Sunday, 21 September 2008

A recipe for New Zealand

Last year, John Williams, one of New Zealand's relatively unsung entrepreneurial heroes wrote a piece for the website nzedge.com setting out ten strategies that would restore New Zealand to the league of wealthy nations, where most of us - I suspect - believe we should be. John used to own Marton-based company PEC (New Zealand) Limited, which developed some revolutionary petrol-pump technology that is now in common use around the world.

From this smart, technology-based platform, which has successfully been taken to global markets, John has produced a list of his 'must-dos' that would see New Zealand transform itself into a genuine knowledge-based, smart economy that we need to become if we are to remain globally competitive.

The list begins, not surprisingly, with a suggestion that New Zealand industry should emulate his success, by 'maximising growth in the sectors where we currently produce world-class products and/or services.'

He includes several strategies for business and commerce, but he also recognises the need for a sound basis in a strong and fair society, recommending (No.4) that the values-based "Kiwi-Can" programme should be extended to all primary and secondary schools.

Whether you agree with the details of this 10-step recipe is, I think, less important than that here at last is someone taking a long-term, strategic look at what New Zealand needs to do. One of the features that I feel has been sadly absent from our national debates over the last decade has been that we have not really talked about what sort of a country we want New Zealand to be. We have argued at length about policies, fairness and tactics; and we've even talked loftily about 'knowledge economies', 'growth waves', 'innovation frameworks' and so on; but without some hard decisions about what we're actually going to do, these will remain simply as cliches.

This debate isn't optional: if we don't at least have the discussion, we'll continue on the current path, where, while enjoying its best trading conditions for decades, New Zealand has barely held its place in the OECD's income rankings. If we have the debate, it's quite valid that we might reach a consensus that we don't want to get back among the rich nations. But I doubt that will be the answer.

What I think we might discover is that dragging ourselves back up the growth curve is in reality the best path to those global standards of health, education and social outcomes that most New Zealanders instinctively want. Unless we're generating the wealth, we can't spread it around. New Zealand's general election is only seven weeks away. Let's challenge ourselves, and the people who aspire to represent us, to take this national debate seriously... to show us their strategies for growing the pie, rather than changing the way we divide the existing one... and to make sure that all sectors of society take part and help to develop a sense of vision and purpose for the next decade.

And, while we're at it, let's not leave it just to the politicians. As leaders in our own sectors, we need to have these discussions around our board tables: how do we build our company to take advantage of the global opportunities (and counter the threats) of the increasingly complex global environment we're in? If we all address these questions, the sum of our answers will go a long way towards providing the answer for New Zealand.