MEDIAWATCH: Prof Robert MacCulloch and how the NZ Political Right ate one of their own

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Watching the political right eat one of their own helps illuminate their true intentions and real values…

Integrity Briefing: NZ’s “Chumocracy” and the suppression of Prof Robert MacCulloch

New Zealand’s “soft corruption” has been called out this week by leading economics professor Robert MacCulloch of the University of Auckland. He’s launched some heavy broadsides at the way that political and business elites in this country are ruining the economy and the political process by their dysfunctional hold on power in which dissent and debate are suppressed using patronage and threats.

MacCulloch’s criticisms come about in the announced closure of his website, which he says is due to pressure from Cabinet Ministers and others. His main complaint seems to be that New Zealand is run by a “chumocracy” of mates whose “cosyism” is leading to national decline.

Cabinet cancel culture?

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MacCulloch announced this week that he is closing his long-running blog, explaining that “National, Labour and Big Business NZ have begun to complain & threaten me at the highest levels about my writings. The game has become clear. Continue doing so and it will mean the end of your career” – see: DownToEarth.Kiwi Closing Due to Threats from National & Labour Parties & Big Business NZ Incorporated

MacCulloch, possibly New Zealand’s leading academic economist, has been fearless in combating oligopolies in the economy and exposing the “cosyism” in our political system. As his last blog post says, he’s “exposed the links between the Big Banks, Supermarkets & Building Firms with our Minister of Finance and PM. It has all been too much for the establishment to bear.”

In interviews and writings this week, MacCulloch has outlined how the attempts of himself and others to hold powerful interests to account have been met, not with reasoned rebuttal, but with threats, blacklisting, and institutional pressure designed to silence dissent. His experience provides a rare insider’s account of how New Zealand’s political and business elite police the boundaries of acceptable debate. MacCulloch explicitly claims to be closing his website after receiving “threats from current and former cabinet ministers.”

He has also recounted specific threats and institutional pushback, such as the supermarket chain Foodstuffs attempting to silence critiques of the duopoly by contacting Auckland University over a colleague’s writing. He also revealed that a director of a major New Zealand corporation had recently complained to his employer about his writing. The impact is chilling.

MacCulloch also highlighted the danger of defamation lawsuits and the real risk of being labelled a troublemaker: “You get excommunicated from the little cosy group of inbred Wellington officials and high-ranking boards.” He says he has become “persona non grata”.

…welcome to my world!

Look at his criticisms of what the Rights values truly are…

Political appointments as patronage

MacCulloch’s core accusation is that New Zealand operates on a system of “soft corruption.” This week, he has explained what this means: “there is a high level of soft corruption going on in the country, and I’ve learned about corruption in New Zealand. It usually is not money under the table like it is in most countries and suitcases of cash. Corruption in New Zealand takes the form of you scratch my back, I scratch yours.”

The message conveyed to him, particularly from figures associated with the current National-led Government, was that positive political commentary would be rewarded with political appointments. He relayed the type of messages he receives from politicians: “You write lovely articles about us, and you tell everyone how wonderful we are, and there’s more likely to be… something in it for you. Oh gosh, you know, maybe you’ll be put on a board or something.”

MacCulloch argues that this patronage system is how the “inbred club” maintains control over appointments to high public and private offices. It’s about ensuring that only those who toe the line and don’t rock the boat are considered for positions of influence, be they directorships or advisory roles. This creates a powerful incentive for self-censorship among academics and commentators who might otherwise offer robust critiques.

In an interview on The Platform with Michael Laws this week, MacCulloch said he was essentially excommunicated by New Zealand’s political establishment for criticising government economic policy and elite appointments. The final straw for him, he said, was the accumulation of pressure from current and former Cabinet Ministers, who made it clear that his public commentary had made him unwelcome in influential circles, including appointments to public boards and advisory roles.

MacCulloch has tenure at the University of Auckland and says he has no ambition for public roles. However, his case illustrates how dissent is discouraged not by direct censorship but through reputational smears, legal intimidation, and the closure of career pathways. He simply asked: what’s the upside of dissent when the costs are so high and the returns nil?

A central theme in MacCulloch’s recent and past analysis is the existence of a “cosy inbred club” running New Zealand. This cosiness, he argues, comprises interconnected individuals across politics, the corporate sector, and the civil service, who are often “promoted way beyond their abilities.”

