Open mike 11/06/2024

Written By: - Date published: 6:00 am, June 11th, 2024 - 71 comments
Categories: open mike - Tags:


Open mike is your post.

For announcements, general discussion, whatever you choose.

The usual rules of good behaviour apply (see the Policy).

Step up to the mike …

71 comments on “Open mike 11/06/2024 ”

  1. SPC 1

    A huge gain in wealth, has not resulted in any increase in tax

    "I thought the rich list was really interesting, the thing that stood out for me is that over the last year the increase in wealth of that very small number of people at the top has increased by $23 billion," Wood said.

    "That would be the equivalent of $10,000 for every single wage and salary earner in New Zealand, and that's been at the time of a recession.

    The Taxpayers Union perspective

    "No one in the world taxes that (unrealised CG), and it is disinformation to encourage comparisons to those primarily earning PAYE income," spokesperson Jordan Williams said at the time.

    https://www.newshub.co.nz/home/money/2024/06/aotearoa-s-rich-list-shows-new-zealand-is-a-little-out-of-balance-e-t-union-organiser-and-ex-labour-mp-michael-wood.html

    In this he is not siding with income tax payers, but those who would be subject to CGT or estate tax (24/36 in the OCCD have both) – making ours one of the the least progressive regimes in that group.

    We have only a bright-line test lasting up to 2 years, no zero free threshold and our top rate of income tax is in the bottom third.

    https://stats.oecd.org/index.aspx?DataSetCode=TABLE_I7

    The only mitigation to inequality is tax credits to support low income families.

    UNREALISED GAINS AND TAX

    Concern at the trend to borrow against unrealised CG and then pass on wealth to others in ways that result on tax, even where there is an estate tax.

    https://marginalrevolution.com/marginalrevolution/2021/10/the-tax-on-unrealized-capital-gains.html

    Options – 5% stamp duty on houses sold over $2M – as Oz does (up to $500M pa with 5000 sales).

    https://www.stuff.co.nz/business/132844161/50000-homes-open-for-purchase-by-foreign-home-buyers-under-nationals-plan

    A 5% windfall tax on bank profits $6B – $300M pa. A 1% stamp duty on all houses with exemption for the owner occupier.

    • tc 1.1

      I recall a crikey piece where oz billionaires over the 3 covid years of 2020-2022 increased their wealth by an average of 66%.

      A rigged game for capital, labour doesn't stand a chance.

    • Ad 1.2

      OK so I'll try an alternative view.

      The only companies we could successfully tax like this are the ones with assets that are fixed in New Zealand.

      The rest would quickly offshore to avoid new taxes, because they are mobile.

      Typical examples of likely capital mobility are Xero who listed in Australia, the Mowbrays who are entirely family-held, NZSuper because they are mostly international shares. Another would be ACC Fund, other than their local projects.

      The large ones who would be taxed would be all the iwi entities, many of the energy entities, Fonterra and Tatua, all local government companies and Crown entities, all local housing entities and owners. Those taxes would be passed on to the local consumers: us.

      The question I'd like to see from any party is: how do we generate more multimillionaires not fewer?

      • Great comment Ad. If the left really wanted to get rid of poverty we'd see policies designed to create as much wealth as possible for as many as possible.

        Often it seems what they desire is as much power as possible for as few as possible.

        • weka 1.2.1.1

          Great comment Ad. If the left really wanted to get rid of poverty we'd see policies designed to create as much wealth as possible for as many as possible.

          how would that end poverty?

          • Michael Scott 1.2.1.1.1

            Weka that is a great question. I have been thinking about a response all afternoon. I don't want to give a trite answer so will respond tomorrow on OM.

      • Incognito 1.2.2

        The question I'd like to see from any party is: how do we generate more multimillionaires not fewer?

        That’s easily answered and done: subsidise Lotto.

        https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/national/518980/lotto-seven-winners-to-split-whopping-50m-jackpot

        Alternatively, give landlords a huge tax cut and transfer even more wealth to them.

      • SPC 1.2.3

        The only companies we could successfully tax like this are the ones with assets that are fixed in New Zealand.

        Total nonsense. The only tax on companies mentioned was a windfall profits tax on Oz banks – who make some of the world best returns here – so would not leave.

        Would you care to explain in what way a CGT, or estate tax or stamp duty impacts on any of the companies mentioned?

      • Drowsy M. Kram 1.2.4

        The question I'd like to see from any party is: how do we generate more multimillionaires not fewer?

        Little ol' NZ is apparently up there (#5 of 48 countries listed) when it comes to the percentage of Kiwis who are millionaires (~9.6%). Some might say that's not a bad platform for "more multimillionaires", and that we should be aiming to close the gap with Australia (#4; 11.2%).

        Others might argue that somewhere in the 4.8% to 8.5% range (Ireland – UK – Norway – Belgium – Sweden – Canada – Denmark – Netherlands) is a more sustainable platform, and healthier in a socioeconomic sense.

        Maybe it boils down to what one values. If Aotearoa NZ really needs moar multimillionaires, then a quick fix would be to direct market NZ citizenship to wealthy foreigners – just until we crack the problem of domestic generation, of course.

        He was controversially granted New Zealand citizenship in 2011 after the Fifth National Government intervened on his behalf. Thiel had spent 12 non-consecutive days in the country, a fraction of the normal residency requirement of 1,350 days for citizenship.
        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Thiel

        Opinion: No more billionaires? We can be more ambitious than that. No one needs more than $20 million [29 Jan 2024]
        We must ask ourselves: “When is enough enough?” And the answer to that question can’t be “1 billion.” Surely, we should be much more ambitious than that.

        New Zealand’s world-beating jump in wealth down to ‘rise of landed gentry’, says economist [21 Sept 2022]
        Warning of increasing inequality as global wealth report shows average wealth per adult in NZ jumped US$114,000 in 2020

        https://berl.co.nz/economic-insights/great-wealth-transfer-and-inequality

      • bwaghorn 1.2.5

        Fuck more multi millonaires, we don't need more people over consuming massively, and let's face it higher wages just get prayed upon by the vultures.

        Link the bottom income to the top , no more than 3× should focus the bosses minds,

        Good housing, top public education, health and transport, is what's needed,

      • Descendant Of Smith 1.2.6

        As proffered some years back by – stop putting our effort into low waged, low productivity industries like tourism, apple production, bringing in foreign students…..

        Oh and learn from Maori about making the country better for our mokopuna.

        Your a dick Michael Scott with your "if the left" because you well know the right has no interest in doing anything about poverty and are the ones who clearly want power for powers sake. Bunch of fuckers pretending to care about anything other than themselves and their wealth. Labour anyway, if you are referring them as left are really national light.

        His primary concern was our place in the world. He showed that New Zealanders work longer and harder than just about anybody, but earn less per hour than nearly all other countries we compare ourselves to. This was true then and it’s still true today.

        A reminder of his presentation back in 2011.

        https://rowansimpson.com/essays/callaghan/

        • Incognito 1.2.6.1

          What exactly is your problem with bringing in foreign students? Is it because they may provide cheap labour?

          • Descendant Of Smith 1.2.6.1.1

            Are you suggesting students studying are high productivity employment as Callaghan talks about?

            • Incognito 1.2.6.1.1.1

              Why are you answering a straightforward question with another question?

              Your link is to an essay about Callaghan, or rather his vision for NZ. It says nothing about international students, which appears to be your opinion. So, again, what do you mean and what is your problem with international students?

              BTW, I don’t think Paul Callaghan did have a problem with bringing in international students into NZ to study here, or did he? His views and vision were not parochial in a narrow sense.

              • Descendant Of Smith

                The point was that we built part of economy around bringing overseas students here which doesn't increase our productivity while they are studying.

                (Now that doesn't mean I think we shouldn't bring students here – there are both negatives such as you have mentioned – used for low cost labour, pressure on housing markets, displacement of NZ students, scams that use study as a means of getting residency as well as positives such as increased diversity of thought, those students once qualified may go on to produce high productivity work, knowledge, inventiveness, etc.)

                Your assumption that I had a problem was irrelevant to the issue of productivity.

