New Zealand Book Review: 'Ruth, Roger and Me': Debts and Legacies -- Andrew Dean (Wellington, 2015)

(en) awsm.nz: Book Review: 'Ruth, Roger and Me': Debts and
Legacies -- Andrew Dean (Wellington, 2015)

When you look at the past 30 years in Aotearoa there might be some debate about which year 
stands out most as a turning point for economic policy. Strong candidates would have to be 
1984 when neo-liberal factions gained a clear ascendency among the political parties. 
There was also 1987 but perhaps the roughest was 1991 and the year of the Mother of all 
Budgets. In that year National Party Minister of Finance Ruth Richardson, took the initial 
work of the Labour Party under Lange and Douglas even further than they had ever dared. 
Unemployment, welfare and sickness benefits were slashed, the health system was 
re-structured and a savage Employment Contracts Act dealt to organised labour. --- Anyone 
over 50 will have clear memories of the period prior to the neo-liberal consensus.

Whether they agree with the changes it has brought in or not, they at least have 
experience of something else. What of those who are younger? Having grown up under the 
current set up and therefore having known no other way of doing things, do they just 
passively accept that this is all there can be? That the effects of the changes have been 
essentially positive? Do they see privatisation and market driven methods as the sole 
valid option for running an economy? Perhaps many do, but fortunately there are 
countervailing voices prepared to question the dominant paradigm.

One of the young challengers is Andrew Dean, a PhD candidate and Rhodes scholar currently 
at Oxford. Dean's short work takes on the myths of neo-liberalism. He does so from his 
personal perspective as someone who is among the 'children' of the Mother of All Budgets. 
Now in his 20s, he grew up when the policies of Richardson and Douglas had their greatest 
influence on the country.

Dean's background is not as a trained economist and some could argue this is a serious 
fault when embarking on such a project. He doesn't claim to have undertaken his own 
economic research or to have made new breakthroughs in this field. His approach is that of 
a synthesist who has nevertheless done his homework. The writer has studied the work of 
local academics from various disciplines sympathetic to his own views such as Brian 
Easton, Jane Kelsey, Karen Nairn, Jane Higgins, Judith Sligo and international best 
sellers such as The Spirit Level. In addition he demonstrates a knowledge of New Right 
ideologues such as Hayek, Isiah Berlin and Charles Murray. This ideological mix is 
adroitly combined with official statistics from the NZ government that make for depressing 
reading and support his contention that the changes made have not been for the better.

Frankly the fact Dean is not an economist actually works in his favour. His style of 
writing is accessible to the general audience it is intended for and its free of heavy 
jargon. He doesn't cherry pick low hanging fruit, but focuses on a range of key sectors 
that were impacted by the changes such as health, housing and education. The fact he uses 
the government's own data carries a lot of weight. It is hard to deny the cold facts he 
puts together and as Dean himself says, the policies have had 30 years to play out so it's 
about time somebody pressed Richardson and her fellow travellers harder.

For those unmoved by dry statistical analysis, Dean also adds personal experience to the 
assortment of information he offers. He is honest enough to admit that in some ways he is 
not entirely representative of his generation. After all, as a pakeha doing post-grad 
study at Oxford, hes not exactly a model of the underclass. Nevertheless experiences such 
as working with vulnerable children for a community agency in Ashburton and watching the 
effects of the health sector re-structuring on his local hospital where his parents 
worked, show his sympathies have not come about in an ivory tower.

Perhaps the strongest 'personalised' section of Dean's work is based on interviews he was 
granted by two of the architects of the neo-liberal landscape. One is not (surprisingly, 
given the book's title) with Roger Douglas, but Rod Carr. The latter held various 
positions in the power structure including jobs as Deputy Governor of the Reserve Bank, 
leader of a taskforce that oversaw the restructuring of health funding and he was recently 
Vice-Chancellor of Canterbury University. Dean's encounter with Carr is marked by a good 
natured bout of sparring and Carr himself proves rather nuanced in his assessment of the 
neo-liberal agenda. In fact he is prepared to criticise elements of the present system, 
though retains a belief in the utility of discomfort to motivate the working population. 
By 'discomfort' Dean means the idea that job insecurity and having to operate with limited 
resources will encourage people to work harder and more efficiently. Though anyone at the 
receiving end of the precarious working environment that exists, won't find it difficult 
to take issue with Carr on that point!

More interesting and exponentially scarier is Dean's meeting with Ruth Richardson. Their 
interview only lasted 90 minutes but Dean says it flowed freely. She was hardly ambushed 
into it and his subject is certainly intelligent. The picture that emerges is akin to an 
encounter with a fanatical suburban cult leader in her lair. Unlike Carr she is not only 
largely non-reflective but utterly unapologetic regarding any of the damage caused by her 
actions. She even admits to being more extreme in her views in older age. As far as 
Richardson is concerned, the 'problem' such as it was, was in not carrying the changes 
further.

From an anarchist perspective the most revealing aspect of the interview is her admission 
that Labour and National have been two sides of the same coin or as she says "...there was 
a natural baton pass" (p.91) in how the various measures have been implemented over time. 
While nominally offering different views, these parties which still dominate the 
mainstream political system merely disagree on minor aspects of how to run our lives.
Opponents of neo-liberalism of various stripes can find much to praise in Dean's treatise 
but from an anarchist point of view there are sections where we probably have to part 
company with him. He correctly highlights the decline in youth voting as an indication of 
disengagement with society at large. There is a definite degree of apathy out there. There 
is a crude form of what could be construed as 'anarchism' that tells people not to vote 
and outsiders would assume views this youthful non-participatory trend in a favourable 
light. Correctly understood, there is an important difference between this straw figure 
version and the reality. We would not follow Dean in wishing to tackle neo-liberalism as a 
starting point for re-engagement and participation with the system. We don't support 
apathy and a disengagement from politics any more than Dean does. Instead we see not 
voting as a positive element of a deeper project of informed political commitment to 
removing the system. We want to replace it with a democratic economy that we believe no 
alternative form of capitalist tinkering can provide.

As an English Lit major Dean has a finely tuned ear for the bullshit and jargon that has 
accompanied neo-liberalism. Establishment political discourse definitely "...now sounds 
more like an advertising campaign for an insurance company-'Vote Positive!'-than it does 
anything that would run the risk of changing the way we think and act" (pp. 101-102). 
Listen to John Key and his minions and you will hear talk of 'nudges', 'policy settings', 
and finding the right 'positioning', as the author says, this is hardly inspiring stuff. 
So what does Dean offer as an alternative? In truth, not much and what little there is, is 
well meaning but vague. He suggests the abandonment of a political philosophy that values 
discomfort, its replacement by greater economic participation, an end to anomie and 
atomisation and an increase in aroha. In fairness Dean admits to not being deeply 
politicised, he is in that sense still a child of Ruth and Roger rather than an orphan. 
His short essay does a lot of admirable work and is encouraging in showing that not all 
among his age cohort are apathetic. However, this isn't a substantive blueprint to get us 
out of the current mess and it doesn't claim to be. That important work remains to be 
done. In the meantime, Dean is worth reading as a reminder of how we got to where we are 
and how people have been personally impacted long-term by the Mother of All Budgets, a 
story with great merit in itself.

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