Well, we made it through the most disruptive year in the last 50. As I reflect, it was the last gasps of the war in Vietnam and Australia’s involvement that even comes close to the disruption of 2020.

However, sitting in the epicentre of the Corona ‘Croydon Cluster’, 2021 looks pretty sad.  Unlike a year ago looking forward to 2020 with optimism, despite the fires that had been lingering around, about to break out into the inferno that started 2020 on such a bad footing.

As the year progressed, downwards, we had now forgotten floods right after the fires that destroyed communities and took lives, then the Corona bug caused an economic and social lockdown which continues.

Our PM started the year very badly, hiding in Hawaii, then trying to find a hand to shake in the ashes of Cobargo, but learnt his lesson and did a surprisingly good job of leading into the corona crisis, bringing the state Premiers and unions into a collaborative forum which for a few months looked like having a lasting benefit. Then the urge for political and partisan chicanery took hold across federal and state jurisdictions, and the year ended in a dogfight over proposed IR changes that will be central to the 2021 destruction of any remaining urge to collaborate across party and philosophical lines.

On top of the chicanery, we had the NSW premier, perhaps the (formerly) most respected political leader in the country, first fess up to a relationship with a disgraced former parliamentarian who had clearly used the premier in more ways than one for personal gain at the expense of the taxpayers. Then followed her admission that pork barrelling was a normal part of the political process. While we all knew that is the case, the evidence over a long period is unequivocal, it is just that hearing it said, so explicitly, was shocking.

Then China decided Australia needed a kick up the backside, and progressively closed off their economy to Australian exports, a process still evolving, although apart from iron ore, there seems little left to ban. We represent only a tiny fraction of China’s imports, but they represent almost 40% of our exports, and 27% of our imports. This is a dislocation of our economy that will have severe long-term consequences, and the best we can do is have a new minister with no diplomatic chops at all, blathering about a pivot to India. To be fair, it is not an easy problem to solve, but politicians grandstanding and publicly shooting their mouths off are unlikely to help much.

We have become hooked on Government stimulus spending, what happens when it is turned off? This is uncharted territory as private investment has been booted in the belly, despite the lowest interest rates in my lifetime, and households are deleveraging as fast as possible given the uncertainty.

Stimulus investment has been more about mitigating the negative impact of Corona, than it has been about putting in place the drivers of future growth. This is understandable, and has been commendable, but we must recognise that it is a tactical response to the crisis, not a strategic one with long term outcomes of growth as the objective.

Politically, we have no confidence in the collective leadership to address the problems in creative and constructive ways, but we assume the pollies will make sure they are OK. We simply do not trust them any more, the old adage that if a pollies mouth is open, they must be lying, is sadly more current than ever.

Underlaying all this we had the spectacle of many politicians who for unfathomable reasons continue to have power, resolutely refusing to accept the overwhelming science surrounding climate change for the last 30 years, jump in the ‘believe the science’ bandwagon in relation to the virus. This level of obstinate hypocrisy is dazzling in its depth.

We might hope that the collective ‘We’ have learnt a lot from this year but suspect that we have not. With a federal election coming any time from August this year, strap in for more piles of rhetoric, lies and pork barrelling, laced with sweet smelling perfume trying to hide the stench of the bullshit. That will be piled on top of a now highly partisan media that has replaced fact with opinion and populism, largely controlled by a former Australian octogenarian billionaire living in New York. No independent thinking and reporting there, so we will have to dig harder than ever to see the truth in whatever ‘mainstream’ media  feeds us.

As a final note, most people are thinking about how to make 2021 better, they are making resolutions, usually big things, outcomes. Something like ‘I will lose 20kg‘. 99.9% of these resolutions made in the depths of new year celebrations, go out the window by the second or third week of January. Instead, decide to make some small changes that will lead to the outcome. We all know that small changes in behaviour both compound and lead to the opportunity to make bigger changes later, so resolve to make a couple of small, easy to maintain changes to your behaviour that will contribute to achieving the objective. This is basic management, do not focus on the objective without recognising that changes must happen if you are to get a different outcome from that which you are trying to move away from.

Look out and stay safe.