal shift to Keynesian
interventionism from the 1930s and the neoliberal revolution
from the late 1970s. [3] We
are in the interregnum. The old orthodoxy is unstable and
fragile; a new one has yet to be born. It remains to be seen
how this plays out, how much resistance it will encounter,
and whether alternative approaches can really break through
the barriers designed to protect neoliberalism and the FIRE
economy from just such a transformation. Kiwi
complacency While the GFC has plunged rich
countries like the US and England and later Spain and Greece
into turmoil, New Zealand seems to be basking in the belief
that it has survived the crisis pretty much unscathed. The
standard Kiwi narrative treats it as a northern hemisphere
affair, triggered by greedy American bankers and profligate
European governments. The story goes something like
this. In today’s globalised world there was bound to be
some collateral damage from other countries’ post-crisis
recessions, but our financial system was shown to be
basically sound (mainly because the Australian banks that
own ours are sound). [4]
Governments on both sides of the Tasman responded promptly
and effectively. Temporary interventions provided fiscal
stimulus and bank guarantees steadied the ship, staving off
a more serious recession. Stability was restored. Each
country then resumed business as usual, regardless of their
governments’ political hue. Helped by exports to China,
future prospects looked positive, even rosy. [5] Exuberant commentators went
so far as to hail New Zealand as the ‘rock star’ economy
of 2014. The strong centre-right vote at the 2014 election
suggested confidence in the status quo or, at least, that
the belief in TINA – there is no alternative – still
prevails. Before the 2008 election, as the GFC began to
erupt, business journalist Bob Edlin observed how the
country’s leaders seemed ‘curiously phlegmatic about
global financial upheaval and its economic implications’.
Their offerings ‘amounted to little more than tweaks of
programmes that have brought us to where we are – a
standstill’. No one was ‘peddling a cyclone-shelter or
rebuilding programme’. [6]
Nothing has changed since then. Couldn’t happen
here? This complacency is deeply disturbing.
Neoliberalism has not served most New Zealanders well. Nor,
in other than a hedonistic sense, has financialisation.
Structural poverty and deep inequalities of wealth and
income have transformed the social landscape. We have a
shallow economy that depends on FIRE, farming,
post-earthquake reconstruction and immigration. Periods of
sustained economic growth in the 2000s have been fuelled by
cheap credit. As a consequence, households, farmers and the
country sit on a growing mountain of debt. Trading in
property has become the main source of easy wealth, creating
repeated incipient property bubbles. We have most of the
preconditions that have been identified as triggers for a
crisis. [7] A former
Reserve Bank of Australia governor, Ian Macfarlane, is under
no illusion there will be further crises. In 2008 he pointed
to at least eight financial crises that impacted on
Australia – and hence New Zealand – in the three decades
before the GFC. [8]
Five were banking crises, and three involved excessive and
risky lending in the property sector. Some affected New
Zealand much more severely than the GFC. However, it was the
depth and contagion of the latest crisis that Macfarlane
says made it the most significant internationally and
invalidated the model of the deregulated financial
system. New Zealand is much more at risk than Australia
because successive Labour and National governments have
located this country at the pure end of the neoliberal
spectrum. For years it was known as the Wild West of
financial markets. [9]
Adjustments during the 2000s were still premised on
light-handed risk-tolerant regulation. Even since the GFC,
governments and their advisers have continued to position
New Zealand as an outlier, ignoring doubts in other
countries and international institutions over the wisdom of
letting financial markets rule. Without some fundamental
changes, New Zealand risks sleepwalking into a social,
economic and political catastrophe. No one knows how or when
that might happen. The tipping point could be another
massive offshore crisis. [10] Or it could be
self-generated, as it was in Iceland and Ireland, if we fail
to heed the warning signs. [11] There is much to learn
from Iceland’s successful post-crisis strategy of
intervention, redistribution and capital controls, [12] and from the tragedy of
austerity economics in Greece, Spain and Ireland. [13] Time to
act Waiting for Armageddon is hardly a
progressive strategy. It makes much more sense for New
Zealanders to confront the country’s challenges now and
begin to shape a socially progressive alternative than to
battle over models in the midst of a crisis. While it is
true New Zealand’s fate will inevitably be caught up in
the unfolding of international events, Kiwis can
influence how those global dynamics shape our
future. Changes of this magnitude do not happen overnight.
They require fertile intellectual, as well as social and
political, conditions. Viable alternatives take time to
gestate and will always be contested. Reform ideas have been
floated here and internationally, but they generally lack a
coherent alternative vision beyond a revival of
Keynesianism. [14] Nor is
there any systematic analysis of what barriers need to be
overcome. Over three decades, neoliberalism has become
deeply embedded in complex ways that will be very hard to
circumvent, let alone undo. The FIRE Economy
contributes to the debate about how we can achieve a
socially progressive post-neoliberal world. By focusing on
the contest between the forces of paradigm maintenance and
paradigm change, it reveals a fundamental contradiction
facing contemporary neoliberalism, not least in New Zealand:
the state and society are locked into a governance regime
and a financialised economy that are dysfunctional but hard
to dismantle. Identifying these barriers to transformation
is a prerequisite to making change possible. Two decades
after my book The New Zealand Experiment was
published, [15] this new
book offers a realistic assessment of where that experiment
has led us. It reveals New Zealand’s vulnerability in a
globalised FIRE economy; how the neoliberal framework of
policy, regulation and institutions heightens those risks;
the techniques that have been used to embed that framework;
and the challenges we need to address. It is not so
presumptuous as to offer a blueprint for the future. But it
does identify where future work needs to be focused, and how
a socially progressive transformation can
happen. 2. UNCTAD, Trade and Development
Report 2014, UNCTAD, Geneva, UNCTAD/TDR/2014,
p.II. 3. Karl Polanyi, The Great Transformation: The
Political and Economic Origins of Our Time, Beacon
Press, Boston, 2001 edn. 4. Reg Birchfield, ‘We’re
Playing Aussie Rules’, New Zealand Management, June
2011, editorial, www.management.co.nz/articles/cover-story-we%E2%80%99re-playing-aussie-rules. 5.