Of this widespread cronyism (or “corrupt inner circle”), MacCulloch observes: “Every high-status job in the country is just a job for mates”, and appointments are “so corrupt it’s beyond belief – now it’s just a group of people going from one big job to the next even when they’re not qualified and don’t deserve the job.” He argues that the last Labour Government entrenched a culture of ideological appointments, and the National-led Government is continuing the same pattern — just swapping in their own preferred cronies.

…the Right implement donors interests at the cost of the common good because that’s all the values National have, donor interests.

Look at the manner in which the 4 Aussie Banks can rob us of monopoly profits while running policy…

MacCulloch’s allegations about the influence of big banks

Probably the blog post that got MacCulloch into the most trouble was his recent argument that Finance Minister Nicola Willis forced out Reserve Bank Governor Orr on behalf of the big banks – see: Incriminating evidence now points to Finance Minister Willis forcing out Governor Orr to take over the Reserve Bank of NZ on behalf of the Big Banks. In this, he alleged that Willis, acting on the advice of lobbyists and corporate lawyers, pushed for looser capital requirements at the behest of big banks and circumvented the Bank’s statutory independence.

His account catalogued a series of interactions: meetings between Willis and lawyers with lucrative public contracts, secret consultations with the New Zealand Initiative (where she previously sat on the board), and the elevation of insiders to oversight roles in the banking sector. He also noted the sudden shift in the Reserve Bank’s policy after Orr’s resignation as further evidence of political pressure. His most damning allegation is that these moves were orchestrated to serve the interests of monopolies (especially the big banks) and that Willis is now acting on behalf of those oligopolies rather than the public.

MacCulloch alleges that Willis is “doing the bidding of the big banks” and questions her motivations, suggesting a link to her former boss, John Key, who chaired ANZ Bank, a job she “also covets when she retires from politics.” He highlights that while Willis orders the RBNZ to potentially cut capital requirements, Australian regulators are ordering ANZ to increase theirs.

This has been a recurring theme in MacCulloch’s recent work – about the influence of corporate interests on the National-led Coalition Government as a whole. He claims Willis takes advice from lobbyists and “people you just wouldn’t believe”, including lawyers with questionable histories.

More broadly, MacCulloch decries the National-led coalition’s reliance on “ghosts exhumed from the past,” pointing to a string of appointments of figures from the John Key era to significant review and governance roles: Bill English, Murray McCully, Paula Bennett, Simon Bridges, Steven Joyce, Lester Levy, Peter Gluckman, and Neil Quigley. This, he argues, shows a lack of new thinking and ensures “we ain’t no meritocracy anymore.”

…and of course the Free Market NZ Initiative is behind it all…

MacCulloch highlights the oversized influence of The New Zealand Initiative

MacCulloch’s ire frequently targets the New Zealand Initiative, a think tank he repeatedly labels as the “National Party’s Adviser / Think Tank” and a lobbying group for corporate monopolies.

He highlights the connections:

    • Finance Minister Willis was a Director of the NZ Initiative.
    • The Prime Minister’s Chief Economic Adviser, Matt Burgess, was a Senior Economist at the Initiative and previously advised Bill English. Chris Luxon, as CEO of Air New Zealand, also used to attend Initiative meetings.
    • The Initiative’s board includes figures like Scott Perkins (Non-Executive Director of Woolworths), Chris Quinn (Chief Executive of Foodstuffs North Island), and Barbara Chapman (former Chair of a Big Bank).
    • The Chair of the NZ Initiative, Roger Partridge, is also the former Chair of Bell Gully, where Willis’ father was a partner.

MacCulloch accuses the Initiative of being “Pro-Monopoly, Anti-Consumer.” He cites their support for the Foodstuffs North and South Island supermarket merger, their push for lower bank capital requirements (which he argues would shift risk to taxpayers), and their opposition to requiring internet giants to pay for local news content (Google is a member of the Initiative).

He argues that the National Party hasn’t done the necessary work on economic policy, which means that the NZ Initiative can step in with some ready-made answers, which the Government essentially adopts as its policy. In this sense, MacCulloch accuses the Initiative of being a cypher for what the oligopolies want implemented by the Coalition Government.

The big banks, electricity companies, supermarkets, property developers, and petrol companies tell the NZ Initiative what policies would suit their businesses the best, and this is passed onto the Beehive, which loyally seems to implement them. According to MacCulloch, this has resulted in the Coalition Government becoming pro-monopoly.

