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Monday, May 1, 2023

Robert MacCulloch: How our Kingdom of Kindness Lost its Way


A question that has gripped this country these past five years is how former Prime Minister Ardern, who touted kindness as her brand, became so divisive.

The explanation may be simple. Political rulers with strong moral viewpoints have long created discord. Enlightenment philosophers like John Locke explained the dangers of governments exercising authority in the realm of individual conscience. Leaders who claimed to represent the moral high ground created the impetus for the separation of Church and State in Europe.

Yet Jacinda Ardern put matters of conscience right back into the heart of affairs of State. If you have any doubt, then read her Commencement Speech at Harvard University back in May 2022. It starts and ends on the theme of kindness.

In between sits conversion therapy, gun control, gay marriage, abortion, trolls, responsible algorithms, disinformation lies, not to mention unhygienic keyboard warriors “dressed in poorly fitted superhero costumes”.

Ardern became more like a charismatic leader of a spiritual movement, promoting passionate conviction, than a traditional party boss. She converted many National Party supporters from her pulpit. They joined her congregation, better known as a “team”, singing her praises, at least for a time.

She even won over the hard-nosed Harvard University academics and graduating students. They gave her a standing ovation. However, a stunned silence would have likely greeted our former Prime Minister had she argued that the world’s economic challenges, in addition to its culture wars, could be solved by kindness.

Yet that is what she did three years before in an article in Britain’s Financial Times newspaper, which the Beehive called “the economics of kindness”.

It caused a problem. No-one had heard of kindness economics. No-one knew what it meant, including our own Treasury. Is it kind to reward effort? If so, is it kind to force hard workers to pay back their extra reward in taxes to support lazy ones? During the pandemic, was it kind to pay the wage subsidy to big firms? Was the Reserve Bank kind when it flooded financial markets with liquidity, causing inflation? Is it kind to now hike interest rates?

The meaninglessness of these questions reveals a lot about “kindness economics”. It was a brand-name for a product that was never built.

This article is not debating the importance of kindness as a personal virtue in our dealings with others.

It is arguing that the non-existence of kindness economics meant Arden had no framework to leverage the stand-out success she helped deliver during the pandemic’s first year into an enduring economic prosperity for the nation.

Our Gross Domestic Product fell by around 1% in 2020. Far larger drops had been experienced throughout the advanced economies of the world, like the United Kingdom, where it plummeted over 10%. Kiwis felt we were living in an incredible place. The rest of the world felt the same about us. Carving out our own path to take advantage of the unique virus-free situation in which we found ourselves was not a luxury. It was a requirement.

Yet our Finance Minister and Reserve Bank Governor instead went and not only copied fiscal and monetary policies from abroad, but did so on a larger scale. They wastefully spent and printed money, reversing our exceptional hard-won Covid gains.

The International Monetary Fund has now confirmed our GDP growth rate this year is below the average and our current account deficit the worst in the developed world. It never had to be that way, since we had been the world’s stand-out success in 2020. The billions subsequently thrown away could have been used for health-care, infrastructure and an education system of which we could all be proud.

Incredibly, we now face recession when most of the nations that did far poorer than us during the pandemic do not.

Meanwhile, Ardern’s Minister of Finance and Governor, who bear direct responsibility for our economic mess, stay on. Both defend themselves against accusations of error by saying others are also doing badly. When you copy folks worse than you, that’s what you get.

The Kiwi story these past years is one of our leaders snatching an extraordinary economic defeat from the jaws of the people’s amazing Covid victory. It reminds us that competency is important, not just kindness.

Professor Robert MacCulloch holds the Matthew S. Abel Chair of Macroeconomics at Auckland University. He has previously worked at the Reserve Bank, Oxford University, and the London School of Economics. He runs the blog Down to Earth Kiwi from where this article was sourced.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

In order to understand Jacinda Ardern’s legacy to New Zealand you must absorb and understand her prior position as president of the International Union of Socialist Youth. That wasn’t just a fun thing for her to do in her spare time to pad out her CV.
This role positions her as the vanguard for the creation of the international socialist utopia.
This is why her election slogan was Transformation. The word “transformation” represents a key concept in Woke Marxism - it signals that the transformers’ desire is to destroy the fabric of society as we know it and build back a utopian society in which we all think and behave exactly as the transformers wish us to.
In this world view, ‘kindness’ is to be directed towards all people but in the Woke Marxist dictionary, the term ‘people’ only refers to those who parrot the WM values.
Thus there is no requirement to be kind to non-people; to those dirty deplorables who fail to toe the party line.
Check out Dr James Lindsay’s New Discourses Bullets audios recently on “When to Stand Up” and “The Power of Opting Out” for further insight into this.

Anonymous said...

Don’t worry. Co-governance will fix it. Cheer yourself up with a karakia.

Anonymous said...

YIP yip, that's what it is, 2 classes of people, yip yip, trust me as your one source of truth, yip yip. I from the CCP and I'm here to help yip yip yip.

Erica said...

Somewhere as we grew up we were probably warned about charming people and how alluring they can be but we were caught off guard and lost discernment, Practising a healthy skepticism that does not involve cynicism should be taught compulsorily to modern children. Ardern was such a terrible liar and the media should have alerted us to this.They have a lot to answer for.

Anonymous said...

Like a lot of us, I never warmed to the shallowness of St Cindy and her empty promises. The worst Prime Minister 'leading' the worst ever government this country has ever had the displeasure of suffering. She didn't even have the courage to face an election defeat. Gutless.

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