Otago Daily Times

Skilled people needed to fulfil Government’s aims

When it comes to Tomorrow’s Schools reforms, the Government needs to focus on the achievable, writes Peter Lyons.

- Peter Lyons hopefully still teaches at St Peter’s College in Epsom and has written several economics texts.

Iwaddled back to school the other day after a year’s leave. The blues were blaring on my iPod. The headmaster addressed the staff. He had taken exception to an article I had written in support of the Tomorrow’s Schools reforms.

He was passionate in his denunciati­on of the proposed reforms. The front row had to dodge the spittle as he approached full stride. Fortunatel­y, I was sitting at the back.

He is quite a big guy. I couldn’t help but reflect that my year has maybe not started too well.

Yet, while I disagreed with some of his points, I agreed with his main issue. There is little point in significan­t reform of the school governance system without addressing the elephant in the room: the issue of teacher supply and retention.

Without quality people, any other reform is meaningles­s. This got me thinking about the Achilles heel of the Government. It is the enormity of trying to roll back a deeply embedded ideology after 30 years.

At the start of each year, I teach my pupils a brief overview of the history of economics. At the heart of economics and politics is the tension in any society between the role of government versus the role of free markets. This tension largely defines politics. In the 19th century, economics was called the study of ‘‘political economy’’. It shed that label as it aspired to be an objective science like physics. Yet economics is very political. What is taught as an objective science often favours the powerful.

The proposed reforms in the governance and operation of our schooling system is a classic illustrati­on of the tension between market forces and government.

This Government is proposing rolling back 30 years of a marketdriv­en schooling system. Although this competitiv­e system has been tempered in recent years, vestiges still remain.

This is the idea that competitio­n between schools will enhance the education outcomes for everyone. But the proposed reforms highlight a crucial issue. It is much easier to shrink the quality and scope of government than to build effective quality government services. Those who preach less government and more market have a far easier task. The proposed reforms illustrate this conundrum. After decades of a marketdriv­en society, where are the skilled personnel going to materialis­e from, to lead alternativ­e reforms?

This problem has plagued KiwiBuild. This has been viciously exposed in the past few weeks by the lack of new housing builds under KiwiBuild. It is impossible to roll back three decades of ‘‘less government, more market’’ in a threeyear parliament­ary term.

I appreciate this Government, because at least it is acknowledg­ing the ugly issues in our society created by a naive belief in more market and less government. These issues include homelessne­ss, a decline in equality of opportunit­y, huge inequaliti­es of income and wealth, and the ongoing damage to the environmen­t.

But trying to sort all these issues in a single parliament­ary term is totally unrealisti­c. It invites voter disillusio­nment. What is needed is a focus on achievable results. The alternativ­e will be a reversion to the norm of ‘‘winner take all’’ while our society continues to fray at the edges, as well as the middle.

KiwiBuild is flawed. Providing affordable housing for the middle class children of middle class parents is not the solution to our housing crisis. The first issue is providing housing to those struggling to put a roof over their head.

The Tomorrow’s Schools reforms are only a possible part of the solution to the inequaliti­es being magnified by our schooling system. My headmaster is correct. The first step must be a pay system that attracts and retains quality teachers and administra­tors for all schools. But it also needs to ensure that they are accountabl­e for their performanc­e. History shows it was government­s that provided access to universal school education, not free markets. Market forces do not always ensure the best outcome for a society.

I tell my pupils I am a firm believer in free markets. I believe that markets work well for ensuring the efficient production of many items such as tomatoes, apples, milk, cars, computers, TVs and a vast variety of other goods and services. The profit motive encourages enterprise and innovation and efficiency. But free markets don’t work well in the provision of education, healthcare , social housing and certain other key services. Unfettered free enterprise is particular­ly flawed in the financial sector. This lesson was learned during the Great Depression and has been sadly forgotten. Central banks were created because it was recognised that a competitiv­e banking system can wreck an entire economy on a periodic basis.

The intentions of this Government are laudable. But it is trying to do too much, too soon. The resources are simply not there, particular­ly skilled, competent people.

The Government needs to narrow its targets and focus on the achievable. Otherwise the polarisati­on will continue as we revert back to the ‘‘same old, same old’’. We have witnessed the inevitable outcome of this process in other countries. It is the rise of extremism and the erosion of democracy. This Government needs to focus on the achievable.

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? Learning experience . . . Without quality people in teaching and education administra­tion, any other education reform will be difficult to achieve, columnist Peter Lyons says.
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES Learning experience . . . Without quality people in teaching and education administra­tion, any other education reform will be difficult to achieve, columnist Peter Lyons says.

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