          • SPC 1.2.6.1.2

            If the issue is the productivity of the economy, it would not involve continuation of a focus on adding more people in it (migration of workers or students placing pressure on infrastructure) for growth, or focus on low profit sectors (I'd except the food/resource export sector from this – but expect and encourage investment in harvesting tech to reduce dependence on there being available seasonal labour).

            As per foreign students, the focus should be on graduate students (research) in areas important to our economy and locale. Otherwise study in areas where we and the world have skilled labour shortages (such as health care/some areas of teaching – maths/science .. specialist IT/AI, etc).

        • Michael Scott 1.2.6.2

          DOS I think that the left and the right care about ending poverty but they have different solutions to get there.

          What do you mean when you say that we could "Learn from Maori about making the country better for mokopuna"

          It doesn't make any sense. What could we learn?

          Maori top all the negative social indicators for familial dysfunction.

          Violence, crime, substance abuse, incarceration.and educational failure.

          • weka 1.2.6.2.1

            if you see Māori negative stats as a reflection of Māori rather than the system we live in, then there are a whole range of solutions that will be invisible to you.

            Do you really not understand theories of colonisation and systems of oppression? Or is it that you understand them but don't think they are real? Or is it that you understand them but are ideologically opposed to the solutions that arise out of those theories?

            • Michael Scott 1.2.6.2.1.1

              This subject is fraught but my question was about what we could learn from Maori about raising children.

              I'm not sure that I fully understand theories of colonisation but I do know that we have all been colonised at some point.

              I don't believe that Maori disproportionally kill their children because they were colonised as there is a lot of evidence that Maori practiced infanticide before they were colonised.

              The primary cause of child murders is the decision of a person to harm the child

              • weka

                are you saying that Māori in 2024 are culturally predisposed to killing their children?

                Can you please provide the reference for Māori and infanticide so we know what are you meaning?

                • I'm not saying that Maori are predisposed to killing their children.

                  Simply that you can't blame the the effects of colonisation on infanticide committed by Maori today as it was happening before Maori were colonised.

                  Maori pre colonisation lived a class based existence where chiefs ruled . Ordinary Maori had some rights and slaves had no rights at all by historical account.

                  https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/273782/#:~:text=PIP%3A%20There%20is%20much%20evidence,more%20often%20social%20than%20medical

                  https://www.researchgate.net/publication/350101339_'The_Natives_Freely_Spoke_of_the_Custom'_Sex-Selective_Infanticide_and_Maori_Depopulation_1815-58

                  https://nzetc.victoria.ac.nz/tm/scholarly/tei-Bes02Maor-t1-body-d1.html

                  P26

                  .

                  • weka

                    Simply that you can't blame the the effects of colonisation on infanticide committed by Maori today as it was happening before Maori were colonised.

                    Why not? Europeans don't have the same child practices from hundreds of years ago, why would Māori?

                    Your sources are google light. Elsdon Best was a British man who didn't get Māori culture, hence phrases like "the quaint customs of the barbaric Maori". He makes a single sentence reference to infanticide. My understanding is that infanticide was part of many cultures where food was scarce and was the killing of newborn babies. That's the same as the kind of lashing out violence we see now, where there is no intention to end a baby's life in order that older children don't starve.

                    • Weka Maori changed their infanticide practices because the missionaries showed them a better way. They abandoned slavery and cannibalism for the same reason.

                      Not because they signed a treaty but because they became convinced that forgiveness was better than utu.

                      The inter tribal wars that had killed a third of the Maori race from 1800 to 1830 virtually ceased and Maori began to walk a better moral path.

                    • weka []

                      yes there were things Māori valued from the missionaries, for sure. But also, declining population and more secure food sources, infanticide was not needed. Do you understand the pressure of having to kill a new born because there isn’t enough to feed it? All cultures have been there.

                      I just don’t see the connection between that and the violence against children that happens now. We know from European accounts that when they arrived there was very little child abuse among Māori. It was so unusual to the Europeans, that they commented on it.

                      I didn’t say anything about the Treaty, not sure why you bought that up.

                      And btw, utu means reciprocity. It’s not inherently negative in the way you seem to be implying. And at that time, Europeans were shipping people across the globe to a penal colony for stealing loaves of bread. So let’s not forget how other peoples were brutal too.

                    • joe90

                      inter tribal wars that had killed a third of the Maori race

                      Now do the Wars of Religion, the warm up for Europe's mechanised warfare of the 19/20thC, that ravaged Europe for > three hundred years.

                      Just one war, The thirty Years War, claimed the lives of around a third of Germans, and in the territory of Brandenburg close to half the population, and in some areas populations declined by an estimated two thirds.

                      But savages, eh…

                      /

                    • weka []

                      my people in Scotland were apparently running round killing all the men in a rival clan village apart from young kids and oldies. We all have brutal histories.

                      I was thinking about the European wars recently, they’re mindboggling in terms of the politics and scale and how long they did that shit for.

                    • joe90

                      We all have brutal histories.

                      Some time ago I listened to Kim Hill's interview with author Louise Noble…hoo boy…

                      However, consuming human remains fit with the leading medical theories of the day. “It emerged from homeopathic ideas,” says Noble. “It’s 'like cures like.' So you eat ground-up skull for pains in the head.” Or drink blood for diseases of the blood.

                      Another reason human remains were considered potent was because they were thought to contain the spirit of the body from which they were taken. “Spirit” was considered a very real part of physiology, linking the body and the soul. In this context, blood was especially powerful. “They thought the blood carried the soul, and did so in the form of vaporous spirits,” says Sugg. The freshest blood was considered the most robust. Sometimes the blood of young men was preferred, sometimes, that of virginal young women. By ingesting corpse materials, one gains the strength of the person consumed. Noble quotes Leonardo da Vinci on the matter: “We preserve our life with the death of others. In a dead thing insensate life remains which, when it is reunited with the stomachs of the living, regains sensitive and intellectual life.”

                      The idea also wasn’t new to the Renaissance, just newly popular. Romans drank the blood of slain gladiators to absorb the vitality of strong young men. Fifteenth-century philosopher Marsilio Ficino suggested drinking blood from the arm of a young person for similar reasons. Many healers in other cultures, including in ancient Mesopotamia and India, believed in the usefulness of human body parts, Noble writes.

                      […]

                      As science strode forward, however, cannibal remedies died out. The practice dwindled in the 18th century, around the time Europeans began regularly using forks for eating and soap for bathing. But Sugg found some late examples of corpse medicine: In 1847, an Englishman was advised to mix the skull of a young woman with treacle (molasses) and feed it to his daughter to cure her epilepsy. (He obtained the compound and administered it, as Sugg writes, but “allegedly without effect.”) A belief that a magical candle made from human fat, called a “thieves candle,” could stupefy and paralyze a person lasted into the 1880s. Mummy was sold as medicine in a German medical catalog at the beginning of the 20th century. And in 1908, a last known attempt was made in Germany to swallow blood at the scaffold.

                      https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/the-gruesome-history-of-eating-corpses-as-medicine-82360284/

      • gsays 1.2.7

        There's not too much that's alternative about that view. 'Capital flight' is just another catch cry for the defenders of the hegemony of neo liberalism.

        There is plenty enough wealth in this country, the issue is distribution.

        National act on behalf of their affluent donors and Labour, under Ardern and Hipkins, are too gutless to do redistribute it

        • Michael Scott 1.2.7.1

          Gsays there is a strange logic that says the profit I make after paying all due taxes from my own hard work is unjust. But living off the work of others is fine.

          • gsays 1.2.7.1.1

            Yr getting close to the idea with "due taxes''.

            It's not for no reason the same ole trope is squealed every election "No new taxes" as if that would be a bad thing.

  2. SPC 2

    Atlas on high, how dirty money rises up and then trickles down to control the narrative on earth.

    https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/world/519196/money-talks-how-the-mega-rich-can-control-the-narrative-writer-says

  3. PsyclingLeft.Always 3

    From the home of fascism….

    Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni's arch-conservative Brothers of Italy group won the most votes in the European parliamentary election over the weekend, boosting her standing both at home and abroad.

    https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/world/519180/italy-s-pm-meloni-comes-out-on-top-in-eu-vote-strengthening-her-hand

    the Brothers of Italy…led by a Woman….and some of their guests

    international guests included British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak , Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama, Spanish right-wing leader Santiago Abascal and businessman Elon Musk.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brothers_of_Italy

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giorgia_Meloni

    • SPC 3.1

      Fortunately, not a fascist.

