- Roger Douglas
Infobox_Officeholder
honorific-prefix =The Honourable
name=Sir Roger Owen Douglas
|caption=
order=33rd Minister of Finance
term_start=26 July 1984
term_end=14 December 1988
predecessor=Robert Muldoon
successor=David Caygill
primeminister=David Lange
constituency_MP2=Manurewa
term_start2=1978
term_end2=1990
parliament2=New Zealand
predecessor2=Merv Wellington
successor2=George Hawkins
birth_date=birth date and age|1937|12|5
birth_place=Auckland,New Zealand
death_date=
death_place=
spouse=
party=Labour (1969–1990)
ACT (1993 - present)
religion=
profession=AccountantSir Roger Owen Douglas (born
5 December 1937 ), aNew Zealand politician, formerly served as a senior Cabinet minister. He became arguably best-known for his prominent role in the radical economic restructuring undertaken by the Fourth Labour Government during the 1980s ("Rogernomics "). In 1993 he founded theAssociation of Consumers and Taxpayers (the forerunner of theACT New Zealand party) withDerek Quigley .Early life
Douglas was born on
5 December 1937 . His family had strong ties with the trade-union movement, and actively engaged in politics. His father Norman Douglas and a brotherMalcolm Douglas both became Labour politicians.Douglas received his secondary education at
Auckland Grammar School , and gained a degree inaccountancy from theUniversity of Auckland .Member of Parliament
After some experience in local-body politics as a member of the Manukau City Council, Douglas began his career in national politics in 1969 when he won election to parliament as the Labour Member of Parliament for Manukau. He became involved in the party's policies on industry and
economics . He served as the MP for Manukau from 1969 to 1978, and then for Manurewa from 1978 to 1990.Labour under
Norman Kirk won the 1972 election, and the Labour parliamentary caucus elevated Douglas to Cabinet rank. During the Third Labour Government, he served as Postmaster-General, Minister of Broadcasting, Minister of Housing, and Minister of Customs. However, Kirk's unexpected death in 1974 (and his replacement by Bill Rowling) became factors in Labour's defeat by the National Party underRobert Muldoon in the 1975. Douglas became Labour's spokesperson on housing until 1980, when he acquired responsibility for the trade and industry portfolio. In informal Labour caucus politics, Douglas became a member of the " [http://www.teara.govt.nz/EarthSeaAndSky/HarvestingTheSea/Seafood/2/ENZ-Resources/Standard/2/en Fish and Chip Brigade] ", which grouped him withDavid Lange ,Mike Moore , andMichael Bassett . In 1983, when David Lange became leader of the Labour Party, he made Douglas the Labour spokesperson forfinance .Minister of Finance
Labour returned to power in the election of 1984, forming the Fourth Labour Government. Lange became
Prime Minister and gave the Minister of Finance role to Douglas. Douglas began to implement revolutionary policies. Known as "Rogernomics " (a coinage based on the term "Reaganomics ", used to describe the economic policies of US PresidentRonald Reagan ), the measures involved monetarist measures to controlinflation , the slashing of subsidies and trade tariffs, and theprivatisation of public assets. Traditionalists regarded all of these policies as a betrayal of Labour'sleft-wing stance, and Rogernomics became deeply unpopular with those who supported the political left inNew Zealand . Douglas's supporters defended the reforms as necessary to revive the economy, which National's Muldoon had kept under tight regulation. "Euromoney " magazine chose Douglas as its "Finance Minister of the year" for 1985.Federated Farmers had proposed most of these reforms. For example, they supported the removal of farm subsidies as well as all the othertrade barrier s. However, becauseFact|date=March 2008 farmers traditionally supported the National Party, the Labour Government applied the reforms to farmers first, in such a manner that the subsidies disappeared while farmers still had to pay for the protected machinery they needed, so many farmers felt hit hard.Despite implementing substantial reforms which made it unpopular amongst many sections of the community, the Labour government won re-election in 1987, with a substantial majority in the legislature (58.8% of the seats). SomeWho|date=March 2008 argue that Labour's re-election stemmed primarily from the weakness of the opposition National Party and from public support for Labour's other policies (such as its stand against
nuclear weapons ). Douglas, along with his supportersRichard Prebble andDavid Caygill , maintained majority backing from the Cabinet to continue with their reforms, up until the conflict between Lange and Douglas. Shortly after the election and the "Black Monday" stock-market crash, Prime Minister Lange moved to stop the changes. A protracted conflict between Lange and Douglas broke out in Cabinet. Eventually Lange dismissedRichard Prebble in November 1988 and, following Douglas' announcement of a new flat-tax system and aGuaranteed Minimum Income scheme, forced Douglas to resign his ministerial positions at the end of 1988.The Labour Party