This type of influence, together with donations and corporate lobbying, means that New Zealand’s political parties have been brought off. MacCulloch says such politicians should be forced to declare these connections: “It’d be good for them to be required to wear their gang patches announcing to Kiwis who and what they truly represent, rather than hiding in shadows.”

…you will remember Damien Grant ended the sponsorship of The Working Group because I was critical of the NZ Initiative.

The NZ Right use political leverage to implement their interests and pretend that’s social and economic policy.

We are having the common good strangled for corporate power manifested most venally in the Regulatory Standards Bill that will allow Corporations to vet all legislation to ensure property rights trump human rights.

TDB has been making these points for the last few years, watching those exact same criticisms from someone on the Right who has been blacklisted for coming to the same conclusions should be awake up call to just how welded the interests of the far right and corporate greed have become in NZ Politics.

We have allowed our post-covid bitterness to blind us to what National, ACT and NZF have become.

We must resist this, we must push back and stand against these cruel and selfish interests.

We need to be kinder to individuals and crueller to corporations!

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10 COMMENTS

  1. Took him a while to figure it out then he has a big cry and dummy spit.
    He’s attacked both sides so has not many friends, this was foreseeable.
    He’s right about the nepotism as a form of corruption through both major parties and local government and the public service, and the collusion of multiple oligopolies.
    What’s his solution? Quit.

  2. We can all see this at work in the media all over NZ .Two years ago the media were demanding the execution of a member of government every week .Now they say nothing because they are too scared to say anything because tomorrow they will be unemployed .Where is the headlines calling for Willis head because she failed to budget for the $700 plus she needs to top up the extra 1% for government employees kiwi saver .Funny how the greens found the cockup but last week the government were calling them clown economists .Whos the clowns right now $700 million here and the business welfare fund will blow its $6 billion in the first year on top of the $3 billion handed to landlords .

    • Any one remember the $16 billion hole in the John key era budget.
      National cant design a budget that adds up at anytime.
      their budget is written up on the back of a a4 sheet of paper the rest is just fluff.

      • You accurately describe the Greens budget, the budget presented by the Coalition is economically and mathematically sound which is beyond your comprehension level.

        • No it’s not Bob the Knob. The coalition is f’ing useless and numerous sources not from the left will tell you that.

  3. I think it’s got a bit bigger than the old boys network having a few gins in the Northern Club and haw-hawing about who they’ve shafted that week and who received the latest cosy sinecure.
    Now the nest of far right vipers in NZ colludes with the nest of far right vipers in Canada with secret meetings between Stephen Harper and Bull Inglush even when both have been expelled from office, and John Key lurks in the shadows looking for any opportunity to pocket another billion at the expense of NZ mum and dads, while the whole cess pit is organised by Atlas Network who uses member organisations to penetrate the media and psyche of nations to overthrow democratically elected governments and indigenous rights while installing authoritarian governments to implement measures to quell dissent and prepare for the end of the Western world.
    John Key’s “club” is not some group of doddery old fools, it is an international cabal of incredibly wealthy tyrants who desire no less than complete power and to own all the world’s wealth.
    And NZ is one of the primary centres of this criminal organisation.

  4. ” MacCulloch announced this week that he is closing his long-running blog, explaining that “National, Labour and Big Business NZ have begun to complain & threaten me at the highest levels about my writings. The game has become clear. Continue doing so and it will mean the end of your career ”

    Yes that would explain why Hipkins and his colleagues sat on their hands in the last government and are predictably silent now.

    I seriously doubt about his sincerity regarding pay parity. Or in fact anything related to progressive policies.

    This explains David Parker’s retreat back into the real world. He literally saw the writing on the wall.

    If there was any doubt that the NZLP was not a front for the same powerful interests operating in the current government it is these revelations and Hipkins speech that the wealthy are people too. He will only talk to organizations like the business and commerce ensuring they have nothing to fear when LINO is back in the Beehive.

    He will tell the Unions that LINO is as good as it gets so keep your expectations low.

    Hipkins and LINO are a front to keep the corruption rolling when the Nasty Natz get thrown out.

    They are simply part of a far larger problem and in no way an option for serious reform and change.

    Right now in the UK pressure is building for a new party on the left that is not beholden to the financial establishment like the current Labour government.

    https://www.thecanary.co/uk/analysis/2025/05/25/merseyside-liverpool-independents-labour-conference/

    There will be NO Green TPM influence in a future LINO led government. Winston will assist with that.

    A depressing but well timed post Bomber.

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