      It is like a reprise of the founding myth of Rome itself, the lupa – night worker (maybe a solo mother of her own child) – who provided a home for a pregnant woman carrying twins.

      Italy has issues being in a Euro zone unable to devalue and having high debt costs – and being expected to carry a heavier burden with refugees/migrants (worse since the chaos in Libya and Syria).

  4. AB 4

    Questions that Corin didn't ask Luxon on RNZ this morning when discussing accusations that TPM misused census data:

    • Why is Luxon calling for a public enquiry into the data security of systems, that he does not yet know have actually been breached?
    • Why is he not waiting for the Police enquiry to establish the facts and proceed with an enquiry only if there really was a breach?
    • What is motivating this premature and potentially unnecessary response?
    • The Police are currently investigating David McLeod's handling of political donations. The facts have not been established here either – but as this doesn't seem to matter, why is Luxon not calling a public enquiry into New Zealand's rules around political donations?
    • What do we call a government that uses the institutions of the state to discredit political opponents on the back of what is still hearsay?

    Oh well. Corin's not alone. Even the guys on BHN last night didn't seem to realise that Luxon's enquiry is into government data security, not the truth or otherwise of the allegations against TPM. The latter is down to the Police obviously.

    • SPC 4.1

      Apart from data security and or privacy issue, there seems to be a questioning of any association of TPM associated personnel to a government funded delivery role (as per public service neutrality).

      Which appears to be part of CoC policy to diminish a politicised or nationalist Maori population – one New Zealand before any Treaty and or indigenous consideration (to dismiss minority “co-governance”). The natural outcome of which would be the end of Maori seats and ban any political party based on Maori/ethnic/race identity.

      This is our part in the post Weimar Republic reprise on the right.

      In Europe and in USA this is about immigration, via relating this to crime or to a foreign race and or cultural presence. This partners a rise in nationalist identity, economic protectionism and a return to social conservative values.

      The driver is "insecurity about change" and orchestration of a retreat into a group nationalism laager mentality.

    • James Simpson 4.2

      Who laid the original complaint?

      • Incognito 4.2.1

        Are you playing games?

        You already provided an answer yourself here a few days ago: https://thestandard.org.nz/open-mike-07-06-2024/#comment-2001927

        • James Simpson 4.2.1.1

          Yes, it seems AB missed that, which is why I raised it again.

          This can't credibly be framed as some kind of coalition witch hunt or beat up. Six separate government agencies are investigating this. Its a serious matter that needs answers. Why anyone would be opposed to an independent enquiry is beyond me.

          As the good Chris said:

          ”And so I think if there was any improper behaviour and improper conduct, then it is important that we find out what happened there.”

    • tWig 4.3

      RNZ reminder that Michelle Boag leaked covid personal data to a Nat candidate in 2020. Obviously OK strategy for senior Nats, if they can get away with it.

      Riddet gossip suggests that the complainants are Destiny Church members who were at Manurewa marae at election time (unsubstantiated, of course, but an interesting twist if true).

  5. Joe90 5

    Meanwhile…

    /

    @indubioproreto

    The nordic countries with a completely different result than Germany and France: Spectacular electoral gains for green and radical-left parties (MP overtakes SD in Sweden; F strongest party in Denmark, VAS number 2 in Finland), really weak results for the far-right.

    @indubioproreto

    • a historical perspective from those countries, showing historical european election results for the alternative-left in Denmark and Finland; as well as novelty in Sweden with the far-right SD for the very first time not increasing its vote share in a nationwide election

    https://x.com/indubioproreto/status/1800053488535114116

    • SPC 5.1

      360 majority

      Ms von der Leyen’s centre-right European People’s Party emerged as the biggest grouping in the next European Parliament – 177 to 186 seats.

      And it can govern much as it did in the past European Parliament.

      With the centrist Renew (79) it can still build a majority with either Socialists and Democrats or with Conservatives and Reformists (73)** and Independents (c25^ of 45).

      186 + 79 + 135

      186 + 79 + 73** + 25^

      The Italian PM** is in a good position to extract better polices as per support for nations at the immigration front-line and with debt cost – here on side with Spain. Her support for common cause on Ukraine is her opportunity.

      https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/1024/cpsprodpb/4ab5/live/dd48b1d0-273a-11ef-baa7-25d483663b8e.png.webp

      • SPC 5.1.1

        The Identity and Democracy group did not increase their total because Le Pen threw AFD out of the group for being too right wing.

        The AfD became too toxic even for France’s hard-right leader Marine Le Pen, who threw the AfD out of the right-wing European parliamentary group Identity and Democracy.

        https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c511dpvr8nlo

  6. SPC 6

    A suggestion that National played politics with cancer drugs (as they have done with funding for hip and knee operation funding – older voters), without being on top of the detail or having a methodology to implement action.

    Sorting out "funding" being an excuse to think again about how to do it.

    https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/national/519235/government-ignored-funding-process-with-cancer-drug-promise-former-pharmac-chair

  7. Incognito 7

    National will pull out all dirty tricks to divert attention away from its own shambolic breaking of election promises; they’re in deep shit.

    https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/national/519235/government-ignored-funding-process-with-cancer-drug-promise-former-pharmac-chair

    Cetuximab is not currently funded by drug agency Pharmac […]

    https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/political/519202/cancer-drugs-funding-actively-being-worked-on-nicola-willis

    This is incorrect.

    Cetuximab is funded in Aotearoa but not for this indication. [my italics]

    https://hcmsitesstorage.blob.core.windows.net/cca/assets/T_Ao_TK_Cancer_medicines_availability_analysis_FINAL_2782afa08a.pdf

    It appears twice on National’s list of 13 promised cancer treatments. However, funding one option would make the other one redundant.

    This means that if the first-line gap were filled with cetuximab or panitumumab, this gap in the second line would become redundant (for people who received cetuximab or panitumumab in the first-line setting). [same link as above]

  8. SPC 8

    It appears that opioids more dangerous than fentanyl are being added to MDMA and meth.

    Another reason for testing of drugs (as per needles exchange etc) to enable safe supply is there.

    https://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/new-zealand-not-immune-to-new-fentanyl-sweeping-europe-the-front-page/M6C6EY5L3VCKNLKTQE4AQ7G6PY/

  9. SPC 9

    We (if not New Zealand until 2026), on the political left are seeing some hope.

    Labour-Green + TPM support is at 46.1, with NACT at 45.1.

    NZF has never had more than one term in a coalition government. Not surviving the 1996-1999 term. And leaving parliament after 2005-2008 and 2017-2020.

    https://www.stuff.co.nz/politics/350304545/nz-politics-live-national-and-labour-both-down-latest-political-poll

    • alwyn 9.1

      Can you imagine the Labour Party campaigning on a line that said that they would go into a coalition with the Maori Party, and include them in the Government?

      I find it hard to believe that the average Labour voter would go along with them on that proposition.

      • SPC 9.1.1

        Well you know the National Party lines.*

        It used to be fear of a Labour-Green coalition government.

        If it is now fear of a coalition, involving TPM, cool.*

        Then that is the beginning of acceptance of a Labour-Green coalition backed by a TPM support partner (Green Party in this role in 2017-2020).

        *Posing the issue as one of Labour Party voters not wanting TPM in a coalition is interesting.

        How many National Party voters are happy with the ACT and NZF CofC arrangement?

        • alwyn 9.1.1.1

          "*Posing the issue as one of …."

          Well, I assure you that I am not currently a Labour voter and am unlikely to change at the next election. That said I can't answer the question. Neither can I comment on what National voters might think. I doubt if they are unhappy with ACT as that was very well signaled before the election although what they think about Winston I wouldn't even try and guess.

      • Bearded Git 9.1.2

        Alwyn-Labour will not say they would go into a coalition with TPM.

        They will say a coalition with the Greens (who continue to poll strongly) is likely, and will not rule out forming a government with the support of TPM. This is how MMP works.

    • observer 9.2

      The biggest story from that poll is the one that has never changed, and probably never will until Luxon is dumped by National.

