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Has Aoteanomics become Labour’s plan for NZ? 

From the Ivory Tower: This government is fostering a rejection of GDP growth.

It started as a few comments that weren’t seen as mainstream. Now it’s become a veritable tsunami.

The head of the Productivity Commission Dr Ganesh Nana has just announced his disdain for GDP. He said it was “not a great measure of anything useful” and blames the profit-oriented shareholder model for our society’s ills, even though it forms the basis of wealth creation in this nation.

The Reserve Bank is backing him. As for the Climate Change Commission, had it cared about both the environment and economic growth, it would have advocated for carbon taxes with the revenues being used to cut other tax rates. But it didn’t. Furthermore, the keynote address at the NZ Association of Economists 2021 Conference by the Ministry of Primary Industries chief economist Marjan van den Belt called for a “systemic transition” to a new “holistic”, “post-growth”, “doughnut” approach to the management of the country’s affairs.

 The keynote gave this new approach a name. Aoteanomics. What is it? A full-blown rejection of the idea that GDP growth is desirable. And it is way more radical and experimental than Rogernomics ever was.

So why won’t the prime minister and finance minister come clean to the nation about the new post-growth agenda that’s the talk of the Wellington elite? Are they terrified of their party being wiped by Kiwi business if they make the big reveal? Is this the reason why the government is pretending to be inventing gravity-defying forms of economic management? Ones that can close borders and still yield long-term prosperity? Ones that can impose a swathe of command-and-control rules relating to climate change with little effect on output? Ones where more equity can be achieved by dumping the shareholder model, or by introducing fair-pay agreements, without giving up efficiency? 

Public concern starting to look fake
The public concern for GDP expressed by the only two politicians who count in New Zealand is starting to look fake. When an indefinite extension of our tight border policy was recently announced, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern argued that: “If we preserve our options, it enables us to make choices that are good for our economy and good for our health.” She appears to be referencing an article from last year about, “preserving options” with respect to Covid-19 by Arthur Grimes, a former Reserve Bank chair. Yet that article’s argument has been surpassed by events. Due to the vaccine roll-out proceeding at snail’s pace, New Zealand has no option other than to keep its borders sealed. 

The twin aims of good economic and good health outcomes that the prime minister describes were achieved the past year due to robust consumer demand made possible by our domestic elimination of the virus. People were able to go on holidays and enjoy a freedom of movement denied in most other places. But the policy actions that achieved this outcome were short-term patch-up jobs.

Aoteanomics. What is it? A full-blown rejection of the idea that GDP growth is desirable.

The factors that determine long-run growth rates are very different to the consumption spending that has recently been underpinning output. Those factors include skills, innovations and investments, which are being severely constrained by our border controls. 

Evidence of such constraints is beginning to mount from stock markets, as share prices are forward-looking. The NZX 50 is down since the start of the year. Yet the Dow Jones in the United States is up over 10%.

Beyond addressing the fall-out
Countries are now moving beyond addressing the fall-out – from what first appeared would be a temporary shock, to designing ways of accommodating what’s fast looking like becoming a more permanent state of affairs. In this new equilibrium, biting trade-offs will occur. Better virus-related health outcomes supported by closed borders are likely to lower long-term growth paths, especially for small, isolated countries. The best-of-both-worlds scenario that we previously savoured is about to evaporate. 

As New Zealand enters this new phase, some truths about government priorities are beginning to be revealed. Long-run economic growth isn’t one of them. 

Notably, after Dick Easterlin, dubbed the father of the economics of happiness, visited New Zealand in 2019, he subsequently heaped praise on this country’s pandemic response. He argued that our government did well to prioritise health and jobs. An interview taped with him got posted onto the Beehive’s website.

What wasn’t posted were the videos outlining the original conjecture that made Easterlin famous, namely his view that higher GDP hasn’t led to higher reported levels of happiness over long periods of time, which he believes is due to materialism being a pointless quest. 

Richard Easterlin

Many Kiwis no doubt support Easterlin’s views. Perhaps GDP should not be New Zealand’s focus and instead we would be happiest by never letting the virus in, focusing on family life, not caring about low productivity, and being grateful for jobs even if the pay isn’t great by world standards.

But shouldn’t the prime minister and finance minister spill the beans? About how output has been dropped as a national objective? About how the government’s covert motto has become, ‘it’s not the economy, stupid’. 


Robert MacCulloch is the Matthew S Abel Professor of macro-economics at the University of Auckland Business School.

Robert MacCulloch Tue, 27 Jul 2021
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Has Aoteanomics become Labour’s plan for NZ? 
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