‘Occam’s Razor’ is the idea that as you progressively eliminate possibilities, what you have left must be the truth, no matter how unlikely it may seem. Some might call it ‘first principles’.
While Occam’s Razor goes back to William of Occam, the 14th century philosopher, there is a recent iteration.
Occam’s broom.
A molecular biologist by the name of Sidney Brenner introduced that addition to describe the brushing of inconvenient truths under the carpet.
Last Thursday night at a ‘workshop’ hosted by a voluntary group, ‘Re-Invent Australia‘ both were on display.
The strategic objective of Re-Invent Australia might be summarised in the words of the great Peter Drucker: “Ideas are cheap and abundant, what is of value is the effective placement of those ideas into situations that develop into action.”
The task set was to identify the major causes of failure of Australian political governance under the headline five general areas nominated from a wide field by the committee: Education, health, innovation, diversity, and aged care, which need immediate attention.
The second, and to my mind even more important part of the exercise is the question: ‘How would we change them’?
The eternal strategic ‘What and How’ questions.
The objective was not to host another gabfest, but to motivate action that might generate results from which we could all learn.
We have just seen a federal budget. ‘Back in the black’ briefly, for the first time since 2007. If ever there was a time for a federal government to seriously address some of the big and growing structural inequities in the economy, it is now. This is where Occam’s broom came in for some extensive use.
First term government, first (sort of) budget, an opposition in total disarray and incapable of tying its own shoes, and it goes soft on anything that might prove combative with vested interests.
In short, they squibbed it based on the expected noisy backlash, rather than taking the once in a generation opportunity to address those structural challenges we all see.
The agreement of the fossil fuel industry to the barely apparent uptick in the PRRT shows how much harder the government could have gone, minimal changes to a taxation system no longer fit for purpose, the ‘palm-off’ of any discussion about the scheduled income tax cuts, or little genuine analysis of the long term causes of the housing shortage with concrete actions and timetables, and so on.
Vanilla.
The politically difficult reality is that if we want to change the infrastructure of the economy to better reflect the country we want to live in, and the world we wish to be a part of, we will need to take some challenging decisions. Many of these will prove to be unpopular with varying noisy and often cashed up segments of the economy, who will not stop at anything to protect their immediate narrow interests.
We cannot afford any longer to exercise Occam’s broom and sweep them under the carpet.
That is what government should be for, exposing and acting on the failures of the market, to shape the future of the country our children and grandchildren will inherit, not guarantee yourself access to commonwealth cars for the next 3 years.