Estate Living Digital Publication Issue 8 August 2015 | Page 51

The answer to the first question is really straightforward if you remember that it was on their watch that we entered the darn brown creek in the first place and, when they were still in charge, we then also lost all the paddles! The second question is more complex and needs to be looked at both in a historical context and from a financial perspective; i.e. the amount of bucks we give ’em for what they do. In his piece, Echoes of the Jazz Age (a period also known as the roaring 20s – the halcyon and hedonistic social free for all between the end of the Great War and the crash of 1929), Scott Fitzgerald offered an interesting financial perspective on the people we put in charge of our national well-being: “...And so on up the scale into politics where it was difficult to interest good men in positions of the highest importance and responsibility, importance and responsibility far exceeding that of business executives, but which paid only five or six thousand (US $) a year.” A banker in the same period whom Fitzgerald references could expect to take home upwards of US $ 20, 000 per annum – not that bankers were ‘good’ men, but it does illustrate and highlight an interesting discrepancy in perceived ‘worth’ and what we value as a society, and demonstrates a mindset and/or value hierarchy that has been perpetuated over the decades. The same discrepancy can also be applied to teachers and medical professionals to whom we entrust the minds of our children and our own wellbeing, but whom we seem reluctant to pay a salary commensurate with their social value. However, as the issues in this case relate to fiscal governance, we must focus on ѡ