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Thanks to Cullen’s clever alchemy, the base metals of neoliberalism could be transmuted into the glittering gold of 'modernisation'; and the grim squares of betrayal transformed into happy circles of fulfilment, Chris Trotter says

Thanks to Cullen’s clever alchemy, the base metals of neoliberalism could be transmuted into the glittering gold of 'modernisation'; and the grim squares of betrayal transformed into happy circles of fulfilment, Chris Trotter says

By Chris Trotter*

Michael Cullen's death leaves Helen Clark as the sole remaining adult in Labour’s room. While he lived, Cullen’s influence on the present government was considerable. He was one of the few Boomers this Gen-X government listened to with genuine respect. Was that because Cullen took care to reassure his protégé, Finance Minister Grant Robertson, that the Labour-led Government’s economic settings were more-or-less correct? Undoubtedly that helped, but so did Cullen’s formidable intellect, his sense of humour, and his undoubted possession of that increasingly rare commodity – political wisdom.

Cullen called his recently published memoir “Labour Saving”. The title is instructive. Like so many Labour Party members confronted with the unrelenting radicalism of “Rogernomics”, Cullen had to decide how best to preserve the political party responsible for improving the lives of so many New Zealanders. Unlike Jim Anderton and his followers, he was convinced that the humanitarian essence of the Labour Party could be safeguarded without jettisoning Roger Douglas’s neoliberal programme.

It was a conviction he shared with Helen Clark, and without it their formidable political partnership would have been impossible. It is no small part of his legacy that, alongside Clark, he was successful in convincing both Labour’s remaining members, and an increasing number of centre-left voters, that the “reforms of the 1980s” were compatible with Labour’s core values. What historians will be called upon to decide is whether Clark-Cullen’s social-democratic rhetoric was ultimately reflected in Clark-Cullen’s on-the-ground achievements.

What cannot be disputed is Cullen’s immense usefulness to the Lange-Douglas Government as the Rogernomics “revolution” was passing through its early critical phases. Nowhere was this usefulness more evident than in the internal party debate over the introduction of the all-important Goods and Services Tax. Without the revenue collected by GST, the dramatic cuts in personal income tax would not have been possible. These reductions were absolutely essential if Rogernomics was to be accepted and, more importantly, supported by the New Zealand middle-class.

It was Cullen’s job to defuse the widespread opposition to the clearly regressive GST that was growing within the Labour Party. He did this by moving an amendment to any remits opposing GST. The amendment appeared to endorse the opposition to GST unless the inevitable increase in the cost-of-living of low-paid workers imposed by GST was fully offset by income tax reductions.

The choice of Cullen as the promoter of this “No GST unless …” solution was extremely shrewd. Within the Labour Party, Cullen was widely credited as having liberal-left leanings. Prior to winning the St Kilda nomination in 1981, he had been an active member of the Castle Street Branch of the Labour Party. Founded by the late Austin Mitchell, Castle Street, like Auckland’s Princes Street, was seen as a haven for university-based radicals. If Cullen was convinced that the regressive effects of GST could be offset by tax-cuts, then Labour traditionalists – as well as Labour “modernisers” – could vote in favour of Douglas’s “reform” with a clear conscience.

It was a template which would serve Cullen and the neoliberal Labour Party extremely well over the years that lay ahead. Decisions objectively inimical to the interests of low-paid workers and beneficiaries could be presented simply as new and better ways of achieving Labour’s traditional objectives. Thanks to Cullen’s clever alchemy, the base metals of neoliberalism could be transmuted into the glittering gold of “modernisation”; and the grim squares of betrayal transformed into happy circles of fulfilment.

The success of this strategy was compounded by the departure of the traditionalists’ leader, Jim Anderton, in 1989. With him went the party members who understood the true implications of the Rogernomics Revolution, and who possessed both the will and the wherewithal to oppose it openly in party forums. Though Anderton’s NewLabour Party – which in 1991 became the Alliance – harried Labour relentlessly throughout the 1990s, it could not, in the end, compete with the immense power of the Labour “brand”. As a former lecturer in social and economic history, Cullen rightly wagered that the doggedly loyal working-class voters who re-elected him to Parliament every three years would never abandon the party of Michael Joseph Savage.

