A great material history of the colonisation of Aotearoa that centers the role of financial instruments and techniques.
Contra-familiar histories of this colonisation that starts at the signing of the Treaty/te Tiriti, this book starts with the role the New Zealand Company played in colonisation not just without the explicit sanction of the Crown, but in direct defiance of it. The role of the joint-stock company and how its structure was created for the expressed purpose of being able to withstand the much higher risks of international colonisation (compared to more localised economic endeavours). That the joint-stock company as a structure marked the first time non-state supported joint financial ventures were able to be carried out with the support of great numbers of people that were not personally known to each other was interesting to consider. The author also drew attention to the joint histories of colonisation from the 17th to 19th centuries and the development and use of the joint-stock companies for these colonial projects (e.g., the probably more world-renowned Dutch East India Company), I wish there was more about this. You really get the sense from Chapters 2-5 that the initial "selling" of land, then the purchasing of it, and materialising these land claims, and then the transfer of all these "bought" land to the Crown were all just.. absolutely blundered through: with the sales of hundreds of thousands of acres of land to speculators and intended colonisers before the Company had ANY material basis for the land at all, and then the buying of land off Maori with couple of potatoes (apparently literally), with alienation of land being not even a conceputally possible thing for te ao Maori ignored, and then the materialising of claims just straight up being a couple of guys putting down wooden pegs around the land that was supposedly "sold". More than the moral indignity of it -- of: imagine you're just here living off the land that exist in relation to, and some guy just comes and puts a stick of wood down and says "hey you can't be here that's mine now" -- I'm honestly mad I held some sort of image that this was somehow a systematic process for so long. Like: come on, THIS is why New Zealand exists??? THIS is why we can't have land back??
Part of the point is, the state could have very easily reversed all these claims to the land, and they made a very deliberate choice, among other actions by bailing the Company out with public money, to capitalise on the opportunity opened up by the New Zealand Company without their initial need to intervene, and the author does a very good job of making this clear.
The next Chapter (chapter 6) discusses how the colonial project was now given more force to carry on under the control of the state from 1840s onwards. The practice of buying land cheaply off Maori and then reselling at great capital gains, which were then used to further fund colonial expansion in Aotearoa, was carried on from the practices of the New Zealand Company. Except unlike with the Company, the state had arms to back its claims up.
The use of taxes during this time was also grounded well in its political intentions and implications. Along with discussions around the Native Land Acts and the setting up of the Native Land Court in Chapter 7, and the Dog Registration Act in Chapter 8, the author illuminates well how finance was explicitly used in 1: the alienation of land from Maori, 2: the proletarianisation of Maori and thus assimilation into European ways of life/ontology.
Simply, what happens is this:
1. Maori are legally required for various reasons to pay the colonial administration -- whether that'd be indirectly through customs tax on goods Maori were disproportionately targeted to consume, requirements of hiring government appoint land surveyors, or paying the Dog Tax.
2. Since Maori often had no access to cash in their communities, given their lack of need for it prior to 1840s, they had to sell the very thing Europeans wanted from them: land. They were able to sell land under their guardianship despite te ao Maori not having any notions of ownership relations with land because Pakeha institutions had set up infrastructures that enabled this possibility: through processes that transformed Maori who had relations with Land to shared owners of land who each individually controlled a section that can then be bought and sold.
3. Maori without land to work and sustain off of had to begin selling the only thing they still possessed: their labour power, to Pakeha capitalists. Entering into these capitalist relations also necessarily entails their beginning to rely on various other institutions which white workers had to in Britain.
This book is not fatalistic however, and in the last few chapters the author specifically highlights various ways Maori have used finance and financial instruments to resist the colonial project, te Peeke o Aotearoa (the bank of Aotearoa set up by Maori to gain financial independence from the colonial administration and finance their own government) I thought was a particularly great example. In the conclusion, ongoing ways financial systems are continuing the process of colonisation and transformation of land relations to property relations are also brought up, I think I'll be able to be more attentive to these things now that I've read this book.