New Zealand has just gone through an election campaign as if in a daze. We woke up the morning after that white-knuckle World Cup final and the party that followed with a bad case of blurred vision.
National and Labour talked past each other and the voters early in the campaign with a pointless exercise in fiscal jujitsu.
There's a good case for Treasury to actually do the costings for each party's policies as well as produce the Pre-election Fiscal Update (PREFU) after this year's bout of he-said-this, he-said-that.
Both parties paraded up and down the country ignoring the storm brewing over the seas in Europe, America, China and Australia.
Both were relaxed about assuming that growth would power the budget deficit back into surplus within three years. Neither were willing to address the structural deficit worth about 3-4 per cent of GDP that they both baked in over the past six years through tax cuts, Working for Families and interest-free student loans.