Politically, Sutch was generally on the left, although his wide network of friends included people of all political persuasions, and perhaps the person he most admired was the centre-right politician
Gordon Coates. He was involved in a number of left-leaning organisations and associations, and helped edit and publish literature connected with them. In 1939, he assisted the publication of "Psycho-pathology in Politics", written by Labour Party dissident
John A. Lee which was an attack on the party's leader,
Michael Joseph Savage. Sutch wrote numerous books. Among the first were:
Poverty and Progress in New Zealand (1941, 1969), which echoed the work
Progress and Poverty, by the Californian
Henry George (1879), known as the "single [land] taxer"; and
The Quest for Security in New Zealand (1942, 1966)., which to Sutch was a related topic.
Early career In 1933, following some teaching in
Palmerston North Boys' High School, Sutch took up a position in the office of Gordon Coates, who was
Minister of Finance. When the government changed, he continued on in the office of Coates's successor,
Walter Nash of the
First Labour Government. During this time he was elected as the first President of the newly formed New Zealand Association of Scientific Workers (now known as the
N.Z. Association of Scientists). He had considerable input into economic policy at the time. Eventually, Sutch's political activities were deemed incompatible with his official role, and he was transferred out of the economic sphere. He left the civil service to join the army, becoming an instructor. He returned to the Ministry of Supply arranging equipment and finance.
Work overseas At the end of the war, he took up a position with the new
United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration (UNRRA), working in Sydney and then in London, covering war-devastated Europe. As a result of this work, he was selected to head the New Zealand delegation to the United Nations, where he held positions with the
Economic and Social Commission and
UNICEF. He played a crucial role in a UN decision to continue with
UNICEF, despite a United States desire to close it down. Ben Alpers has said that some of the credit for UNICEF's
Nobel Peace Prize should go to Sutch and New Zealand. Soviet documents claim he was recruited as a spy in 1950.
Return to New Zealand Upon returning to New Zealand in 1951, Sutch worked for the Department of Industries and Commerce, eventually in 1958 rising to be its Secretary. The
First National Government had blocked Sutch's promotion to the head of the department because of an American threat that they would regard New Zealand's security as suspect (The United States communicated secret information to its
ANZUS and
SEATO allies which included New Zealand). Leading National Party MPs openly regarded Sutch to be a Communist. However the
Second Labour Government appointed Sutch to be permanent head of the department. Prime Minister
Walter Nash, who knew Sutch well, ignored the objections of the Security Service who thought an appointment was not worth compromising allegiance to the United States. Nash's biographer described Sutch's elevation as a "courageous decision". There he promoted the development of the
New Zealand economy using the policy instruments of the day, including
price controls, subsidies and import controls. He concluded that pastoral exports by themselves would not generate enough foreign exchange to maintain full employment, and would continue to make the economy highly vulnerable to fluctuations in international conditions. So he sought import substitution, the further processing of agricultural production for export, and the exporting of non-pastoral agricultural exports, manufacturing and services (such as tourism). As such he foresaw, championed and laid the foundations of the great export diversifications of the 1970s. Sutch's promotion of industrialisation was anathema to much of the farming community, though many in the business community supported him. In March 1965 he was forced to retire after 40 years of public service employment. His dismissal letter said, "you do not enjoy the confidence of the business community and of the Government to the measure desired of the permanent head of your department." At the age of 57 he became a consultant. Among his many further publications were the books,
Colony or Nation?,
The Responsible Society in New Zealand,
Takeover New Zealand, and
Women with a Cause. His
festschrift,
Spirit of an Age, was published in 1975. Sutch became active in the arts and architectural communities, including the
Wellington Architectural Centre. He was an early and active promoter of
New Zealand design, asserting that quality design was central to economic and social development. He helped to set up the Wellington Architectural Centre, provided the intellectual framework that led to the formation of the New Zealand Industrial Design Council and chaired the
Queen Elizabeth II Arts Council (now
Creative New Zealand).
Legacy Sutch's writing provides one of the most comprehensive accounts of, and visions for, New Zealand. While his views were often original and independent, many that were rejected at the time are now accepted. He was a nation-builder who wanted to see an economically strong and socially fair New Zealand, free from colonial ties, whether economic or political. He was a committed nationalist, and on many matters ahead of his times. Economist Brian Easton has argued that: "The events surrounding the trial overshadowed the significance of what went before, and have muted subsequent recognition of his intellectual contributions." The trial also overshadowed his role in the establishment of
UNICEF. Sutch's daughter, Helen Sutch, said after the declassification of
New Zealand Security Intelligence Service (SIS) documents in 2008: "Our family hopes that justice can now be done to that historic legacy, which has been overshadowed for so long by events in the last year of his life". ==Controversy==