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New Zealand doesn’t need more government, it needs less government

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On Saturday, New Zealand’s ruling Labour Party nominated Chris Hipkins to be the next prime minister. He must still garner an endorsement Sunday from his Labour Party colleagues, but that is just a formality. Hipkins will have only a little more than eight months in the role before contesting a general election.

Hipkins, currently heads the ministries of education, police, and public service, but came to prominence in 2020 as the minister of health.  Ardern appointed Hipkins to the newly created ministry of covid-19 response in November 2020, a post he held until July last year.

Zeee Media, an Australian independent media outlet, highlighted the problem with Hipkins on Telegram:

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Our Post Ardern Way Ahead

By Dr. Guy Hatchard

On Friday, I had a very wide-ranging and interesting discussion with Farmer James and Jono Frew. You can view it on Farmer James’ Facebook page. I realised how important it is to offer ideas about a way ahead in the vacuum created by Ardern’s abrupt departure. We are facing Chris Hipkins as PM, who is firmly identified with Ardern’s failed policies.

More importantly, we are living in a broken society. Our health system is overwhelmed. Excess all-cause mortality is at record highs. Our school system is in crisis. Social cohesion is at a low ebb. Crime is rising. The cost of living has skyrocketed. More of the same policies are not going to solve these crises. If nothing is changed, the coming year will bring a harvest of bankruptcies and mortgagee failures.

You may feel like me that we don’t need more government, we need less. With some trepidation (I know that many will differ with good reason) here are a few suggestions to kickstart a debate:

Housing: Repeal the Resource Management Act and amend building and planning regulations. We live in a country the size of the UK but we only have a population of five million (UK has 60). Why are planning regulations herding us into inner city multi-unit dwellings known to breed crime and pollution? Why can’t we build our own houses on our own land? Why can’t farmers provide dwellings for their children? Why can’t groups of young people buy land, subdivide and build for themselves? This single measure will enable Kiwi enterprise to solve the housing affordability crisis, soften the impact of Labour’s interest rate rises, and stimulate the economy.

Cost of Living: Remove general sales tax (“GST”) on primary produce, fruit, and vegetables. Come to think of it, why is the US economy more flexible than ours? They don’t use the European taxation model at all. They just have a retail (end-user) sales tax, removing at one stroke the huge bureaucratic nightmare of GST. GST is a burden on every enterprise and a disincentive to start-ups, investment, and economic resilience. GST pushes up prices of staple commodities across the board as they pass from hand to hand in the supply chain taxed at each transaction point.

Youth Crime: Jail time has to take on an educational and aspirational character. We have among the highest rates of imprisonment in the developed world, but it is not working. Prisons are turning out hardened criminals. There are models of reforming success in Scandinavian countries for example that we can adopt. They really do reduce crime.

Education: One size does not suit all, especially in our rapidly changing modern world. Educational achievement is falling. Children are not inspired. Mastery learning schemes will help children to acquire the basics, no child will be left behind. At the moment, only those able to afford private education have a choice. Consider instituting an education voucher system which would give all parents, teachers, and pupils a choice of content, providers, and systems. We should explore good practice.

Health: Mandated health workers should be allowed back to work. The scientific evidence is overwhelming. A July 2022 study undertaken in Qatar found that natural immunity offers long-term 97.3% protection against reinfection, higher than the protection of mRNA vaccination which in any case wanes rapidly. Over the longer term, more proven complementary preventive approaches to health should be co-opted into our health funding system. They work. In contrast, the present government is planning to regulate and restrict availability of Natural Health Products. This Bill should be abandoned.

Politics: The New Zealand Bill of Rights should be entrenched. Reduce the Mixed-Member Proportional (“MMP”) threshold to one per cent. Remove parliamentary privilege – MPs should be held to the same standards as the rest of us. Use modern electronic communication systems to make MPs and Parties more closely accountable.

These are a few ideas. You will have lots. We have always been a can-do country. It is time for a positive new direction.

About the Author

Guy Hatchard, PhD, was formerly a senior manager at Genetic ID a global food testing and safety company (now known as FoodChain ID). You can subscribe to his websites HatchardReport.com and GLOBE.GLOBAL for regular updates by email. GLOBE.GLOBAL is a website dedicated to providing information about the dangers of biotechnology.

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1 year ago

[…] – New Zealand doesn’t need more government, it needs less government […]

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1 year ago

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Augustus
Augustus
1 year ago

This article could have been written about the US, other countries as well I suspect. Every problem the doctor outlined about New Zealand exists here in spades. Governments across the world are broken and do not serve its citizens. Dr. Hatchard points out that in education that “one size does not suit all” is certainly true, but this type of lazy thinking is typical of government. I believe it encompasses more than just education, as we have seen and are continuing to see in healthcare and crime. I wish the citizens of New Zealand well and hope their election process is not corrupted as it is here and they elect a decent PM.