Gordon Campbell on the costs of cost-cuttingFirst published on Werewolf
As Jesus said, blessed are the poor who almost end up riding in unsafe taxis and school buses, so that others among them may enjoy lower taxes on their investment income.
Verily, one of the weirder political stories this Easter was the news that Transport Minister Simon Bridges and Police Minister Paula Bennett had succeeded in a last gasp
effort to persuade Finance Minister Steven Joyce to pony up an extra $10 million to keep the jobs of 26 safety officers
in the Police commercial vehicle investigations unit, after safety concerns about a proposal to scrap them.
Really? This is the realm of cost-cutting being considered to render tax cuts possible this year? Keep in mind what this safety unit
actually does:
The safety officers, mainly mechanics and engineers, check vehicles such as trucks, buses, mobile homes, and taxis to
ensure they meet safety standards, as well as attending crashes involving commercial vehicles and assessing the vehicles
involved.
Yep, that sounds like it could be a disposable service. Lets consider scrapping the means of ensuring safety standards
in the vehicles on roads, and the ability to assess whether structural failings contributed to accidents. How on earth
did this work ever get put in jeopardy?
Last month Police advised road transport groups they were proposing to scrap the 26 safety officers as part of wider
cost-saving measures to stay within NZ Transport Agency's road policing 2015-2018 budget of $960 million. The cuts were
part of a restructure proposal for the "reallocation" of 111 road policing staff in Auckland, Wellington, Counties and
Waitemata, mostly into other areas of the police to do a wider range of work…..
Right. That ‘wider range of work’ might possibly include this piece of law and order populism by Bennett’s predecessor Judith Collins:
All up, it has been a fascinating example of how decisions get made in the prevailing climate of the cost-cutting of
public services. (We’re currently amid a process primarily geared to enabling Bill English and his colleagues to reap
the political benefits of tax cuts at this year’s election.) It has nothing to do with good governance. Faced with
trying to stay within that $960 million budget for 2015-2018, the Police have quietly retaliated by threatening to cut
something that would become a political hot potato. Do the politicians really want to be seen to be putting little kids
at risk on unsafe school buses? Hardly. As a result, Bennett and Bridges have ended up petitioning Joyce to save this
government from the political consequences of its own cost-cutting ideology.
Such waste, though. For the past month, a considerable amount of time and money will have been poured into paying the
bills of $120 an hour ministerial consultants to draft position papers and send departmental hotshots off to meetings
with Ministers to show why having de-regulated, potentially unsafe school buses, trucks, taxis etc on our roads may
conceivably be a bad idea. All of this costly make-work would have converged on Treasury, to make the case that X number
of accidents (representing for example, a reputational risk to New Zealand from dead or injured foreign cyclists run
down by cowboy truckers) would be a quantifiably bad look. A number of meetings would have been held to demonstrate that
the $10 million in question would be a worthwhile investment. Here’s how it eventually panned out:
After the Police Association and Road Transport Forum raised concerns about the proposal… Transport Minister Simon
Bridges said he and the NZTA board had agreed to it because of the safety concerns aired. "Road safety is a bottom line
and it became apparent Police required more to fulfil what is necessary."
Others can learn from this example of how to apply pressure to the public purse strings. To get this government to do
something/anything about funding the unmet need in public health, perhaps specialists should threaten to close down the
children’s wards in one or two public hospitals. You know, to enable the government to afford a bigger, more bountiful
tax cut bribe to voters this year.
How D’You Solve a Problem like Korea?
Diplomacy tends to be been slow and boring, like one of those art movies with subtitles. (All nuance, no car chases.)
Finally though… with Donald Trump in the White House, diplomacy has become a lot more like speed dating. Last week’s
Trump’s spectacular breakup with Russia – America’s hot and heavy date since furtive motel liaisons and sexting back in
2016 - has been matched by his sudden passionate fling with China ( until recently the arch currency manipulator and
stealer of American jobs) but now Trump’s new partner in pressuring North Korea into submission. Its 50 Shades of Orange
on the Korean peninsula.
From the viewpoint of Pyongyang, there may not be many viable options left. Last month, the US deployed its THAAD missile complex in South Korea, a system ostensibly aimed at destroying incoming missiles from North Korea. Reportedly, this development has caused
fury in Beijing – which sees itself as the potential ultimate target of the THAAD system – and stoked its resentment of
Seoul’s apparent willingness to be a US stooge and military platform. The THAAD deployment has also motivated China to
take economic sanctions against South Korea; a major concern, given that China is Seoul’s biggest trading partner. Mind
you, China also took economic action in February against North Korea, by suspending its coal imports from that country, in an effort to bring the paranoid Kim regime into line. Good luck
with that.
Back in the US, Trump’s sudden embrace of China is being widely seen as another sign of the (a) sudden demise of White
House chief advisor Steve Bannon and (b) the related rise of family insider Jared Kushner and his wife Ivanka Trump. As
others have pointed out, Bannon’s main aim was to advance the cause of Trumpism, a conservative ideological movement of
Christian populism that Donald J. Trump just happened to lead. This cause has quickly proved to be politically
disastrous for Trump. By contrast, the Kushner/Ivanka cause is Trump himself, and their devotion is to Dad’s survival as
a political project. If that involves him cartwheeling into embracing all the things – like say, the wisdom of the
intelligence agencies – that Trumpism formerly rejected, then so be it.
China crystallises the difference. For Bannon and Trumpism, China (and Iran) were the ultimate and apocalyptic enemies
of US nationalism, and Russia its natural Christian ally. For Kushner/Ivanka however, China is a transactional partner
in economic and diplomatic activity – a country with whom they already do business, and which offers even better
business opportunities in future than Moscow. This week at least, Dad seems to agree with them.
The Art of Skating
While we celebrate the prowess of the All Blacks, rugby isn’t on the radar in most other countries. Ditto ice skating
for us. Yet if you’ve got a spare quarter of an hour, the world championship freestyle performance a fortnight ago by
the Japanese star Yuzuru Hanyu is an amazing example of athletic skill and grace. As the Japan Times put it last week with only a hint of exaggeration:
This was the kind of artistry that masters like Mozart and Picasso created. Truly priceless. Video of Hanyu’s free skate
to Joe Hisaishi’s “Hope and Legacy” will be used by coaches around the world for years to come to illustrate to their
skaters what perfection is. I believe that if a tape of this is put into a vault and not opened for 50 years, those who
find it would be blown away by the stunning fusion of athleticism and artistry that the 22-year-old Hanyu weaved.
Have fun: