The
Prime Minister was right when he said lifting the remaining Covid19
restrictions earlier this was week was an anticlimax. Most New Zealanders had,
like the rest of the world, been treating Covid19 as “just another illness” for
a long time. They had largely been ignoring the self-isolation requirements
that had remained in place here ten months longer than in Australia.
So, the removal of the last restrictions, and the accompanying predictable
chorus of woe from the band of zealots that had so enjoyed ruling the media roost during the
pandemic, was more a reminder of the worst of national times than a cause for
celebration.
What was particularly galling though was the way the Prime
Minister tried to brush off the tough times so many New Zealanders had endured
over the last three and a half years. As Covid19 Minister he was the one who
presided over the concentration camp system that MIQ became. He was the one
that kept families divided, unable to be with dying loved ones or attend family
funerals. He was the Minister who suggested that Aucklanders might require
permits and have designated times to leave town for their summer holidays at
the end of the long 2021 Auckland lockdown. And who will ever forget his
shameful treatment of mothers-to-be like journalist Charlotte Bellis, to whom he
was obliged to subsequently publicly apologise, when she wanted to return home
to have her baby?
It was therefore little wonder that in the lead-up to the
election he was keen to banish any lasting memories of Covid19 and his role in
managing it. Whereas Dame Jacinda
Ardern rode a wave of public support for her handling of the early stages of
the Covid19 response to a landslide election victory in 2020, Chris Hipkins
knew full well there be no such wave for him. The last thing he wants is to be
reminded of his Covid19 actions during what is already shaping up to be
Labour's most difficult election since 2008.
A recent report from
the international media and software giant Bloomberg on international lessons
to be learned from the pandemic rated New Zealand’s response the best because
the number of deaths recorded here was marginally lower than what might have
been normally expected during a similar period. It
attributes this performance to a combination of our geographic isolation,
border closures, and lockdowns, alongside clear, consistent leadership, at
least in the early stages of the response.
However, it also points out that the “severe
lockdown” came at a cost. It noted the high cost of border closures on the
tourism sector which accounts for “about 19% of the country’s export revenues,
far higher than the 7.9% or so in France and Italy and 9.5% in the US.” Keeping
the economy afloat in such circumstances “meant that government debt increased
faster than in almost any other developed economy, rising 43% in local-currency
terms compared to a 15% jump in the UK and 5.4% in Japan”.
According to Bloomberg, the pandemic has “left harmful
after-effects”. Between March 2021 and October 2022, it reported there was a
sharp rise in emigration with emigrants outnumbering immigrants by 215,571,
equivalent to about 7.5% of the country’s labour force. That has contributed to
rising inflation and the cost-of-living crisis New Zealand households are now
experiencing.
Bloomberg’s overall conclusion about New Zealand goes to the heart
of Hipkins’ current dilemma about how to deal with the ongoing consequences of
the pandemic. It says, “New Zealand made its isolation from the world the
cornerstone of its success against Covid. It may end up its Achilles’ heel as
well”.
However, there are signs New Zealanders are embracing a more
normal way of life again and quickly re-engaging with the rest of world once
more. Travel companies report significant increases in the numbers of people
travelling abroad over the last year. On the domestic front, the success of the
recent FIFA Women’s World Cup shows that New Zealand is once more open to the
world, and ready to welcome tourists. These indications confirm that most
people have moved on from the pandemic and are now far more preoccupied with
current circumstances and how they cope with those, than recalling the dark
days that caused them.
But this feeling may not last. It was the same at the end of World
War II, the last great international disruption before the Covid19 pandemic.
Initial public euphoria gave way over the following few years to public
impatience at the slow rate of progress toward economic and social recovery. By
1950, incumbent governments in Britain, Australia, and New Zealand had been
voted out as a result.
Hipkins knows that the pandemic and Labour’s handling of it is no
longer the election winner it was in 2020. Rather than invoking it at every
opportunity as was the case then, Labour today barely mentions it. Getting rid
of the last Covid19 restrictions this week was therefore about consigning the
pandemic to the past, so Labour can focus unencumbered on the future as the
election nears, without the reminders of the dark years.
But whether all those whose lives and businesses were disrupted or
ruined by MIQ, the lockdowns, and border closures regard this week’s decision
as just an anticlimax as the Prime Minister does, remains to be seen. Their
answer may come on election day.
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