NZ's
rockstar economy in rehab
Andrew
Gunn
ROBERT KITCHIN/FAIRFAX NZ
the Press,
9 May, 2015
New
Zealand's rockstar economy has cancelled all future appearances amid
rumours that it has gone into rehab.
The
news comes after revelations this week that the rockstar economy was
found comatose in a trashed Wellington hotel room by a small cluster
of self-proclaimed Young Nat groupies.
Hotel
staff immediately notified emergency services who in turn dispatched
a team of macro-economists to the scene to convene a seminar on how
best to revive the ailing economic system.
Forensic
accountants later established that the rockstar economy had passed
out after bingeing on a potentially lethal cocktail of milk powder,
Auckland house prices and Canterbury earthquake insurance payouts.
Friends
of the rockstar economy – worried that its increasingly exorbitant
and extreme lifestyle had become unsustainable – have called for
intervention in the past.
"The
rockstar economy was spinning out of control" said one. "It
was always going to crash – it was just a matter of time. Only last
week I heard it on the phone to Fonterra, pleading for one more hit
to make it to the end of the financial quarter."
But
calls for a "cup of tea and a lie-down" have repeatedly
been blocked by the rockstar economy's manager, "Colonel"
Bill English.
"There's
no need for concern," a visibly sweaty Mr English told
reporters. "The rockstar economy has simply been on a
weight-loss programme and hasn't quite achieved its goal."
News
of the cancellation has dismayed hardcore rockstar economy fans who
had snapped up tickets for its "Gods of Surplus" tour
opening on Budget Day, May 21.
"I'm
absolutely gutted," said private wealth consultant "Tiny"
Dodge.
"We've
all sacrificed a lot to get to this point. I had my PA camp out in
the queue for two days to get access-all-areas tickets to Bill
English's post-budget business breakfast. If the rockstar economy
isn't going to perform like he promised I'll be demanding a tax
refund."
It
has been a boom and bust ride for the rockstar economy, which first
got its act together in Roger Douglas' Manurewa garage in 1987. It
was a time of burgeoning free love for free markets, when the pill of
supply-side economics promised liberation for a generation shackled
to the priming-pump of Keynesian dogma.
After
early artistic differences which saw original leader David "Fat
Boy Slim" Lange split from the band, the rockstar economy was
managed by Ruth Richardson, seen by some as being a Svengali-like
figure and others as the early 1990s answer to Simon Cowell.
Whichever
view history proves correct, no-one can doubt that Richardson's
mentoring instilled the hard corrosive edge that saw the rockstar
economy grace the cover of Rolling Stone magazine's
"Fiscal Faves" edition.
Meantime,
Mr English has assured fans that the rockstar economy's path to
recovery is well in hand, with a studio session to planned to record
its new album, Climate Changer.
"I
can't too say too much, but with tracks like Drill Baby
Drill, Unleash the Carbon and Born To
Frack this one will turn up the heat for sure."
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