      His personal favourability rating has dropped again, in negative territory. Reminder: it took Ardern 5 years to go "negative" in the same Curia poll. Key took even longer (using other comparable polls).

      Luxon is a total outlier, uniquely unpopular among winning PMs in the MMP era, and even well before that. There was no honeymoon, no budget boost, nothing.

      He appears to have zero self-awareness, so he won't change. His caucus will have to do the change for him. Not this year, but before the election. MPs don't vote to give up power.

      • Bearded Git 9.2.1

        I can see them replacing Luxon with Bishop, who seems at ease supporting all of COC’s terrible policies, but is more eloquent and personable than Luxon and has a better political pedigree.

  10. Kay 10

    From an email sent by an Aussie relative:

    Have you guys been affected much by the cost of living in NZ? It’s getting a bit horrific over here, especially in Vic where we were locked down for 2 years. Guess you can’t print money non stop and expect that inflation won’t go through the roof!

    That last sentence suggests to me that particular RW talking point is certainly doing the rounds, and if you say something often enough, then, not only will you end up believing it yourself, you can bring a lot of the population along with you. (Said relative sadly ended up right down the FB rabbit hole during the pandemic, to the anti-vax extreme, so I don't bother engaging with him on any of this).

    It did get me interested in the current VIC leadership, and policies. It's an interesting budget over seen by Jacinta Allen. A lot of it seems very familiar to our last Labour budget- a wasted opportunity. It will be interesting to see if by their next election in 2026, they too will punish-voted out. They also have a lot of people still stewing about the lockdowns.

    https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/article/2024/may/07/victoria-state-budget-analysis-premier-jacinta-allan-cost-of-living-childcare-student-payments

    • Michael P 10.1

      So you think the huge inflation spikes in all of the western economies in 2021/2022 were caused by something other than vast amounts of government borrowing? (I think the figure in NZ was around $70 billion?)

      What do you think was the cause?

      Note I'm not agreeing or disagreeing with the pandemic response, or lockdowns or vaccines or anything else including the money printing (borrowing).

      Just stating that it obviously caused the jump in inflation and I'd love to hear what the poster can dream up as to what they think caused it…

      • SPC 10.1.1

        QE certainly had an impact on house price inflation – all that money available to banks for on-lending in the housing market and all at low cost.

        But where the money was to compensate for loss of economic activity (lockdowns), not so much.

        There were other causes at the global level.

        The international logistics system was disrupted – shortages.

        Loss of production because of worker shortages.

        The Russian invasion of Ukraine in early 2022 had an impact.

        Here we had some of our own – lack of gib board, loss of migrant worker inflow, the flood events (limited supply of food). The rising cost of eggs.

        • Nic the NZer 10.1.1.1

          "QE certainly had an impact on house price inflation – all that money available to banks for on-lending in the housing market and all at low cost."

          Also untrue, bank lending is not constrained on settlement balances (what your calling money available). The OCR system is setup to ensure there can not be a shortfall of settlement balances regardless of how much lending banks have done. And the OCR was at close to zero before QE anyway, it had been for a long period.

          The spike in house prices was because the housing market was shut down for a few months and all the transactions got compressed together when it re-opened so there was very hot competition on price for a short time.

          • SPC 10.1.1.1.1

            Grant Robertson and the Government were warned in January 2020 that there was a ‘significant’ risk Reserve Bank money printing would push up house prices and deepen inequality

            https://www.stuff.co.nz/national/politics/300223358/reserve-bank-repeatedly-warned-government-money-printing-would-lead-to-house-price-inflation

            Feel free to engage

            QE replaces bonds in the banking system with cash, effectively increasing the money supply, and making it easier for banks to free up capital. As a result, they can underwrite more loans and buy other assets.

            This so-called quantitative easing increases the size of the central bank's balance sheet and injects new cash into the economy. Banks get additional reserves (the deposits they maintain at the central bank) and the money supply grows.

            The bank will keep some of it on hand as required reserves, but it will loan the excess reserves out. When that loan is made, it increases the money supply. This is how banks “create” money and increase the money supply. When a bank makes loans out of excess reserves, the money supply increases.

            • Nic the NZer 10.1.1.1.1.1

              Unfortunately the mainstream economics framework for discussing this is fiction. This has been very widely researched by scores of economists, though primarily (not all) outside the mainstream. In fact banking was better understood by Keynes, Keldor, Robinson and formed the basis of their critique of Monetarism. The mainstream today tends instead to go with the monetarist view that there is a stable money multiplier which relatively expands the broad money supply when some notion of the monetary base expands relative to that stable multiplier. This is total fiction.

              What actually happens when commercial banks agree to extend a loan is they grow their own balance sheet with their own bank deposit liabilities (paid into a sellers account) in return for the agreement to repay the loan (the deposits in a commercial bank account are money and are recorded as such in statistics). If a loan agreement happens within the same bank then no interbank settlement payment happens so clearance balances are irrelevant. The OCR system however means if any bank is short of settlement balances then they can always borrow them to clear payments. The upshot of this is the availability of settlement balances doesn't have any implications for commercial banks ability to extend loans.

              Here is a source for the same description,

              https://larspsyll.wordpress.com/2024/06/07/mmt-the-key-insights-3/

              The main driver of lending is the credit worthiness of potential borrowers and regulations which might inhibit certain loans being made.

              That this must be accurate should actually be very easy to see when your not focused on single very specific examples. After 2008 a lot of nations engaged is extensive QE policies without this resulting in massive extension in lending. You can also look back further at Japan since the 90s. Yes, there were some very foolish people who predicted an immediate large or hyper-inflation would be the result of those QE policies, just they were completely wrong. NZ just happened to implement its QE policy just prior to a significant inflation episode.

      • Nic the NZer 10.1.2

        Its entirely implausible that government borrowing caused the inflation, how is that even supposed to work?

        The occurrence of inflation requires a significant number of price setters to increase their prices, so the cause of inflation is a question of why did they do that at the time? We know the reasons including covid based supply bottlenecks, OPEC oil price hikes, impacts of the Ukraine war on food production and also covid based demand for home office supplies. We should also understand some price hikes were profiteering, rather than matching up with genuine supply cost increases.

        None of these things are particularly related to either govt borrowing or spending or QE.

      • SPC 10.1.3

        I should have mentioned this rider

        QE can cause a relative change between economies – thus an increase in cost to business importers (and thus local consumers), if there is more paid in local currency to foreign suppliers.

  11. tWig 11

    Carried over from The Standard's feed, a post by Meredith Dale, senior urban designer, together with a survey you can finish.

    "New Zealand’s Housing Survey has been developed and tested throughout Aotearoa, for Aotearoa …building on the PhD of Director Dr Natalie Allen, as part of a private plan change in regional NZ, as part of a comprehensive housing needs assessment in Kāpiti Coast, and for two iwi and a hapū collective developing their housing strategies. It has also included a series of industry and academic reviews and three rounds of user testing to refine the question wording across cohorts. Back end analysis processes have also been supported by a Callaghan Innovation Student Experience Grant."

  12. newsense 12

    Things that go together, but not in societies:

    https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/national/507477/auckland-anniversary-floods-a-year-on-outstanding-insurance-claims-properties-yet-to-be-categorised

    Auckland Council said 1570 properties were yet to be categorised, which it hoped would be done in a few months.

    http://norightturn.blogspot.com/2024/06/climate-change-farmers-get-what-they.html

    At present, following the complete failure of he waka eka noa, agriculture is scheduled to enter the ETS next year at the processor level, with 95% of emissions subsidised. National will reverse this, disband he waka eka noa, and ensure an effective hundred percent subsidy for our worst polluters forever.

    Remember this when the rural ducks complain about how tough everything is. 95% ignore climate change? Okay okay 100% ignore contributing to the country dealing with minimisation and retreat. Not in a hypothetical sense at all. Your biggest asset in limbo for a year.

  13. Descendant Of Smith 13

    Reply to Michael Scott above. Unsure why it is detached.

    It is easy to focus on the deficit statistics if that is all you want to. It is also quite racist to link some of that data directly to ethnicity when other factors are at play eg crime rates follow age – young people commit more crime. If you have a younger population then you will have more crime. Teenage pregnancy the same.

