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The Presentation Fallacy continues to plague economic debate in Australia — and not in a good way for conservatives.
For a long time after the financial crisis, most of us lamented that the dearth of economic reform in Australia was because politicians lacked the ability to sell it effectively. Most of us saying that had been around in the Hawke-Keating era, so we’d been imprinted with the idea of the genius politician talking the community to a reform nirvana. If only Wayne Swan and Julia Gillard/Joe Hockey and Tony Abbott/Scott Morrison and Malcolm Turnbull would more effectively present reform, all would be well.
But we’d ignored data that didn’t fit the facts. John Howard — supposedly another courageous reformer — had lost government because of WorkChoices, despite frantic efforts to sell the original version, and then a watered-down version cobbled together in a panic. The problem with WorkChoices wasn’t the presentation — on which the government lavished over $100 million — but the product itself. We also ignored that the media environment of the Hawke-Keating era had long since fragmented into the communications equivalent of crazy paving.
The Presentation Fallacy (that we could have lots of reform if politicians communicated better) is a convenient blindfold that means you don’t have to look at the fundamental question of why voters need brilliant communicators, marketing campaigns and manipulation to believe something is good for them. For political elites — and I’ve been one of them — it can seem a mystery why voters won’t support things that are allegedly in the national interest. But, in effect, we were asking them Groucho Marx-style who they were going to believe: a slick marketing campaign, or their own lying eyes? As they contemplated soaring power bills, falling wages and corporations paying little tax but hefty executive remuneration, the Presentation Fallacy held that they could be convinced with some better talking points.
A while ago many of us started to work out the product was poor, not the packaging. Even the Reserve Bank has worked this out. As Philip Lowe said in June, “slow wages growth is diminishing our sense of shared prosperity. If this remains the case, it can make needed economic reforms more difficult.” Good luck trying to find an effective communications strategy for slow wages growth. The remedy is to speed it up, not spin it.
But in the wake of the weekend byelections, the Financial Review opined “the pressing issue now for the Coalition is just how to make its economic argument more compelling to cut through the untruthful Labor narrative about a rotten unfairness and increasing inequality.” The Australian the following day lamented “many of the lessons relate to selling a message”.
Now The Oz’s top bloviator, Paul Kelly, complains that the government “has been unable to sell the idea that proper funding of health and education depends on economic growth or that having a competitive corporate tax system is essential to growth and jobs.”
The Oz editorialised that “the Coalition needs to embrace and win the inequality debate: increased growth, lower taxes, reduced power prices and extra jobs help to push inequality down further. Company tax cuts, too, are designed to create more opportunity. Make the case with facts.”
The problem is, voters know the facts perfectly well — in particular, how their wages have stopped growing and, in the private sector, gone backwards, despite constant promises from the political class that growth was around the corner. And that’s happened at the same time corporate profits have surged and executive remuneration has grown seven times faster than the pay packets of ordinary workers.
Over the last three years, both parties have been forced to shift in response to a growing sense within the electorate that the economy is working for corporate elites, not for them. But the Coalition has only done it when forced politically, while persisting with neoliberal policies like its company tax handout that will worsen inequality and, contrary to Kelly’s silliness, undermine funding for health and education.
Labor has shifted across the breadth of its policies, focusing on protecting wages and bolstering health and education funding. Labor will be very happy if the right continues to believe that all it has to do to restore neoliberalism is to hit on some killer lines for a press conference.
Thanx for the ‘presentation fallacy’, which neatly encapsulates much corporate ‘strategy’ as well.
It is extraordinary that the Australian Financial Review and the Australian can write such dishonest opinion without stating anything that is factually false.
…. Do the working classes buy advertising space in their rags?
“BS remains an editorial decision and prerogative”.
The mudorc challenged the owner of an upscale NY emporium, Bloomingdales if memory serves, as to why they never advertised in his rags.
He was not best pleased with the answer, “Sir, your readers are our shoplifters.”
It is interesting that policies, decisions etc which may be plainly wrong or which defy commonsense or are plainly stupid – the reason why there is great resistance to them is put down to ‘not communicating effectively’ or not enough marketing – never to the basic fact that the product being espoused is itself unbelievably defective and in the long run people will not beleive the B….sh..t thrown at them.
look at the recent eHealth.gov changed to My health . gov – changing the name doesn’t change the defects a campaign a bit like – You cannot believe it is not butter – the advertising debacle that went on & on until they woke up no one was listening or buying – The Pollies still haven’t learnt the lesson.
Desmond – please learn to make the distinction – Do not tar Labor with the LNP brush, their polices/actions/attitudes are poles apart.
Any attempts to claim “trickle down” from the Company Tax Cuts was pretty much shot to hell at the end of May, when that BCA Memo got leaked.
Welcome to the dissenters camp Bernard. Some of us have been here a while. Like, since 1983. In 1997 Stephen Bell (Ungoverning the Economy) tabulated the numbers for the post-war couple of decades: GDP growth average, 5.2%, unemployment average 1.3%, inflation average 3.3%.
Neoliberalism *never* worked, it was a con. The ’70s problems were the quadrupling of the oil price, US money printing, and perhaps a bit of imbalance in labour vs capital that could readily have been fixed.
The economy has struggled on due to a huge build up of household debt, excessive working hours and the deceit of saying the economy has grown because it has 250,000 more people in it each year. GDP per capita is not mentioned.
See Sack the Economists, The Rise and Failure of the Radical Right, and Desperately Seeking the Fair Go:
https://betternature.wordpress.com
I haven’t heard any journo challenge the government on the More Jobs for Australian Families fairytale currently being parlayed.
For example, should banks be handed $17B in tax cuts precisely where will these new jobs be created? Perhaps, for the convenience of their clients, they are planning to re-open dozens of rural branches closed down & much missed over recent years? I jest. The detail needs to be explained by the banks – exactly what jobs, where? Their answer, if they manage to confect one, should prove fascinating.
The “More Jobs for Australian Families fairytale” Isn’t even a fairytale. It’s an outright lie. Nothing this shambolic government, or the Business Council, or any of the other corporate shills touting this gift to bottom lines can say will ever turn it into the truth.
It’s in the same vein as the “new jobs” that were going to be created by penalty rate cuts. A bit of simple mathematics showed that up as a lie too. Mr. Harvey gave the real purpose away, when he said the decision would improve his bottom line by $900,000. I wonder how much more he’ll get out of the current tranche of reductions which started to be effective on 1 July.
As for the banks, their record shows there won’t be any new jobs in banking. Wasn’t it NAB who, in the same press release, skited about a record half-yearly profit, and announced the sacking of 6,000 people? No matter, they’re all the same. There’ll be no new jobs there; nor will there be new branches, or any more employment. But no doubt they’ll try to convince us of the opposite. As you say, it’ll be fascinating to watch.