John Quiggin and other prominent commentators on
Australia’s neoliberalism analysed the Gillard 2011 Budget
in Antoinette Abboud (ed.), Budget 2011: InSight
Edition, Centre for Policy Development, Haymarket, NSW,
May 2011, http://cpd.org.au/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/CPD_Budget_Insight_2011_FINAL.pdf.
For New Zealand, see John Key, ‘Speech from the Throne’,
speech on the occasion of the State Opening of Parliament,
21 December 2011, www.beehive.govt.nz/speech/speech-throne-1. 6.
Bob Edlin, ‘Bold Leadership is Needed’, New Zealand
Management, November 2008, www.management.co.nz/articles/economics-bold-leadership-needed. 7.
Stijn Claessens and Laura Kodres, ‘The Regulatory
Responses to the Global Financial Crisis: Some Uncomfortable
Questions’, IMF Working Paper, WP/14/46, Washington DC,
March 2014, pp.6–8. 8. These were the Third World debt
crisis of the early 1980s; the Savings and Loans crisis in
the US in the mid-1980s; the October 1987 sharemarket crash;
the bursting of the mergers and acquisitions and commercial
property bubble at the end of the 1980s; the Asian Financial
Crisis in 1997–98 that flowed into Latin America, Russia
and elsewhere; the threat to the US financial system from
the near-collapse of the hedge fund Long-Term Capital
Management in 1998; the tech boom of the late 1990s,
culminating in the bursting of the dotcom bubble in 2000;
and the GFC itself: see Ian Macfarlane, ‘Australia and the
International Financial Crisis’, The 2008 Lowy Lecture,
Lowy Institute for International Policy, Sydney, 3 December
2008. Martin Wolf lists six globally significant crises,
including the Tequila crisis of 1994 and, more recently, the
Eurozone financial crisis from 2010–13, as well as
devastating national crises, notably Argentina’s financial
collapse from 1999 to 2002: see Martin Wolf, The Shifts
and the Shocks. What We’ve Learned – and Still Have to
Learn – from the Financial Crisis, Penguin Press, New
York, 2014, p.318. 9. Parr v Financial Marketing
Authority, Advertising Standards Authority, Complaint
11/409, 13 September 2011, p.5. See also Matt Nippert,
‘FMA Wins Cowboy Complaint’, NBR, 13 October 2007, www.nbr.co.nz/article/fma-wins-cowboy-complaint-mn-102350. 10.
International commentators predict this could occur at any
time, e.g., former chief economist at the IMF, Raghuran
Rajam: Puja Mehra, ‘Raghuran Rajam Warns of Another Global
Financial Crisis’, The Hindu, 8 August 2014, www.thehindu.com/business/Economy/raghuram-rajan-warns-of-another-global-financial-crisis/article6292494.ece. 11.
Mairéad Considine and Fiona Dukelow, ‘Ireland’s
Economic Crises in Recent Historical Perspective: From
Resilience to Retrenchment in the Irish Welfare State?’,
in Guðmunder Jónsson and Kolbeinn Stefánsson (eds),
Retrenchment or Renewal? Welfare States in Times of
Economic Crisis, NordWel, Helsinki, 2013, pp.126–46;
and Stefán Ólafsson, ‘Crisis and Recovery in Iceland’,
in Jónsson and Stefansson (eds), Retrenchment or
Renewal?, NordWel, Helsinki, 2013, pp.106–25. 12.
Jónsson and Stefansson, Retrenchment or Renewal?;
Ólafsson, ‘Crisis and Recovery’, p.123; IMF,
‘Iceland’s Unorthodox Policies Suggest Alternative Way
Out of Crisis’, IMF Survey Magazine, November
2011. 13. Ann Leahy, Sean Healy and Michelle Murphy,
‘The Impact of the European Crisis’, Caritas Europa,
Brussels, 2013. 14. See, e.g., Paul Krugman, End This
Depression Now!, W. W. Norton & Co., New York, 2013;
Bryan Gould, Rescuing the New Zealand Economy: What Went
Wrong and What We Can Do To Fix It, Craig Potton,
Nelson, 2008. Wolf acknowledges this concern and suggests
the need for more radical options in the conclusion to
The Shifts and the Shocks, pp.325–53. 15. Jane
Kelsey, The New Zealand Experiment: A World Model for
Structural Adjustment?, Auckland University
Press/Bridget Williams Books, Auckland,
1995. ENDS
Copyright © 2015 Jane Kelsey. Extract
from Kelsey, Jane, The FIRE Economy: New Zealand’s
Reckoning, 2015, Bridget Williams Books, Wellington,
Introduction, pp.9–12, http://www.bwb.co.nz/books/the-fire-economy.FOOTNOTES:
1.
There is no neat boundary between the three. Sometimes the
‘financial sector’ refers to finance, insurance and the
mortgage and similar financial instruments associated with
real estate. At other times they are treated as quite
distinct commercial activities. This book uses the terms as
they are discussed in the relevant literature on the topic
under discussion.