    Putting that aside in any population only a small proportion are doing the offending in any community. Most are not. Trouble is most Europeans have little contact with Maori in those communities let alone with aspects of the culture that has concepts that are anathematic to capitalism.

    Capitalism is about exploitation of resources and private ownership. Callaghan touches on this. rewatch his video. In the 1800's capitalists saw things like communal ownership of land as communism and were opposed to this (in the same way the commons was destroyed largely in Europe – think copyright laws for instance.

    If you think there is nothing to learn then it isn't a voyage I should take you on – it is one you should go and explore your self.

CommentsOpinions

Recent Comments

Recent Posts

FeedsPartyGovtMedia

  • Dunedin Protests Against Hospital Cuts

    Dunedin is not a happy city at the moment. We are used to being ignored in the nationwide New Zealand media – wrong end of the country and all – but the Government’s recent announcement on the Dunedin Hospital rebuild has got people motivated. How motivated? Well, I couldn’t make ...
    8 hours ago
  • The One Who Saw Too Much: accepted

    A nice bit of news. I can report that I have had a short story success – my 3,600 word gothic horror piece, The One Who Saw Too Much, has been accepted ...
    9 hours ago
  • Broken Stone

    And another pitch shattersAnother little bit gets lostTell me what else really mattersOh, such a costLike pebbles on a beachKicked around, displaced by feetOh, like broken stonesThey're all trying to get homeSong by Paul WellerDoes it feel as though your country has been hijacked? That terrible people have taken the ...
    Nick’s KōreroBy Nick Rockel
    15 hours ago
  • I’m Glad The Right Wing Coalition Won

    Dame Jacinda Adern would not accept “acceptable death rates” during Covid. But in the UK the Tory government said “Let them die”.Additions belowYesterday, when I saw the news that a Timaru factory with hundreds of jobs on the line was going to close, I couldn't help but think:"I'm so glad ...
    Mountain TuiBy Mountain Tui
    18 hours ago
  • We will never give you up, let you down, or Rickroll you

    1. What did the National party promise Dunedin last election?a. We will build the hospital you needb. We will never give you up, let you down, or Rickroll you c. We will bring back John Keyd. Pandas2. What is the National party promising  Dunedin now?a. A sawn-off half-pint watery version of ...
    More Than A FeildingBy David Slack
    18 hours ago
  • The 48 Hours Leading Up To An Execution

    Note: This is obviously a very heavy topic — it took me three days to manage to write it — so please read with care. In saying that, in amongst the awfulness I think this piece also contains some hope, and plenty of humanity. Thanks to those of you who ...
    David FarrierBy David Farrier
    21 hours ago
  • Remembering our friend John Mason

    We are extremely sad to say that our esteemed Skeptical Science colleague— and good friend to many of us— John Mason passed away on Friday September 20, 2024. Only last week, we blew a horn of appreciation for John's remarkable gift for telling stories about science. Our expectation was that ...
    1 day ago
  • How has the New Zealand economy been doing?

    Stagnation and ContractionIn this column I use the less familiar measure of GDP per capita instead of the GDP measure favoured by the commentariat. I became familiar with it when I began doing international comparisons because of the population differences between countries, while I depended upon the measure while working ...
    PunditBy Brian Easton
    1 day ago
  • Luxon taking his cues from Amazon

    This is embarrassing: I just had to google who Andrew Jassy is.I come to substack to learn terrible thingsIn my defence, they promoted him during the pandemic and I had other things on my mind. Also watching Amazon injure their workers at a rate of over four times the US ...
    2 days ago
  • The Hoon around the week to Sept 27

    The podcast above of the weekly ‘Hoon’ webinar for paying subscribers on Thursday night features co-hosts & talking about the week’s news with:The Kākā’s climate correspondent on the latest climate news, including research suggesting a doubling of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere could trigger 8° of warming ...
    The KakaBy Bernard Hickey
    2 days ago
  • Could a doubling of Co2 trigger 8° of warming?

    Long stories short, here’s the top six news items of note in climate news for Aotearoa this week, and a discussion above between Bernard Hickey and The Kākā’s climate correspondent Cathrine Dyer:A seventh planetary boundary, for ocean acidification will soon be breached, and may have already done so, according to ...
    The KakaBy Bernard Hickey
    2 days ago
  • Trust Us, Luxon Said

    Just a little something for the painHospital food getting you down?Honey now I'm not one to complainBut this hangin' aroundIs wearing me outSong by David Gray.Yesterday, Dr Shane Reti, the Minister of Health, and Chris Bishop, the duty Minister for looking sad, sincere and determined, announced that Dunedin’s promised new ...
    Nick’s KōreroBy Nick Rockel
    2 days ago
  • Treasury warns of unprecedented cuts in real spending per capita to achieve surplus

    Kia ora. Long stories short, here’s my top six things to note in Aotearoa’s political economy around housing, climate and poverty on Friday, September 27:Treasury’s Chief Economics Adviser Dominick Stephens gave the year’s most important speech yesterday, saying real and per-capita cuts in public spending implied by the Government’s surplus ...
    The KakaBy Bernard Hickey
    2 days ago
  • Weekly Roundup 27-September-2024

    Welcome to the end of the week and the end of the month. Ready to “spring forward” to Daylight Saving Time this weekend? As always, this post is brought to you by a largely volunteer crew. If you’d like to support our work and keep the posts coming, we welcome ...
    Greater AucklandBy Greater Auckland
    2 days ago
  • Please consider submitting on the offshore mining bill: We have 4 full days left

    The National led Coalition government intends to bring back offshore oil and gas mining. Shane Jones made that clear as soon as he got into power last year:“Mining is coming back!” he declared in Parliament in December.And this year: “Drill, Baby, Drill!”It’s his brand of politics.It feels futile but I ...
    Mountain TuiBy Mountain Tui
    2 days ago
  • The Long and the Short: Ageing Boomers, Laurie & Les, Talk Politics.

    While a nationwide vote to confirm, or not, the public’s understanding of our foundational constitutional document would be ‘divisive’, ‘racist’, a ‘blunt instrument’, and therefore completely out of the question, a referendum to extend the life expectancy of elected politicians, which no one not deeply involved with the governing process ...
    2 days ago
  • Procedures, Processes and Principles: Is It Possible To Defend The Treaty Of Waitangi And Democracy?

    Out Of The Loop: The great insight of sympathetic Pakeha jurists, like Sir Geoffrey Palmer, was that, suitably empowered, the judiciary and the executive branch of the state could take on the role formerly played by the non-elected governors of mid-nineteenth century New Zealand. Māori resources could be protected, and ...
    2 days ago
  • Has Government Become A Public-Private Partnership?

    Dirty Deals Done In The Dark: There will be times when it is to the considerable advantage of both National and Labour to be able to shrug philosophically and pardon themselves for cooperating in the introduction of controversial and divisive policies by explaining to an outraged public that this is simply ...
    2 days ago
  • Is National A White Supremacist Party?

    By Their Deeds Shall Ye Know Them: When the defeated Reform and United parties were persuaded to unite under the rubric of “National” in 1936, the values advanced were unashamedly imperialist and white supremacist. Eighty-eight years later, National is at pains to distance itself (coalition agreements permitting) from the most obvious ...
    2 days ago
  • On the way to another “Mother of All Budgets”?

    Finance Minister Nicola Willis yesterday dismissed a grim warning from the Treasury that the country was headed for a fiscal crisis. Treasury Deputy Secretary Dominick Stephens said that fulfilling the Government’s promise to get the country’s books back to surplus by 2027-28 would require cuts to Government services “unprecedented in ...
    PolitikBy Richard Harman
    2 days ago
  • The Three-Headed Taniwha Has Begun Biting Itself

    When ACT, National, and New Zealand First joined together in a three-way coalition at the end of the last year, it was met with predictions of backstabbing, stonewalling, and inter-party politics. Many seemed convinced this government would get little done with such a diverse agenda. If only that had been ...
    2 days ago
  • Skeptical Science New Research for Week #39 2024

    Open access notables Refined Estimates of Global Ocean Deep and Abyssal Decadal Warming Trends, Johnson & Purkey, Geophysical Research Letters: Deep and abyssal layer decadal temperature trends from the mid-1980s to the mid-2010s are mapped globally using Deep Argo and historical ship-based Conductivity-Temperature-Depth (CTD) instrument data. Abyssal warming trends are widespread, ...
    2 days ago
  • Embrace the heresy, touch the third rail

    Let’s examine some numbers.This is a public transport number.3% And this is an invitation to make an educated guess: In the morning rush hour in Wellington on Thorndon Quay, what proportion of the vehicles are buses?Yes indeed …the answer is:3% However, what do we find if we look inside those buses? Care ...
    More Than A FeildingBy David Slack
    2 days ago
  • Another abuse of democracy

    This week National introduced its long-threatened bill to repeal the offshore drilling ban and promote the fossil fuel industry, and rammed it through to select committee. Today the select committee opened for submissions. If you have an opinion on this corrupt, ecocidal legislation, you will need to speak up quick ...
    No Right TurnBy Idiot/Savant
    2 days ago
  • Bye, Bye Health !

