The New Zealand Herald

How to build govts which work for our times

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Do we, as New Zealanders, have the government we deserve? That was effectivel­y the question that Chris Hipkins, one of our most powerful ministers, asked earlier this month when launching a consultati­on on what could be the biggest shakeup of government’s internal workings in 30 years.

His basic pitch was that the 1988 State Sector Act, a key part of the sweeping political and economic reforms of that period, had been world leading in its time, but was no longer fit for purpose. It set up each government department very much as its own fiefdom, making it hard for agencies to work together on complex problems in the way that the public clearly wants them to.

There should be “no wrong door” for people approachin­g the government, Hipkins proclaimed: any public servant they contact should be able to help, or at least ensure a seamless transfer between agencies.

The proposed reforms he set out, and on which the public is now being asked to have its say, seem completely sensible and should be supported. But they do not necessaril­y address the biggest problems with the way our government works and the quality of the services it provides us.

The director of the Institute for Governance and Policy Studies, Simon Chapple, has already pointed to the erosion of an independen­t public service, one ready to provide genuinely free and frank advice, as a major problem. To this I would add two deep-lying concerns.

One is to do with the government’s reliance on private contractor­s to carry out much of its work, alongside an absence of proper regulation in many areas and other recent retreats from what was once core government activity. The second is our relative reluctance to use some of the most exciting democratic innovation­s springing up around the world, most of which are about finding new and effective ways to get citizens more directly involved in shaping policy.

The thread connecting these two ideas is, quite simply, the need to improve how government works. The market-based reforms we have embarked on since the 1980s were supposed to deliver better

services at lower cost. In this attempt we were not alone, but rather mimicking changes across the Anglospher­e, a set of countries that includes ourselves, Australia, Canada, the UK and the US.

But as I set out in my new work, Government for the Public Good: the Surprising Science of Large-Scale Collective

Action, the market-based drive has in many ways been a failure. Some things have improved, of course: no one wants to return to the days when the Post Office provided all our telecommun­ications needs.

But the evidence also points to many problems, such as government’s retreat from providing high-quality state housing, which has exacerbate­d the homelessne­ss crisis, or the unwillingn­ess to properly regulate companies that led to disasters such as Pike River and leaky homes.

If market-based reforms have generally failed to deliver on their promises – as the evidence compiled in my book suggests – we have to find other ways to improve the quality of the public services on which we all rely. A much more promising route is to draw more on the empowered democratic discussion of ordinary citizens. Around the world, government­s have been creating forums – going by the name of citizens’ assemblies, participat­ory budgeting and other terms – that encourage good collective discussion and allow citizens to intelligen­tly shape policy in very direct ways.

In Melbourne, a citizens’ assembly has laid the foundation for the city’s 10-year financial strategy. In Canada, a similar group of citizens has profoundly shaped the country’s mental health action plan.

In Brazil, tens of thousands of people every year help directly determine a portion of their city’s infrastruc­ture budget. These forums are already highly effective, and probably represent our best hope of creating government­s that are truly fit for the 21st century.

In other words, more democracy, not more markets, is the key to solving our collective problems. Max Rashbrooke is a senior associate in the Institute for Governance and Policy Studies at Victoria University of Wellington.

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