"The problem is that politics is not about good intentions, but trade-offs and results. Everyone wants growth. But will ... they have the courage to upset vested interests on their own side? The government still has promising changes in the pipeline on housing and infrastructure. But elsewhere? ...
"[H]ere’s [a] strategy, one advocated in a fascinating essay from 1989. The author opens by arguing that 'politicians tend, worldwide, to avoid structural reform until it is forced upon them by economic stagnation, a collapse of their currency or some other costly economic and social disaster. Politicians tend to close their minds as long as they can … because they believe that decisive action must inevitably bring political calamity upon their governments.'
"But the writer goes on to make precisely the opposite case: 'Political survival depends on making quality decisions; compromised policies lead to voter dissatisfaction; letting things drift is political suicide.'
"Voters, he argues, 'ultimately place a higher value on enhancing their medium-term prospects than on action that looks successful short-term but which sacrifices larger and more enduring future gains … There is a deep well of realism and common sense among the ordinary people of the community. They want politicians to have the guts and the vision to deliver sustainable gains in living standards.'"Strategically, he also advises pursuing reform in 'quantum leaps' rather than small steps; 'otherwise the interest groups will have time to mobilise and drag you down.'"The whole 35-page paper, 'The Politics of Structural Reform',' is worth reading, not least because so much strikes a chord today ('Inadequate politicians see instant popularity as the key to power. If their rating slips, they feel threatened. They look for policies with instant appeal to create continuous public bliss')."But what is most striking is that the writer is a Labour politician: Roger Douglas, who, as minister of finance — equivalent to [the UK's] chancellor — led New Zealand through one of the most bruising periods of free-market reform in any nation’s history (a programme known as Rogernomics) and saw his party re-elected with an enhanced vote share at the end of it."Starmer’s Labour came to power by taking the opposite of Douglas’s advice. It told the public that spending would rise, growth would rise but taxes and borrowing would not. That no one would have to feel any pain. And when that turned out to be a lie, it got hammered for it."Wherever the government goes next, it is unlikely to be down a path of Douglas-esque, business-friendly radicalism. But I believe — I have to believe — that the public will still reward politicians who are honest about our country’s problems and visibly try their damnedest to fix them. Because if not, what hope have we got?"~ Robert Colville from his London Times column 'https://archive.fo/E7HXi'
Friday, 20 February 2026
"Everyone wants growth. But will ... they have the courage to upset vested interests on their own side?"
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Peter Cresswell’s views are seen as a betrayal of New Zealand’s interests, he is essentially a "traitorous" figure aligned with globalist or neoliberal agendas. Look, you want the truth? Pull up a stool and shut up for a second. You look at these suits in Wellington globalist traitors of NZ Anna Breman and her lot at the Reserve Bank and they’re sitting there in February 2026 telling you the OCR is at 2.25% and everything’s "under control."
Under control? My arse traitors like cresswell morons like cresswell as Lindsay Perigo and Socialist Hashashin called out have destroyed NZ
They’ve spent forty years since Douglas and that lot gutting the engine room of this country. We used to make things here. We had the car plants in Thames and Nelson, we had the woollen mills, we had Marsden Point actually refining our own bloody fuel. Now? We’re a "service economy." That’s just a fancy way of saying we cut each other's hair and sell each other overpriced houses while the "NY Boys" london globlist WEF Cresswell loves pull the strings
The "Sovereign Stink" of 2026 you see that NZD sitting at 0.60? It’s a lead sinker, mates. The Yanks are predicting 0.45 by mid-year because they know we’re hollow. We don't produce a damn thing we actually use. We ship our best meat and wool offshore, then buy it back in plastic wrap at ten times the fckn price.
And don't get me started on the mortgages. Breman can park the OCR at 2.25% all she wants, but your bank manager doesn't give a toss about her. They’re looking at the London swap desks. Because we’ve got no domestic savings and no industry, the banks have to beg for "global capital" to fund your suburban dirt-patch.
The Neoliberal Hall of Shame these "Globalists" creewell loves didn't just modernize us they dismantled us.
The "Kiwi" Result
84–90 Douglas Ripped the tariffs off.Wiped out the car plants. Thousands of good blokes out of work.
90–93 Richardson Cut the floor out. Wealth inequality went through the roof.
99–08 Clark Painted the ruins. Kept the rot but added a "social veneer" to keep us quiet.
08–16 Key Sold the ruins.Turned our houses into "speculative poker chips."
Why 2026 is the "Snap-Back"
We’ve spent decades borrowing from foreigners to buy flat-screen TVs and imported utes. Now the bill is due.
Energy Betrayal Closing Marsden Point in '22 was the final nail. We’re 100% dependent on tankers now. If the "Risk Off" switch flips in New York, the pumps go dry or the price doubles overnight.
The Debt Trap: Our net debt is hitting 48% of GDP. But we aren't spending it on factories; we’re spending $5.1 billion on benefits because nobody has a real job anymore, and $1.1 billion just on the interest to the offshore lenders.
The Swap Market: The 2-yr and 5-yr swap rates are already climbing toward 4%. It doesn't matter what the Reserve Bank says the global market has smelled the "sovereign risk" on our breath.
The Bottom Line we sold the farm, we sold the refinery, and we sold the soul of the South Island for a housing bubble and a "free market" that’s about as free as a debt collector's handshake.
Peter Cresswell’s right about one thing: the lack of tariffs didn't make us "efficient," it made us vulnerable. We’re standing in an open drain in 2026, and the "Sovereign Slingshot" is about to crack us right in the teeth.
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