    Bye, Bye hospital plans.Today Rachel Thomas reported - $3.2 billion is sleighted to come out of “hospital and mental health infrastructure projects”, and it seems the first formal casualty is Dunedin hospital, South Island.ODT reports former Labour Cabinet minister Pete Hodgson saying:“At the end of the day, the question is ...
    Mountain TuiBy Mountain Tui
    3 days ago
  • Geoffrey Miller: New Zealand’s trade deal with the UAE could unlock Middle East

    New Zealand and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) are moving closer together – at record pace. Just a year after agreeing to enter initial talks, Wellington and Abu Dhabi have concluded negotiations on a Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (or CEPA for short). The deal will go down as one of ...
    Democracy ProjectBy Geoffrey Miller
    3 days ago
  • Things That Make You Go… Dang

    Pull up like a shipwreck in reverseYeah, I do, yeah, I doMaybe it's foreverMaybe it's just shampooDangSong by Caroline PolachekToday, a few things that, depending on your age, might make you go - that’s outrageous, or hmm, maybe WTAF, or just plain old dang.Specifically, I’ll be covering:When Press Secretaries resign, ...
    Nick’s KōreroBy Nick Rockel
    3 days ago
  • Minister ignored widespread concern about GPS, official documents confirm

    Two weeks ago, the Ministry of Transport proactively released two tranches of documents that show the advice officials provided to Minister of Transport Simeon Brown as he directed the shaping of his draft and final Government Policy Statement (GPS) on Land Transport. You can find the documents via the MoT ...
    Greater AucklandBy Greater Auckland
    3 days ago
  • An attack ‘unbecoming of a leader’

    Kia ora. Long stories short, here’s my top six things to note in Aotearoa’s political economy around housing, climate and poverty on Thursday, September 26:Days after realising hundreds of thousands of tax-free gains on the sale of one of his rental properties, PM Christopher Luxon responded yesterday to ANZ CEO ...
    The KakaBy Bernard Hickey
    3 days ago
  • On The Government’s Bizarre Hostility To A Capital Gains Tax

    Oyez oyez, CEO Antonia Watson, CEO of the biggest bank in New Zealand has come out in favour of a capital gains tax! Actually, this is not a daring new idea. Over the past three decades the IMF, the World Bank, the expert Tax Working Group and most mainstream economists ...
    WerewolfBy lyndon
    3 days ago
  • Hamish is out. Has had enough of Luxon role

    Following on from my earlier post … ‘Hamish Rutherford always looks grim these days‘, well, it seems that enough is enough for Hamish Rutherford (and fair enough too). Stuff reports: [Rutherford’s] message said: “It has been an absolute honour to work for Christopher Luxon both in Opposition and for the ...
    The PaepaeBy Peter Aranyi
    3 days ago
  • Climate Adam: Turning the Tide on Climate Change

    This video includes conclusions of the creator climate scientist Dr. Adam Levy. It is presented to our readers as an informed perspective. Please see video description for references (if any). As the world heats, we face the consequences from rising seas, extreme weather, and the spread of disease. But what can ...
    3 days ago
  • Reasons to feel positive

    Reason to feel positive # 1The next of Life's Little Victories could be just around the cornerSince I got back I have been hearing a wheezing choking rasping sound coming from the Number One Boss element of our gas stove. Wheezy gas is never something you want to hear coming ...
    More Than A FeildingBy David Slack
    3 days ago
  • David Seymour Got His Wish – Charter Schools Are Back. Who Is Getting the $$$ ?

    OPINIONThis morning I wrote that the Charter Schools Bill had passed its final reading. Jan Tinetti called it a “sad, sad day for New Zealand education”. And Green Party MP Dr Lawrence Xu-Nan said the move is “not about education, it’s about privatisation”.$153mn for charter schools in what teachers and ...
    Mountain TuiBy Mountain Tui
    3 days ago
  • David Seymour: “The Government is Broke” & Other Politics Headlines

    Note: Video of the fricken’ targets and a nanny state mentality at end. Read more ...
    Mountain TuiBy Mountain Tui
    4 days ago
  • Climate Change: We can’t afford the gas industry

    Yesterday, National finally introduced its long-threatened bill to repeal the offshore drilling ban and promote the fossil fuel industry to the House. They'll be ramming it through its first reading under urgency this afternoon, and while it will go to select committee, they will almost certainly try their usual stunt ...
    No Right TurnBy Idiot/Savant
    4 days ago
  • Calling Occupants of Interplanetary Craft

    In your mind you have capacities, you knowTo telepath messages through the vast unknownPlease close your eyes and concentrateWith every thought you thinkUpon the recitation we're about to singCalling occupants of interplanetary craftCalling occupants of interplanetary, most extraordinary craftSongwriters: John Woloschuk / Terry DraperThink of the capabilities of the human ...
    Nick’s KōreroBy Nick Rockel
    4 days ago
  • Nine public transit lessons from Perth

    This guest post by Darren Davis originally appeared on his excellent blog, Adventures in Transitland, and is republished here by kind permission. A while ago, I wrote about Perth’s public transport journey, outlining how Perth got to where it is now. I recommend reading that piece if you haven’t already, ...
    Greater AucklandBy Guest Post
    4 days ago
  • ANZ CEO says ‘it’s time’ for a Capital Gains Tax

    Kia ora. Long stories short, here’s my top six things to note in Aotearoa’s political economy around housing, climate and poverty on Wednesday, September 25:Ad agency climate activist group Comms Declare today launched the New Zealand version of the globally compiled ‘F list,’ which names 14 local agencies “which have ...
    The KakaBy Bernard Hickey
    4 days ago
  • Parliament to get its own police force

    Parliament yesterday moved to give its security staff powers of search, seizure and arrest. In effect it is establishing a quasi Parliamentary police force which will have the power to handcuff and detain offenders.  But it will be a force with some heavy restrictions on what it can do. Most ...
    PolitikBy Richard Harman
    4 days ago
  • How to complain about a delayed OIA release

    A few years back, Te Kawa Mataaho / Public Service Commission started releasing OIA statitistics, on the theory that this would allow failure to be identified and managed, and so improve performance. It may have done so initially, but then the iron laws of bureaucracy (and specifically, Goodhart's and Campbell's) ...
    No Right TurnBy Idiot/Savant
    4 days ago
  • Just have a think: Arctic Sea Ice minimum 2024. Three degrees Celsius warming now baked in?

    This video includes conclusions of the "Just have a Think" channel's creator Dave Borlace. It is presented to our readers as an informed perspective. Please see video description for references (if any). From the video‘s description: Arctic Sea ice reaches it's minimum extent each year around the middle of September. This ...
    4 days ago
  • Let them eat glue

    What is real, what is fake?  Do we really know any more?Let's say you want to make tonight’s dinner a bit more appealing by trying something new.Why don't I google it? You say.You type: Idea for fresh and exciting meal.Google tells you: Pizza!  Here's a topping combo that will wow ...
    More Than A FeildingBy David Slack
    4 days ago
  • The Narcissist in Life

    OPINIONYesterday, after the Polkinghorne case verdict, Philip Polkinghorne told reporters:"Now we can grieve and let Pauline rest in peace. That is the best gift we can possibly give her."And today his defence lawyer Elizabeth Hall said the case showed the justice system was working as intended.Jurors could not land the ...
    Mountain TuiBy Mountain Tui
    4 days ago
  • Do you know what the Coalition Government has done for you in its first 100 days? Here’s a lis...

