Thursday, June 09, 2011

Brash was at the Knowledge Wave Conference too

Fran O'Sullivan was delving through old file boxes and came across one about the Knowledge Wave conference in 2001. Ten years ago already. She writes that is was a lost opportunity:

...Catching the Knowledge Wave project stands out as one of the key missed opportunities that also litter New Zealand's history...

Essentially she says we are all talk. But quotes Helen Clark, mentions ex University of Auckland vice-chancellor John Hood and "political, business and social leaders from countries like Australia, Canada, Ireland, Israel, Singapore, Korea, the US and Taiwan."

She makes no allusion to Don Brash, then Reserve Bank Governor. But I was impressed enough by what he said to also keep a clipping.



The headline reads, Let's get radical, challenges Brash. NZ could only climb back into the ranks of the wealthy with a change of attitude and behaviour but New Zealanders had " deeply ingrained cultural characteristics", a disdain for commercial success, no strong passion for education and a tendency for immediate gratification. The economy would not improve significantly while 350,000 working age people received tax-payer funded income support. He suggested lifetime limits on how long able-bodied people could claim state benefits.

But let me finish with Fran O'Sullivan's words:

In retrospect, Catching the Knowledge Wave was too much about conversation and too little about action. It would be too pat to put this down to the heavy infusion of public relations messaging. Although that is a factor.

The real issue is that New Zealand body politic is still far too slow and far too slack when it comes to implementing a big agenda.

The John Key Government's own growth strategy is a case in point. For example, the shambles over the mining strategy and the failure to put some ballast under the PM's financial services hub project. Until recently, NZTE has been a relative shambles ... the list goes on.

It's unfathomable that a private sector operator like Key doesn't put a few more skilled ministers alongside Steven Joyce and Tony Ryall to form a speed team to get major change bedded down.

After three years of economic crises, endlessly debating is no longer an option.


Brash obviously agrees with the final sentence. But the way Key and National reacted to his political re-emergence illustrates exactly why we are going nowhere fast. Perhaps there should be an age limit on becoming the leader of a country. Too young and there is little or less sense of urgency and certainly less context.

Ten years ago my son had barely started primary school. This week he recieved his electoral enrolment form. Ten years is a bloody long time.

As Brash said ten years ago, New Zealand needs to get radical.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

NZ "need to get radical" 10 years ago.

Now NZ's economy has been put back to worse than Muldoon by 9 years of Labour and 3 years of Key.

NZ's economy is worse than Belgium, worse than Iceland, on a par with Ireland, Spain, and Portugal.
(Hell even Belgium has only 98% debt, holding steady or reducing, while NZ has 120% and rising 20% per year!)

We are past the time when a "radical" proposal like more education or better dole case managers could make a real difference. We are past the time when Brash's 2025 Taskforce proposals (50% cut in benefits & super, 40% school privatisation, kept govt healthcare) would be enough.

The Economic problems NZ faces are far, far more severe than any damage done by the Christchurch earthquake - but Key passed two enabling Acts to sort that out.

It's unfathomable that a private sector operator like Key doesn't put a few more skilled ministers alongside Steven Joyce and Tony Ryall to form a speed team to get major change bedded down.


We don't need ministers. We don't need a "Speed Team"! We just need to make the absolutely commonsense chances to fix NZ once and for all.

Lifetime limit on benefits (including Dole); SURE ZERO. No government funds for school or health. No more bludgers, WFFers, civil servants. No more RMA - real property rights.

These don't need ministers or lobbyists or civil servants or anything to achieve just the COMMONSENSE to STOP THE MESS

Shane Pleasance said...

It is bizarre that we should consider a nation of free, independent, assertive and entrepreneurial thinking citizens as 'radical'

Colin Eade said...

The conference's focus on knowledge was misplaced. It is not knowledge that we need but wisdom. What we should be asking is Who are the wise? How do we develop wisdom? How can we value wisdom?