Framing the Role of Government and the Economy

Introduction

Want to know how to frame communication about the government and the economy in a way that will be of benefit? Here is useful research that was presented at the conference Virtual Progress 2020 (Australian Progress) by Lily Spencer from Australian reMADE.

For the full presentation download the PDF from the yellow box below. Here is a sneak peek.

Summary

Most people defaulted to a very narrow vision of the role of government in the economy: taxing and spending, or making laws to regulate business… ‘interfering’ with private sector people who usually have the best solutions to people’s problems.

There is a real opportunity now especially to talk up what we can do through government to benefit people’s lives.

3 Bits of Advice from Research

table with text
Our message, their story – ExampleOur message, our story
The government says we can’t afford to extend JobKeeper to everyone, or keep the rage of JobSeeker high, because the budget will go broke.
But that’s just not true. We can’t afford NOT to look after everyone properly, as ultimately the cost to the economy will be greater.
– We all need a strong social safety net when times are tough. (Vision).
– But right now the Prime Minister’s policy excludes certain people from JobKeeper, and he’s about to send JobSeeker back to poverty rates. (Human made barrier.
– Good, responsible government should expand JobKeeper and maintain JobSeeker because it’s the right thing to do. (Specific solution)

Critiquing Government

  • The research shows that when most people hear criticism of ‘the government’ or even politicians, they understand it as ‘our system of democratic government isn’t working.’
  • They are left to conclude that private corporations are the viable option for getting something done.
  • When we point out the shortcomings of political leadership, focusing on what government should do conveys what they have done wrong, in a way that encourages people to think good government can do right. When criticising a government policy, program or project, or lack thereof, say ‘government can/ should do x,’ not ‘government has failed to y’.
Government as the problemGovernment as the solution
– By excluding casuals from the JobKeeper payments, the government has failed to provide for some of the most vulnerable in our society.
– The government has failed to take climate change seriously and now they’re pushing a gas-fired recovery.
The private sector has pushed a million people into casual contracts. The government should expand JobKeeper to make sure everyone in our society is taken care of.
– The next energy boom is going to be renewable. Government can move us past fossil fuels to become the next global energy super power.

Metaphors be with you

Use journey metaphors

We’ve seen how far we can go when we listen to experts, work together and put people first. The road ahead may have challenges, but we can do anything when we put our minds to it. What once seemed impossible — free childcare, homes for people who need them, raising the rate of income support — now seems obvious.

So where do we want to end up on the other side of this?

Use building metaphors

Let’s lock in and build on the pollution reduction gains we’ve made during this time. Australia has the tools to become a green tech powerhouse. We know how to design green agriculture that draws carbon out of the air. We can engineer a sustainable transport revolution. We can build better lives and livelihoods in harmony with nature. We can take this opportunity to build back better than before.

Avoid war metaphors

Covid-19 is not a ‘battle’ against an ‘enemy’ we must defeat at all costs. That implies pitting nations or people against each other, fanning flames of fear, paving way for authoritarian government crackdowns.

REPLACE

  • We can fight this virus
  • ‘Frontline’ workers
  • Win the battle against covid-19

EMBRACE

  • We can navigate our way through this
  • Essential workers, teachers, nurses, shop-keepers, etc
  • Slow the spread, flatten the curve

Avoid ‘economy as a patient’

It’s hard to do in this health + economic crisis, but primes people to think of economy as a natural body or entity we shouldn’t ‘interfere’ with. Try to use the word ‘recovery’ only holistically — referring to people or society as a whole, not economy/ budget/ sharemarket.

REPLACE

  • Revitalise the economy
  • Economic rescue package
  • We need a stimulus
  • Economy is on life support
  • Resuscitation

EMBRACE

  • Get the economy back on track
  • Supercharge the economy
  • Flick of a switch, reset
  • Steering us towards a better future

Access Resources

Download slides

Explore Further

See the Framing Guides & Manuals tag on the Commons for related resources.