caucus , however, voted to return Douglas to Cabinet in July the following year. While Lange had perforce to accept the decision of caucus, he did not have to reappoint Douglas to his old post. Douglas became Minister of Police and Minister of Immigration, much more junior positions than his old role of Minister of Finance. The rejection by caucus of Douglas's original dismissal, however, had weakened Lange's position, and the Prime Minister himself resigned the month after Douglas returned. Lange's successors (Geoffrey Palmer andMike Moore ) did not, however, restore Douglas to his former position, and Douglas proved unable to pursue his economic programme. Douglas did not stand for Parliament at the 1990 election, which Labour lost. His policies, however, continued under the aegis ofRuth Richardson , the Minister of Finance in the newFourth National Government of New Zealand (seeRuthanasia ).Roger Douglas became a Knight Bachelor as The Honorable Sir Roger Douglas in 1990. [ [http://www.dpmc.govt.nz/honours/lists/nzom.html New Zealand Honours Secretariat listing] , retrieved
2008-03-25 ]By and large, subsequent governments have retained or re-inforced the policies promoted by Douglas in the years 1984 to 1987 — including low levels of import-protection, "credible" monetary and fiscal policies, deregulated
financial markets and limited subsidies and other interventions in the economy. TheHeritage Foundation /Wall Street Journal 2006Index of Economic Freedom ranks New Zealand 9th-highest in the world, (equal with the United States and Australia).ACT New Zealand
In 1993 Sir Roger Douglas co-founded the Association of Consumers and Taxpayers with
Derek Quigley . Sir Roger and Quigley intended the Association to serve as a pressure-group promoting the Douglas economic policies. Shortly afterwards, in 1996, the country switched to using the MMP electoral system. (Some commentators Who|date=March 2008 attribute this change in part to public perceptions about betrayal by the "established" parties, with Labour's pursuit of non-leftist policies figuring as the most major of those perceived betrayals). MMP gave smaller groups a much better chance of entering Parliament, and encouraged the new Association to establish theACT New Zealand Party. Sir Roger served as the new group's first leader, but soon stood aside forRichard Prebble (his old ally from their days in the Labour caucus).Sir Roger has remained a strong supporter of the ACT party, although he has become somewhat unhappy with the party's alleged lack of focus on pure economic policy. In particular, Sir Roger has criticised what he sees as
populism within the party, claiming that some of its MPs seem more committed to grabbing headlines than to developing policy-frameworks. When in April 2004Richard Prebble announced his decision to retire, Sir Roger spoke out in favour ofStephen Franks andKen Shirley as possible successors — the other main contender in the leadership race,Rodney Hide , generally had a reputation for advocating the style that Sir Roger condemns.Rodney Hide won theleadership and currently heads the ACT party.On
2 December 2004 , both Sir Roger andDerek Quigley announced that they would step down as patrons of ACT. They stated as the reason for this action that they wished to have more freedom to disagree with the party publicly.On
21 February 2008 Sir Roger renewed his involvement with the ACT party by signing a letter inviting supporters to the 2008 ACT conference, and appearing in television and newspaper interviews endorsing ACT for 2008. [cite news|title=Sir Roger makes his peace with Act |url=http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/1/story.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10494804
publisher = "The New Zealand Herald "
date=27 February 2008 ]At ACT's 2008 Annual Conference in
Auckland , Sir Roger announced his intention to stand for Parliament once again, as an ACT candidate in an unidentifiedSouth Auckland electorate. An announcement on8 June 2008 associated Sir Roger's candidacy with the newly-created electorate ofHunua . [cite news
first = Audrey
last = Young
title = Douglas to take high position on Act list
url = http://www.nzherald.co.nz/category/story.cfm?c_id=144&objectid=10515163
work =The New Zealand Herald
publisher =
location = Auckland
date = 2008-06-09
accessdate = 2008-07-12
quote = The announcement about Sir Roger's decision was made by Mr Hide yesterday at a barbecue at Karaka in the Hunua electorate, where Sir Roger will stand. ] He is third on the ACT party list for the 2008 election. [ cite news
first = Maggie
last = Tait
title = ACT party announces list
url = http://www.nzherald.co.nz/feature/story.cfm?c_id=1501799&objectid=10528079
work =The New Zealand Herald
publisher =
location = Auckland
date = 2008-08-20
accessdate = 2008-09-01 ]The Roger Award
In a back-handed compliment, the founders in 1997 of the annual award for "The Worst Transnational Corporation operating in New Zealand" - as voted by left-wing groups - named it the "
Roger Award " after Sir Roger Douglas.Outside politics
Since leaving politics when he retired from the leadership of ACT, Sir Roger has held senior positions at a number of prominent companies. He currently serves as the managing director of his own group, Roger Douglas Associates.
References
Further reading
*
External links
* http://www.rogerdouglas.org.nz/
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