| By
MIKE MOORE |
22 March 2007 |
CAN
A NATION OF THE NORTH GO SOUTH ?
Douglas
North, an American, won a Nobel Prize in Economics, pioneering work
on the value of institutions in economic development. The higher
the quality of institutions, the better the result. If Cameroon
could lift the quality and efficiency of its public institutions
to the giddy heights of Uruguay, it would more than double its per
capita income per person, according to the World Bank. Governments
do matter despite the right wing mantra that government is the problem
not the solution. Its the quality, predictability and honesty
of government and its agencies that matters. And if you think globalisation
has meant the death of government and that governments no longer
matter, explain the difference between Chile and The Argentine,
North and South Korea, or Burma and Thailand. Of course, too much
government is almost as bad as no government. Good governance, property
rights, and independent courts are fundamental to sustained progress.
In economics where there is a problem, seek out the cleansing disinfection
of competition, and where corruption is a problem, seek out transparency
and competition, and where there is a political problem, seek more
competition via democracy. This expels the rent-seekers and the
privileged who extort and steal because of their insider knowledge.
The self-correcting genius of democracy holds bureaucracy and the
powerful to account.
But
democracy without an effective, honest, well-paid bureaucracy, predictable,
transparent institutions is not enough especially if one large faction,
party or tribe, by its numbers, can suppress the minority and reward
itself with the baubles of office. Douglas North made this case
in a most profound way to a U.N. Commission Im a member of,
recently. Chinas biggest problem is not energy, inequality
or the environment, but the capacity of its system to handle these
problems without a responsive, accountable bureaucracy, and without
a competitive democracy, is the issue, argues North.
I was
recently in Timor, which is amongst the worst places in the world
to do business because of its confused bureaucracy. Will Timor be
the first less-developed country to escape the "resource curse"
and manage to use its new-found wealth in oil and gas to assist
people and develop without serious corruption? Theres not
much to steal yet but this will be a close-run thing, its
like watching an old movie for the fifth time. Its not rocket
science, the evidence and literature is overwhelming. I spend half
my time in New Zealand and Australia. Theres no doubt that
policies to enhance the conditions of Australias Aboriginal
people have seriously failed, This is a scar on the conscience of
Australians, sending money, devaluing power and authority to Aboriginal
peoples without a professional class of civil servants; where, under
the guise of democracy, tribal leaders exploit their positions -
this is not democracy but feudalism and tribalism. When people can
be excused from civilised behaviour, violence is accepted because
of customary rights, it is painfully absurd. The privileged will
inevitably exploit their positions, which always turns to tears
in any society.
Its
better in New Zealand but there are ominous signs, when millions
of dollars disappear via Maori institutions and no-one is held accountable
let alone goes to jail. And its not just in Maori endeavours
that the warning signs are here in New Zealand. We are a developed
nation of the first rank and compare ourselves with the worlds
best when it comes to education, life expectancy, or all the worthy
measures of civilisation. But we operate more and more, in some
sections of our society, like a developing country, or an economy
in transition, accepting poor performance by our public service,
often using the excuse that theres no government responsibility
because government is responsible for policy, bureaucrats for operational
matters, a fad from the 1990s. How is it in New Zealand, from
sickening prosecutions of animal police behaviour to
multi-million dollar health contracts, to inferior education projects
which cost millions and dont produce anything, to the probation
system ignoring consistent advice about offenders who murder and
maim while on probation, is no-one ever sacked or goes to jail,
or pays back the money?
How
is it health expenditure can go up by 49% in 6 years but productivity
fall? If Douglas Norths theory that progress in poor countries
is based on the quality of the public service, is it possible that
the opposite might be true, that successful nations could go backwards
if the quality of their institutions degenerate? |