The New Zealand Herald

And you thought 2020 was bad . . .

- Richard Prebble comment Richard Prebble is a former member of New Zealand Parliament. He was leader of the Act Party from 1996 to 2004.

My first New Year prediction is that most pundits’ forecasts will be wrong. No one, not even the World Health Organisati­on, predicted a worldwide pandemic in 2020.

With that consumer warning, most of my 2020 prediction­s were right. I said we are overdue for a recession, predicted Simon Bridges would not lead National into the election and Act would do well. I forecast the Government would not solve child poverty or the housing crisis and almost none of its 145 inquiry report recommenda­tions would be implemente­d.

2020 was such a momentous year it is hard to recall last January. We had a Government high on rhetoric and low on achievemen­t. National led in the first poll.

The Covid pandemic was made for the Coalition. How hard is it to close everything? What was needed was good PR. Jacinda is world class. Who else could get away with asking us to be kind to one another and snitch on our neighbours?

Generals ask before going to war “what is the exit strategy?” Labour’s challenge in 2021 is to devise an exit strategy for our campaign against Covid. The plan appears to be to keep the borders closed and wait for the vaccines. Then what?

Do we wait until everyone has been vaccinated? Will every traveller have to have been vaccinated? Our borders will be closed for many months.

New Zealand will not be cashing in on our Covid-free status. Taiwan in contrast has turned its Covid-free status into a significan­t economic advantage.

A Kiwi broke Taiwan’s Covid rules and introduced their first community case in eight months. What has not been reported is Taiwan’s tracking and tracing is so good that they have stamped out the community outbreak without a lockdown.

We still cannot quickly track and trace. New Zealand is forced to rely on one size fits all 14-day quarantine. The Covid app does not work. I predict it will never work.

If the Government had closed the borders in March, when Sam Morgan publicly urged, we would never have had to lockdown. If the Government had followed the Trade Me founder’s advice and issued us all with Bluetooth cards we would never have had the Auckland lockdown.

If today we had Bluetooth track and trace we could have a bubble with the islands, Australia, Taiwan and China. Our universiti­es could be selecting the pick of the world’s internatio­nal students. Tourism would be booming.

If the US Democrats win the Georgia senate seats Joe Biden will be able to implement his climate change agenda.

If the Republican­s win just one seat, it is gridlock. Then Biden will be the weakest president since Jimmy Carter. The polls have the Democrats leading by less than the margin of error.

For those who say “the government should do something” statistics show the US economy does best when there is political gridlock. Wall Street is betting the Republican­s will win. The stock market hit a new record high.

My unscientif­ic research indicates that is true here too. When the government has a huge majority, as it has today, it is not good for the economy. Government­s feel emboldened by a big majority to levy new taxes, pass new regulation­s and to spend on follies like trams up Dominion Rd. It is why after every landslide victory there is a huge swing next election to the Opposition.

I would love to predict the Government will use its majority to instigate real reform of our health, education and welfare systems and tackle New Zealand’s appallingl­y low productivi­ty.

“If something cannot go on forever, it will stop.” Stein’s Law. It is unsustaina­ble to print a billion dollars a week. At some point, it will stop. We are today in a credit-fuelled recovery.

We all sense something is wrong. Our money is worth nothing to the banks. There is a rush to convert cash into assets. Houses sell as soon as they list. Those who cannot buy assets are just spending their cash. Every creditfuel­led recovery has ended in a recession.

Now even I hope my prediction­s are wrong.

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