Cullen also understood what so many of Anderton’s Alliance voters did not. That in the 15 years since the election of the Fourth Labour Government in 1984, neoliberalism had so firmly embedded itself in New Zealand’s key economic and administrative institutions that it could only be dislodged by an upheaval of revolutionary force. Neither Clark nor Cullen were revolutionaries, which is why, when confronted with an employer class spooked by the policies of the Alliance (Labour’s coalition partner between 1999 and 2002) they capitulated without a fight.

Stared down by the A-team of Auckland employers gathered in the Cathedral Room of the exclusive Auckland Club on 24 May 2000, Cullen blinked. The following day, speaking to yet another group of angry employers, Labour’s Finance Minister purred: “We want to be a government that moves forward with business, not one that watches indifferently from the side-lines.”

Sobered by what soon came to be known as “The Winter of Discontent”, Cullen proved as good as his word. The big reforms that constitute his political legacy: The Superannuation Fund; Working For Families; KiwiSaver; far from being the solid social-democratic victories Labour presents them as, were actually a sequence of inadequate workarounds for the problems created by neoliberal policies Cullen now knew better than ever not to challenge.

The Superannuation Fund (quickly dubbed the “Cullen Fund”) kept billions of dollars safely out of the hands of cash-starved ministries. This sequestering function was amply demonstrated by the speed with which the National Government suspended contributions to fund its GFC and Earthquake recovery projects. Working For Families, far from being “communism by stealth” acted as a giant wage subsidy for New Zealand employers. KiwiSaver, a privately run scheme, unguaranteed by the state, poured billions into the pockets of financial institutions. Social-democracy, at least as Mickey Savage and Norman Kirk understood it, had been murdered in the Cathedral Room.

With Cullen’s passing, the Labour Party has only Helen Clark to turn to for advice and consolation about the hard business of preaching Labour kindness while delivering neoliberal cruelty. Frustratingly for the present Labour Government, Clark is a much more protean figure than her former Finance Minister: less prone to staying put and saying only the right things.

Those who place themselves on the centre-left will miss Michael Cullen. They’ll miss his prodigious intellect and his wickedly witty tongue. They’ll miss his wisdom. He has, however, left them with an enigma.

Who was he? This son of a London artisan who won a scholarship to the upper-class Christ’s College? This radical history lecturer who hung John Ball’s challenge to the English peasantry: “When Adam delved and Eve span, who was then the gentleman?” on his office wall – and then went on to accept a knighthood? This “too clever by three-quarters” MP with a left-wing reputation – who was willing to sell Rogernomics to a confused and dismayed Labour Party? This Labour Finance Minister who left state housing underfunded and beneficiaries’ children unassisted by Working For Families?

Sir Christopher Wren, buried in the heart of his greatest architectural achievement, St Paul’s Cathedral, wrote his own epitaph: Si monumentum requiris circumspice “If you would see his monument, look around.” Looking around at the New Zealand he has left behind him, how should we sum up Michael Cullen’s legacy. Who won? Who lost? And who will eat the shame?


*Chris Trotter has been writing and commenting professionally about New Zealand politics for more than 30 years. He writes a weekly column for interest.co.nz. His work may also be found at http://bowalleyroad.blogspot.com.

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22 Comments

In a similar vein to Muldoon’s young Turks David Lange’s team was a heck of a lot more energetic and rambunctious than anything we see in parliament today. Quite savage interplay then obviously. Recall reading some time ago that in caucus Richard Prebble would or could reduce Michael Cullen to tears? Discussed that with a then retired MP of Muldoon’s government who remarked in politics that is always the result when the bigger bully meets the smaller bully. Perhaps that explains,but doesn’t excuse, some of the unfortunate gutter sniping his much celebrated intellect stooped to “Merv Wellington is a lobotomised Jerry Lewis” for example, but in any event it is not all that easy to identify MPs that are any much better than that.