    I decided to finally write my “About Mountain Tui” page and found some of my old posts that I wanted to transfer here. This won’t be distributed by email, but will serve as a record of my writing.Here is one of them:Repealed under urgency No more Fair Pay Agreements, a ...
    Mountain TuiBy Mountain Tui
    4 days ago
  • Back in the Office

    These things that I've been told can rearrangeMy world, my doubt in time but inside outThis is the working hourWe are paid by those who learn by our mistakesSongwriters: Ian Stanley / Roland Orzabal / Immanuel Franklin EliasSince Covid, life has been tough for many central city businesses. As you ...
    Nick’s KōreroBy Nick Rockel
    5 days ago
  • The Mayor’s Plan for Bridging the Harbour

    Discussion of another harbour crossing has been in the news a lot recently as a result of Mayor Wayne Brown pushing for a bridge from Point Chev to Birkenhead. While I believe his proposal is bad, at least some of his reasoning behind his push for a bridge is correct. ...
    5 days ago
  • Gordon Campbell On Nicola Willis’ Perverse Hostility To Working From Home

    Vaccine work mandates, no. Work-in-the-office mandates? Hell yes, Finance Minister Nicola Willis is all for them. Given half the chance, she believes, “some people but not all” will just skive off, otherwise. Sigh. But here’s the thing. Normally, when the media wants to query Cabinet Ministers about events in their ...
    WerewolfBy lyndon
    5 days ago
  • ACCC accuses Woolworths of misleading pricing

    Up then down: Australia’s competition watchdog alleges both Woolworths Australia and main competitor Coles Myer put the price of hundreds of products up before dropping them again and advertising ‘everyday low prices’. Photo: Getty ImagesKia ora. Long stories short, here’s my top six things to note in Aotearoa’s political economy ...
    The KakaBy Bernard Hickey
    5 days ago
  • A World Full of Potential Cult Leaders

    Hi,In this Webworm podcast episode, I bring you a conversation with someone I found endlessly fascinating to talk to — one of my favourite authors, Jason Pargin. He’s perhaps most well known for writing John Dies At The End, or a host of other books that all have amazing titles ...
    David FarrierBy David Farrier
    5 days ago
  • Nicola Willis’s Catch-22

    Would you like to get paid more and have your work get worse, or have your pay decrease in real terms but when you’re saving lives or raising the next generation of workers, you get to keep your head juuuust above the water level during this flood of fiscally unnecessary ...
    5 days ago
  • Luxon Is THAT Asshole Boss

    After firing half the capital’s public servants, Luxon and Willis are now trying to blame the remaining few for sending Wellington’s cafes bankrupt. It couldn’t possibly be the economic downturn that resulted from him pulling all the money out of the system and giving it to the wealthy to bank. ...
    5 days ago
  • Nicola’s destruction

    Today, Stuff led with a headline claiming that forcing public servants to return to the office was “the number one” fix for Wellington’s ‘icy’ economy.No mention until much later of the 6500+ positions the Government culled or its slashing of government programs and spend.That’s been the key differentiator in Wellington, ...
    Mountain TuiBy Mountain Tui
    5 days ago
  • Media Link: ” A View from Afar” on multidimensional hybrid warfare and the ineffectiveness of mu...

    This week’s “A View from Afar” podcast addresses the issue of multidimensional hybrid warfare using the Israeli pager attacks in Lebanon as a starting point before moving on to discuss the failures of multilateral institutions, the UN in particular, when … Continue reading ...
    KiwipoliticoBy Pablo
    5 days ago
  • Priorities

    Back in 2018 the then-Labour government legislated formal targets to reduce child poverty with the Child Poverty Reduction Act - and took actual steps to achieve them, with a $5.5 billion families package to boost incomes and a school lunches scheme to ensure kids didn't go hungry. While a lot ...
    No Right TurnBy Idiot/Savant
    5 days ago
  • The Dead-End Options Of Political Decay.

    Dark Times: Denied the state’s leadership and resources, New Zealand’s economy has been hollowed out and taken over. More importantly, so has its democracy.WHAT’S WRONG WITH NATIONAL? New Zealand’s “natural party of government” (since its formation in 1936 the National Party has won 17 out of 28 general elections) has ...
    5 days ago
  • Fixing child poverty would cost <1% of GDP

    The previous Government set a goal of reducing the number of children experiencing “material hardship” from 13.3% down to 6% by mid-2028. But Upston says sticking to that, or even the suggested ‘lower ambition targets’, wasn’t realistic. Photo: Lynn GrievesonKia ora. Long stories short, here’s my top six things to ...
    The KakaBy Bernard Hickey
    6 days ago
  • If I Only Had a Brain

    I would not be just a nuffin'My head all full of stuffin'My heart all full of painI would dance and be merryLife would be a ding-a-derryIf I only had a brainSongwriters: Harold Arlen / Yip HarburgNot much happens in the world of politics on a Monday. I mentioned that recently ...
    Nick’s KōreroBy Nick Rockel
    6 days ago
  • A vision for Swimmable Cities

    This is a guest post by Nikki Goodson, a self-proclaimed urbanist and Independent Marketer for businesses building a better world. Looking for projects to connect on, she found the global movement Swimmable Cities and thought advocacy for urban swimming sounded like a pretty good idea. (The header image of ...
    Greater AucklandBy Guest Post
    6 days ago
  • Yawning gaps in RMA proposals

    The Government’s overriding principles for resource management reform, released on Friday, are likely to be widely welcomed by some and resisted by others. Minister Chris Bishop and Simon Court promise the two replacement bills will be less complex than Labour’s legislation, which was passed by Parliament last year but would ...
    PolitikBy Richard Harman
    6 days ago
  • 2024 SkS Weekly Climate Change & Global Warming News Roundup #38

    A listing of 33 news and opinion articles we found interesting and shared on social media during the past week: Mon, September 16, 2024 thru Sun, September 22, 2024. Story of the week Might be added later. Stories we promoted this week, by publication date: Before September 16 Departures ...
    6 days ago
  • No Fricken’ Chicken on Q&A

    These train conversations are passing me byAnd I don't have nothing to sayYou get what you pay forBut I just had no intention of living this wayI need a phone call, I need a plane rideI need a sunburn, I need a raincoatAnd I get no answers, and I don't ...
    Nick’s KōreroBy Nick Rockel
    7 days ago
  • Eulogy, delayed

    There is more to tell about my drive to Masterton earlier this year.The first stop was Turangi, to let my cousin Garth know about Mum, or rather to talk to him on the phone because I soon learned he was in the back country, which is where you will often ...
    More Than A FeildingBy David Slack
    7 days ago
  • The Luxon Government: turning Aotearoa not just “around”, but completely upside down…

    Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday…. cultural, political, economic, environmental, social costs aplenty to our society, every day. It’s been one of those weeks, again. Barely a day, even a minute it seems, can go by before the public get assaulted with some new attack, figuratively, or literally, on the public good. ...
    exhALANtBy exhalantblog
    1 week ago
  • Brer Sauron’s Briar Patch: A Review and Analysis of The Rings of Power, Episode 6 (Season 2)

    We are now into the back-half of The Rings of Power, season two. Thus far, I have gushed with praise for how much improved the show has become – at least relative to season one. Never mind my innate sense of charity, I have worried whether my reviews have become ...
    1 week ago
  • Who’s to Blame for the Government?

    I saw no evil when I looked into your eyesI heard no evil while you told me all those liesI spoke no evil when I called out your nameLook at us now, babyWho’s to blame?Lyrics: Hemberger, Hemberger, Mayo, RaseroToday’s newsletter is a bit of a rant; some of you might ...
    Nick’s KōreroBy Nick Rockel
    1 week ago
  • Political revolutions don’t exist. But economic ones do.

