But excuses and reasons are easy when you're trying to justify holding on to an addiction. Foreign debt and asset sales to foreigners are the nation's enablers.
New Zealand has been spending much more than it has earned since about 2000.
In the past 12 years, we added about $100 billion of foreign debt and sold off a bevy of private assets to ensure we could maintain our lifestyles. Meanwhile, falling productivity and the growth of government undermined our ability to export our way back to prosperity.
When will someone stage an intervention to shake us out of our trance?
Key is not the prime minister to do it. He has presided over a Government that has financed a blowout in its deficits funded by foreign creditors, including the Chinese Sovereign Wealth Fund that has bought our bonds, along with Kim Dotcom.
Key campaigned to extend a programme of state asset sales that would lead to significant portions ending up in foreign hands.
The only way to end our addiction to overspending is to throw out the enablers of foreign borrowing and selling assets to foreign interests.
The proportion of our national income that has to be siphoned off to foreign creditors and asset-owners has risen from 2 per cent of GDP in the early 1970s to about 8 per cent now.
Eventually we will not be allowed to borrow more and will not have anything left to sell. Who will reassure us and enable us then?
Bernard.hickey@interest.co.nz