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Ken Henry and the establishment

By Mark Christensen - posted Tuesday, 30 April 2019


Yet the essential drivers of culture remain organic, always beyond our intellectual efforts to make things happen.

"We understand what the concepts mean in general terms," he informed Orr. "But I am not sure I could satisfy you with – in fact I am sure I couldn't satisfy you with a very precise definition."

Hence his radical plan to treat customers as ends in themselves. To regard them as means to a profit objective wrongly presumes human relations are quantifiable and thus within our control.

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It's ironic. For leaders to cultivate the right culture – whether in business or across society generally – they must first unconditionally accept the limitations of the political and economic hierarchies they oversee.

Disruptive phenomena such as Brexit and Trumpism confirm it's time this truth be reflected in actual behaviour, not just rhetoric.

If asked, members of the ruling class readily concede there is no silver bullet. But this is not how they act. Nor is it what they want the punters to think.

As any religious zealot knows, moralising requires black-and-white answers. For the establishment to admit it's more nuanced than yes/no or one/zero would put at risk its vast edifice. People must believe implementing the Commission's recommendations will ensure that the failings of the banking sector never happen again. Even though this attitude guarantees they will.

Kenneth Hayne singled out Henry and CEO Andrew Thorburn, suggesting they won't learn from the lessons of the past.

"More particularly," he said, "I was not persuaded that NAB is willing to accept the necessary responsibility for deciding, for itself, what is the right thing to do, and then having its staff act accordingly."

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But here's the real ruse.

We endure corporate Groundhog Day because it is the wider establishment which is unwilling to put people before the system, to let go and allow the likes of NAB to take responsibility for performance and entrust it to those at the coalface.

Henry and Thorburn had to go so others at the top, and the swamp of lawyers, bureaucrats, regulators and various hangers-on who depend on them, could continue to obscure the con game that goes on.

In order, perhaps, to retain the prospect of being readmitted to the club down the track, Ken Henry went meekly. It’s a shame he couldn’t muster the conviction of Malcolm Tucker, scapegoated before a public inquiry in the final series of The Thick of It.

"You don't like your species. And you know what – neither do I. But how dare you come and lay this at my door, [when it's] the result of a political class which has given up on morality. And simply pursues popularity at all costs."

"I am you and you are me."

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About the Author

Mark is a social and political commentator, with a background in economics. He also has an abiding interest in philosophy and theology, and is trying to write a book on the nature of reality. He blogs here.

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Creative Commons LicenseThis work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.

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