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Michael Cullen may well be seen as a successful salesman of GST on the basis of the quid pro quo on income tax. But that was soon forgotten in the next Labour government when under his direction, income tax was ratcheted up again without any quid pro quo at all for that attached. Very blatant and cynical tax grab that.

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New Zealand has a major issue with mistaking 'tax increases' for 'tax reform'.

Meanwhile our tax system is shuffling along, largely the same as it was pre-property boom, and with rates that haven't changed meaningfully since 2011.

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Social fudging spares blushes temporarily for Labour whilst inequality increases remorselessly since 1976

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https://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/PA0810/S00063.htm

He represented - lived within - the Overton Window dissonance between what we want, and what we can have.

Nobody really asked him the hard question; as nobody (from the MSM, at least :) has yet asked Carr. The question is:
If you could tell the truth, rather than the politically-expedient, what would you advocate to put New Zealand on a sustainable pathway?

All all else is misdirected chaff. We may realise, in hindsight, that there were more useful uses for this intellect but that the social discourse hamstrung it.

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Yeah, who between those two was the real intellect? Practical wisdom and political wisdom are two very different things. My money is on Jeanette as she had the former.

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A fascinating article that gives some glimpses to CT's frame of mind as well as his blinkers. Unfortunately CT IMHO, fails here to provide some real analysis of Cullen's legacy, perhaps revealing the degree of his own hero worship?

He describes Cullen as a 'formidable intellect' and what I would summarise as being the consummate politician. And it appears that in truth he did turn his intellect towards politics, but I fear he failed dismally in being able to critically analyse the 'neo-liberal' economics and the impacts on the working class (as did so many others in the world).

He perpetrated the betrayal of the people of NZ by extending GST without the commensurate reduction in PAYE that was promised (in memory PAYE was to be at 0% with GST at 12%). The housing crisis largely began and gained significant momentum on their watch, demonstrating their inability to critically analyse the impacts of policy settings. CT is somewhat disingenuous to suggest that historians should be the ones to analyse their legacy. Politician, if they are to live up to their mandates and their word, should be doing much more critical analysis of their policies.

CT gives away a weakness of political parties in his description "doggedly loyal working-class voters" - namely the unthinking masses. And being a lecturer in economics history does not by any means make one an economist , just a historian, and I think that is very much evident in what he achieved. Actually on par with Piggy Muldoon!

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Thanks to Cullen’s clever alchemy, the base metals of neoliberalism could be transmuted into the glittering gold of “modernisation”; and the grim squares of betrayal transformed into happy circles of fulfilment....Exceedingly gushy Hagiography. Could we have a responding article,something more balanced and critically tempered ?
It need not be an obituary,either.

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I don't believe that sentence was meant to be entirely complimentary.

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Working For Families, far from being “communism by stealth” acted as a giant wage subsidy for New Zealand employers. KiwiSaver, a privately run scheme, unguaranteed by the state, poured billions into the pockets of financial institutions. Social-democracy, at least as Mickey Savage and Norman Kirk understood it, had been murdered in the Cathedral Room.

This Labour Finance Minister who left state housing underfunded and beneficiaries’ children unassisted by Working For Families?

I don’t think the article is particularly complimentary to Cullen at all. Maybe people need to read it again.

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If he had tabled an inflation-acknowledging CGT of 15-20% instead of top-of-tax bracket a few years back, how different would the world be? Massive opportunity missed and now we have a hodge podge of bright line tests that discourage people from selling.

