Tuesday, January 30, 2007

That speech...

I was struck by the sense that John Key’s much awaited speech was a really odd attempt to sit on at least two fences. For a start, he has chosen a theme which is really quite uncertain factually, and which has few obvious or feasible policy solutions. It was a little off-putting that apparently the best he could do in terms of a strategy was deputizing to a back-bencher, and promising that she would come up with some ideas. Where was the integration with the rest of his team? Will it really be just the two of them?

I don’t doubt that the underclass in this country is a problem. It’s not nearly as big as Key makes out though. His assertion on the radio this morning that we weren’t far from street rioting was frankly hilarious. Also, the policy approaches which seem likely to work are likely to be long-term, expensive interventions, which don’t make good sound bites, and which are unlikely to excite the public. This is actually quite difficult stuff, and even if it works, the pay-offs won’t really come through for a decade or more. Hardly the kind of stuff to excite a passionate reaction!

To gain traction on this issue also requires the National Party to frame itself as the party of compassion for the poor. Do they really think they can do this convincingly? It seems to me to be evidence of John Key’s ongoing attempt to be all things to all people. He doesn’t really have a strong policy “rudder”, so he tries to say something, anything that he thinks people want to hear.

It also seems odd that he has chosen to make this speech at a time when both crime and unemployment are actually quite low, and without having any clear to solve the problem. It’s hard to see Key getting much traction on this issue. Not only has he failed to show a major, systemic problem, he’s failed to give us any indication as to how he might actually solve it. At least Don Brash’s Orewa speeches chose issues the public was actually concerned about, and actually generated some passion, support and press for the party.

He also seemed to vacillate between a number of approaches to the problem. On one hand he claims to want the government out of people’s lives. On the other, he wants more government spending and programmes. He is talking about more spending, more government involvement, and more civil servants. I particularly noted the talk about working with the “aunties and uncles” of under-privileged kids. What he is talking about is quite large scale intervention in the community. How will he ensure people’s buy-in, and then devise programmes that actually work.

Another idea he talked about in general terms was private sector involvement. This is really just shifting the expenditure though, not reducing it. Private sector organizations will only get involved in these programmes for profit, and there is no easy way to ensure effectiveness (how does one tie a company’s payment to education or employment outcomes, which might not show for 15 or 20 years?). Even if charities rather than companies are involved, their activities would still have to be paid for. Essentially it would be government expenditure under another name.

He also spoke of plans to ensure every unemployed person is in training or looking for work. WINZ already case manages unemployed people. The fact that his “plan” to do this is already government policy sets him up for an ambush that I would have expected him to avoid.

If I was a right-winger, I would actually be quite worried about this speech. If Key’s best move at this stage is to focus on an issue framed in left-wing terms, and which is not really fed by any great public feeling, it may be a sign of a worrying lightness in policy and political thinking.

4 comments:

Jordan Carter said...

I like this analysis. Nice and considered.

Chris said...

I also think this is a really good post. You are quite right when you say that solutions to this so called 'underclass' problem will be long term ones that won't excite the public imagination. Policies like free early childhood education, smaller class sizes for new entrants, truancy reduction initiatives, the NCEA (yes, the NCEA), more funding for on-job and industry training etc will all take time to show their full value. So we know that Labour has policies in place, and is developing more all the time, that take a long term view. What we have not seen from National is any evidence that they are also taking a long term view and are focused on anything other than where their next soundbite or populist grab for votes is going to come from.

Swimming said...

Ha Chris, you obviously dont udnerstand what the underclass is. Its all very well having policies in place, but these policies need to work. NCEA has taken how long to iron out? 20 hours free is not going to happen unless revision are done to policy costings. so its not really a workable policy if stakeholders arent going to embrace it.

ALso SMSD, you say that WINZ case manages people. How do you know that? What evidence have you got to say that WINZ case managers gets people jobs, rather than merely paying benefits? If WINZ case manages people into employment> Why then are there so many contracted services that do this - and do it better.

Single Malt Social Democrat said...

Dave,

Any policy will take time to implement, to sort out the wrinkles, and to take effect. When we are talking about policies to improve the lives of the very poor, it will take longer, as it takes time to get people out of entreched cycles of poverty.

Even if we came up with and implemented the perfect set of policies today, it might take a generation to solve the problems.

I note also that Key hardly has any substantive policy suggestions. School lunches and sports are all very well, but they are hardly cure-alls!

As far as the Winz thing goes, i know that beneficiaries are required to be looking for work, and that each is assigned to a case manager to whom they have to report at least weekly to form and implement a plan to find work.