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We like to do self-congratulatory back patting from time to time at this Blog. Why? Since we believe we get most of our economic predictions in NZ correct. The reason is that we chase facts, have good sources, and solid bases for making predictions, rather than an agenda of trying to brain-wash readers into our preferred way of thinking, like most journalists in our Main Stream Media. In November 2021, we ran the headline The Next Election (in 2023) will be a Cost of Living Election. Although NZ was in the midst of Covid back then, cost-of-living did become the No. 1 election issue two years later. We predicted inflation would take off & interest rates rise to combat it, before any other commentator - including the Reserve Bank. Which brings us to Election 2026. It will be a Tax Choice Election. And tight.


The National-ACT-NZ First Coalition is in more danger than the polls suggest. We're not far from 2025, which is its last full year of government before the next election. GDP in 2024 is officially not growing - we're stagnant at 0%. That has put the coalition under enormous pressure to find the revenues to fund New Zealand's welfare state - its health & pension systems, which are being stressed due to ageing population - let alone invest in water supplies, Dunedin & Whangarei hospitals, & build new infrastructure. Should economic growth be tepid in 2025, which it likely will be, public services will become run down. NZ Labour's solution will be a copy of the UK Labour Party's "solution" being rolled out at we speak. Hiking taxes on the wealthy. Whoever leads NZ Labour in 2026 will defend their Election Platform along similar lines to the UK Chancellor now, "Labour will launch a new era of public & private investment in hospitals, schools, transport & energy as momentous as any in the party’s history in this week’s budget", Rachel Reeves said. The choice will be presented as "underfunding public services" (National) versus "investment in the country's future" (Labour). The folks targeted by Labour to pay the bills will be wealthy NZers. Just like the British PM Sir Keir Starmer is currently doing in the UK.


Why the similarity to British politics? Because, for all the pretense NZ is growing up, forging its own identity, when it comes to economics it certainly is not. In terms of those institutions, we're still squarely a British Colony. Our health system is the same model as Mother England's. Its "socialized medicine" - which means single public provider / single public payer, whereby wealthier folks can opt out with private insurance. Our education is based on the UK's "specialize early" approach, whereby after leaving school, students go, for example, straight to law, medicine, or engineering, doing specialized degrees - rather than the US 'liberal arts' approach, where you specialize later. Our parliament & court systems are "adversarial", copying the British. We don't have an "inquisitorial" French-style approach where a judge is appointed to investigate facts. NZ corporate law is based on the British shareholder model. We drive on the left, being one of the few, other than Britain, and the Union Jack's in our flag. Where did Jacinda Ardern learn politics? London, in UK Labour PM Tony Blair's office - not exactly a marae. And her new best friend is Prince William.

What this means is that NZ has not moved on and done its economic institutions differently from the UK. When Margaret Thatcher started her market reforms in the 1980s, NZ did its market reforms at the same time. Both in the UK & NZ, there was a backlash against those reforms, although they have nearly entirely been kept in place in both countries. Now both the NZ Labour Party and UK Labour Party are promoting capital taxes to go after the rich, and "rebuild" public services - with the British set to increase their rate and NZ Labour set to propose them. Ironically, those most in favor of demanding a break from the UK by saying the Treaty never ceded sovereignty, which includes the Opposition Leader, leftist armies of University academics, historians & legal "experts", are the same ones who support classic UK approaches to economic management. They don't want French style health-care, where everyone can choose to go public or private, since they hate privatization, like British Unions. They don't want Singapore-style savings schemes let alone US style anything. That group are trapping us in a colonial mindset more than any other. They've colonized NZ economics, and are about to propose UK Labour economic solutions for NZ Election 2026.

Those of us in the trade have long known that the quality of maths education in NZ was in decline, before it became news headlines and a political issue. So years ago, a Charity I help run started awarding prizes for Maths teachers. Good Maths teachers have a big range of employment opportunities outside teaching - making the salaries they receive in schools often unattractive. The least we could do was offer them Best Maths Teacher Prizes. In 2017 we gave our inaugural Kalman Teacher Excellence Prize to Subash Chandar at Ormiston Junior College in South East Auckland. Today he features on the front page the NZ Herald:

"By day, Subash Chandar is in the classroom, teaching maths to Year 7 to 10 pupils at Ormiston Junior College. By night, he switches on his computer, logs into his YouTube channel infinityplusone and goes live for some of his 52,000 subscribers, tuning in as Chandar K. He solves maths problems, goes over NCEA curriculums & talks viewers through previous exams. Another 8,000 follow him on Instagram; 4,000 on TikTok. This time of year is particularly busy, with thousands of Kiwi teens across the country preparing for end-of-year NCEA exams".


In addition to winning our Kalman Charity Prize in 2017, another private Charity, this time Australia based, gave him their National Excellence in Education Award in 2019. Now we're helping fund the South & West Auckland Maths Challenge (SAMC). Josephina Tamatoa and Katalina Ma are the brainchilds behind it. They say "The ‘trends in international mathematics & science study’ (TIMSS) scores for Aotearoa paint a bleak picture. This initiative gives students opportunity & fosters belief in their potential as mathematicians. The success of SAMC and the follow up success of Māori & Pacific students in Mathex regionally is a prime example of what happens when you instill confidence in communities".


But its not for private charities to sustain all of these activities - the Nats, ACT & NZ First better reward maths teachers way more, or there wont be any left. Some Best Maths Teacher Prizes & the "South Auckland Maths Challenge" aren't enough to turn it around, by a long way.


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