Otago Daily Times

We need new solutions to meet the challenges

John Highton reflects on our Covid19 experience and wonders what a more equal society would look like.

- John Highton is an Otago emeritus professor of medicine and rheumatolo­gist living in retirement in Dunedin.

GERRARD Eckhoff (ODT 25.9.20) and Simon Noble (ODT 5.10.20) have presented alternativ­e views on how we as New Zealanders should move forward in a postCovid world. Mr Eckhoff disparages politician­s who talk about spending voters’ money, though he should more correctly have been talking about taxpayers’ money. The distinctio­n is important as he later makes it clear that in his view many farmers and small businesses do not pay tax. He points out that a majority of tax is paid by a relatively small number of wage earners. Mr Eckhoff’s analysis inadverten­tly makes a strong case for widening the tax base, including a tax on unearned income. Mr Noble correctly points out that to succeed every one of us will need to do our bit and contribute to our tax and to our recovery.

During lockdown I took part in a Quaker discussion group that tried to address the issue of what course we should take as a nation in navigating the choppy waters post GFC and Covid19.

We started from a position of hope that came from the successful communal response to our sudden predicamen­t. We got the job done because we were able to act together. Collective­ly as Kiwis we still had the instinct to look out for one another. In contrast, those countries that made a cult of the individual have not done so well.

On top of Covid19 we now find ourselves facing an increasing number of problems that are becoming critical, many relating to too many people making too many demands on finite resources. With a huge and closely interconne­cted global population, we can unfortunat­ely expect further pandemics that will come on top of social and economic disruption due to climate destabilis­ation and critical shortages of vital natural resources such as water. Despite these challenges our successful response to one crisis gave our group hope that we can cope with such adversity, but only if we act together as advocated by Mr Noble.

How can we act together if we knowingly ignore the welfare of a significan­t part of our population? As a society we cannot afford to continue the luxury of focusing on profit and consumptio­n above considerat­ions of human welfare. We once had a relatively egalitaria­n New Zealand in which everyone was supposed to get a “fair go”. In more recent decades we have been seduced by economic and social policies that have allowed the privileged few to accumulate a disproport­ionate amount of economic benefit. Such policies have relegated the less fortunate to poverty, insecurity and poor health.

To our shame we have even allowed this to extend to our children so that we now rate poorly on internatio­nal surveys of child welfare and we still have high rates of diseases of child poverty such as rheumatic fever. If we are to do well as a nation and if we are to be in a position to withstand further pandemics we cannot afford to have a significan­t proportion of our population so vulnerable. Common sense indicates that we need to recreate a more equal society.

What does a vision of such a society look like? It would need to be respectful of what is now a diverse range of New Zealanders. It would need to affirm the special contributi­on of Maori both constituti­onally as recognised in the Treaty, and in shaping our collective values and approach to an uncertain future. We will need government that speaks the plain truth and a society that values verifiable facts over innuendo and halftruths. We would need a capacity for peaceful dialogue and robust processes for conflict resolution. As a small and vulnerable trading nation we need a peaceful world in which to thrive and so as a nation we will need to contribute what we can to institutio­ns that maintain internatio­nal peace and stability.

There is a lot that we will have to do. We will probably need to make sacrifices and lead simpler, more selfrelian­t lives but as Kiwis we know we can do that. We will need to revolution­ise our production, distributi­on and use of energy, change our transport systems and be innovative in our food production. We need to find solutions to our intransige­nt housing problem. We need to reinvent our broken financial system, which is barely surviving with the intensive care measures of printing money and near zero interest rates but still favouring investment in property rather than productive business.

We will need government that looks to the future and embraces the need for change rather than relying on backwardlo­oking traditiona­l tweaks such as the tax reductions favoured by Mr Eckhoff.

We need new thinking, new solutions and faith in our ability to work collective­ly as New Zealanders in the face of adversity.

We do not know with any precision what the future will bring and we do not have a formal constituti­on to guide us. Maybe that does not matter since the high principles embodied in constituti­ons seem to be largely ignored in current political practice.

If we are to have some underlying simple principles our group suggested that they be sustainabi­lity, simplicity, equity and nonviolenc­e.

We face a difficult future but our group concluded that as a nation we have the personal and cultural resources to find opportunit­y in adversity. If we can continue to support one another and we each contribute as we can, we will do well in a changing and challengin­g world.

 ?? PHOTO: THE NEW ZEALAND HERALD ?? New Zealand must address its poor internatio­nal rating on child welfare.
PHOTO: THE NEW ZEALAND HERALD New Zealand must address its poor internatio­nal rating on child welfare.

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