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nktokyo - You are so spot on the money, Cullen headed the Tax review group that came out with a CGT at one's nominal tax rate which for most when dealing with a reasonable Capital Gain would be the top tax rate - now 39% - the highest CGT in the world with no consideration of inflation or costs of renovating etc.
If the CGT was set at a tax rate that was sensible and made provision for costs and inflation then it could/would have been an easy sell.
In my opinion it should have included the family home, because when it does not too much extra money ends up there, which is what we are starting to see with the Brightline pushed out to 10 years we are incentivised to load up the family home which is adding fuel for owner/occupiers to go up market rather than invest in a rental with a view to cashing out later tax free and downsizing !!!
Sure he instigated the Superannuation fund and Kiwisaver that most countries had had for decades !
WFF is a disaster, making 10's of thousand welfare dependent, a tax code change to get a tax rebate for families would have achieved the same with out a expanded social welfare group to administer WFF.
Nothing impressive in his time as finance minister other than keeping Government debt down.
He was part of the Clark Government that actively encouraged residential investment with 100% tax deductions including depreciation as Clark could see that the Government could not provide enough rental accommodation alone.
Smug would be the term I would call the man.

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He was beyond smug. He was arrogant, and a plastic socialist!

But beyond that, on CGT you are very wrong! Just an envy tax. If he was so smart, how come he did not recognise the difference between a change in the theoretical value of an asset, and actual realised income?

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Murray86 - We all have our views particularly on CGT.
I for one have benefitted enormously from CG's.'
Sure it's an envy tax I get that but some level of taxing realised CG is not such a bad idea.
A rate set at a modest level could raise alot of extra revenue.
We are out of step with the rest of the world on this and the envy people will not be happy until it comes in.
Our society over time is being divided by this and I'm sure you would agree as time goes on the divide gets bigger.
Not having CGT on the family home is silly in that the family home then becomes the golden egg to grow tax free gains.

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So by your comment you have realised in some way the the gains you made in the change in value of your house, by borrowing against them or selling to move up? Then for you any changes would be real, and I believe you should have paid tax on that realisation. If on the other hand you just get pleasure in some wally telling you your house value is more than what you paid for it, then that pleasure is both wrong and misguided as well as utterly superficial.

For a lot of people, myself included, nothing has been done to capitalise on any change in value. It is theoretical in every way and means nothing, because there is no extra to spend. Why should that be taxed?

Cullen in all his so called intelligence could not define the difference. I doubt he even understood it. But I have no doubt that he very much one of those people who he described as being a "rich prick".

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Any finance minister who prescribes budget surpluses for year after year and in the process drives up household debt to historical levels can only be described as a neo-liberal.

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I give MC credit for recognising that the budget surpluses pre-2008 were an
unwarranted windfall courtesy of the global policy mistakes that led to the GFC,
which is why he maintained budget surpluses.

But he did waste a lot of the unwarranted windfall on interest-free student loans to buy the
2005 election. And the $1,000 Kiwisaver sign-up bonus and on-going $500 annual top-up
could have been avoided by making Kiwisaver compulsory as in Norman Kirk's 1972 scheme.

By keeping tax brackets unchanged for 9 years, an increasing amount of the so-called budget
surplus was created by bracket creep.

Working for families is just a version of the income tax system of 50 years ago which had tax-free
allowances for a spouse and dependent children.

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Budget surpluses are not a "windfall". The government does not spend taxes, taxation deletes money, that is why it drove up household debt. Look up 'sectoral balances' online for further explanation.

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Chris Trotter is pretty much on the money re Cullen. All Labour governments since 1984 have been in the neo-liberal camp; sure they have sometimes softened the assault on lower income people but their ongoing policy direction has allowed a level of poverty and homelessness in this country not seen for generations. Their best buddies are the heads of the many privatised industries and foreigh owned corporations like the banks. Cullen was politically astute but just another Nat-lite Labour politician.

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Brilliant — and cutting — analysis:
"Working For Families, far from being “communism by stealth”, acted as a giant wage subsidy for New Zealand employers. KiwiSaver, a privately run scheme, unguaranteed by the state, poured billions into the pockets of financial institutions."

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Probably the worst legacy of all was the ramped up sale of land to overseas interests during the Clark/Cullen era. This is a great documentary about that subject;

The Last Resort: God Defend Our Free Land
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=duk7OfxOzdU&t=41s

Should be freely available, but couldn't find it online.

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Yes i think many generations of politicians have lied to their constituents, repeatedly and most are too gullible to see it, to prideful to admit it, and too weak to fight it. And worse the MSM perpetrate the myths.

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