    The further you get into radicalism, the more appealing the concept of a revolution seems. Both the far right and the far left dream of taking up arms and overthrowing what they see as an unsatisfactory system, to an unhealthy and unhelpful extent. Instead of revolution, what happens in the ...
    1 week ago
  • Hangups

    Hello! Here comes the Saturday edition of More Than A Feilding, catching you up on anything you may have missed. Share Read more ...
    More Than A FeildingBy David Slack
    1 week ago
  • Unfortunately, Being a Hero is Mostly Illegal

    Hi,Today is a pretty heavy, weighty Webworm — so maybe get yourself a cup of tea or coffee before you settle in. It’s about, you know, the end of the world and stuff.Before we get to that, I’d like to say I thoroughly enjoyed the notes you left under my ...
    David FarrierBy David Farrier
    1 week ago
  • My Substack erm… Summer

    Hi all,Apparently it’s the end of Summer, hope you enjoyed it. 🙂The rather Northern Hemisphere centric folks over at Substack have sent this out, I’m not sure what time period it covers, I guess the last three months. In any case you might like to give it a go yourself ...
    Nick’s KōreroBy Nick Rockel
    1 week ago
  • Pricing Road Usage

    Congestion pricing is easier said than done.The first seminar I attended in Britain – around sixty years ago – explained a scheme for road usage pricing which would eliminate traffic congestion and direct roading investment. It was impressive and elegant (as many such seminar propositions are) but proved impractical and ...
    PunditBy Brian Easton
    1 week ago
  • Tory Whanau may have to sell Wellington mayoralty to make ends meet

    Tory Whanau has revealed that she’s struggling so much financially that she may have to part with her beloved mayoralty, that of New Zealand’s capital city, if she’s to fund her ever-diminishing lifestyle. Whanau was elected to lead Wellington in 2022, winning an overwhelming victory against the incumbent mayor: the ...
    The CivilianBy Ben Uffindell
    1 week ago
  • And round we go again…

    One of Labour's few achievements last term was to finally move on RMA reform. Following an independent review and a select committee review of an exposure draft, both aimed at ironing out bugs and producing a compromise most people could live with, Labour passed the Natural and Built Environments Act ...
    No Right TurnBy Idiot/Savant
    1 week ago
  • The Supreme Court stands up for fairness

    National is planning to breach te Tiriti o Waitangi by amending the Marine and Coastal Area Act to effectively make it impossible for the courts to recognise Māori rights over the foreshore and seabed. But its also been playing dirty in other ways. Earlier in the year it announced changes ...
    No Right TurnBy Idiot/Savant
    1 week ago
  • My Substack Summer

    What I read in Summer 2024Highlights☕ I read the most in the morning💌 I subscribed to 16 new Substacks🎧 I listened to 76 minutes of podcasts📽️ I watched 46 minutes of video❤️ I liked 22 posts💬 I left 8 comments on posts📜 I scrolled 26 meters in Notes🕵️ I discovered ...
    1 week ago

  • Cost-benefit analysis for potential third medical school completed

    The Government has announced that an initial cost-benefit analysis of establishing a third medical school based at the University of Waikato has been completed and has been found to provide confidence for the project to progress to the next stage. Minister of Health Dr Shane Reti says the proposal will ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    15 hours ago
  • Government delivers sensible approach to speed limits

    The Government’s new speed limit rule has today been signed to reverse Labour’s blanket speed limit reductions and enable Kiwis to get to where they want to go quickly and safely, Transport Minister Simeon Brown says.  Reverse Labour’s blanket speed limit reductions on local streets, arterial roads, and state highways ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    15 hours ago
  • Minister to meet with Pacific Island climate leaders

    Climate Change Minister Simon Watts is travelling to Fiji on Monday to attend a Ministerial Meeting (Talanoa) with Pacific Island Countries, Australia, and New Zealand. “Attending the Talanoa will reinforce New Zealand’s commitment to supporting climate resilience in the Pacific and advancing action in the areas of climate change,” Mr ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    16 hours ago
  • Human rights recommendations accepted

    The Government is accepting the majority of human rights recommendations received at the fourth Universal Period Review in Geneva, Justice Minister Paul Goldsmith says. “We have considered all 259 recommendations from the United Nations. We are supporting 168 and partially supporting 12 of these recommendations. “Recommendations related to women’s rights, ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    1 day ago
  • Geotech work begins on Warkworth to Te Hana Road of National Significance

    The Government is continuing to move at pace on the Northland Expressway, with significant geotechnical investigations now underway for phase one from Warkworth to Te Hana, Transport Minister Simeon Brown says. “With thousands of motorists and freight travelling through Northland, we’re focused on delivering for this region to grow our economy. ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    2 days ago
  • Free mental health resources for business owners

    The Government and Auckland Business Chamber have entered a memorandum of understanding which will enable mental health and wellbeing resources for business owners to be freely available, Small Business and Manufacturing Minister Andrew Bayly says. “As a former business owner, I know first-hand the toll running a business can take ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    2 days ago
  • Mental Health and Wellbeing Commission board appointment announced

    Mental Health Minister Matt Doocey and Rural Communities Minister Mark Patterson have announced the Government has appointed Wayne Langford to the Board of the Mental Health and Wellbeing Commission for a five-year term of office. Mr Langford is the National President of Federated Farmers and is also their spokesperson for ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    2 days ago
  • New Game Animal Council appointments

    Hunting and Fishing Minister Todd McClay today announced one new, and one returning, appointment to the Game Animal Council (GAC).  Mr McClay is thrilled to announce first time appointment Glenn MacPherson and welcomes the reappointment of keen pig and deer hunter Eugene Rewi.  MacPherson is currently president of the Te ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    2 days ago
  • STAR attendance system template released

    Associate Education spokesperson David Seymour says the Government has released a new resource to inform the introduction of Stepped Attendance Response (STAR) systems in every school. “The response to the announcement of the STAR system has been hugely supportive. Educators have been in touch to express their support, which gives ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    2 days ago
  • New Zealand National Statement to the UN General Assembly – ‘The Spirit of San Francisco’

    Mr. President Nearly four score years ago, nations exhausted from a cataclysmic World War came together in San Francisco to create the United Nations Charter. Forged in the immediate aftermath of that war, then New Zealand Prime Minister Peter Fraser held “the greatest hopes” for the Charter’s success, which he ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    2 days ago
  • Charter Schools Authorisation Board appointments announced

    Associate Education Minister David Seymour has today announced his appointments to the new statutory Charter Schools Authorisation Board.  Leading Kiwi educator Justine Mahon has been appointed as Chair of the Board. She is joined by Board members Catherine Isaac, Neil Paviour-Smith, Professor Elizabeth Rata, Rōpata Taylor, Dee-Ann Wolferstan and Doran ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    2 days ago
  • Clubs and Ranges Bill passes first reading

    Improvements to the way shooting clubs and ranges are regulated are on the way with the Arms (Shooting Clubs, Shooting Ranges and Other Matters) Amendment Bill passing its first reading says Associate Justice Minister Nicole McKee.   “The package of reforms in this Bill will enable simple and effective regulation ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    2 days ago
  • Want to make a difference? Go to school

    Students should be in school and learning instead of protesting during school hours, Associate Education Minister David Seymour says in response to the school climate strike planned for Friday 27th September. “If students feel strongly about sending a message, they could have waited until Monday, when the end of term ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    2 days ago
  • Peer Mental Health Service Launched, Further Support Planned

    Mental Health Minister Matt Doocey says the new peer support service launched in Middlemore’s Emergency Department today is a positive step towards improving mental health outcomes. “Having someone with lived experience available to support someone in mental distress can make a crucial difference. With the right training and clinical supervision, ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    2 days ago
  • New reporting for amateur charter fishing vessels

    A proposed new electronic reporting system will make it simpler for amateur charter vessels to record and report fish catch information, Oceans and Fisheries Minister Shane Jones says. “The new digital reporting, via an app, will replace the paper-based system which is out of date and slow,” Mr Jones says. ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    2 days ago
  • Building a stronger weather forecasting system

    The Government is looking at integrating the National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research (NIWA) and the MetService to improve the weather forecasting system for New Zealand, Science, Innovation & Technology Minister Judith Collins says. “We have agreed in-principle to NIWA acquiring the MetService, with the MetService retaining its role ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    3 days ago
  • Next steps on the New Dunedin Hospital

    The Government is seeking advice on two options for delivering the New Dunedin Hospital project within its existing funding appropriation to ensure the people of Dunedin get the modern, fit-for-purpose medical facilities they need. At the same time, Ministers have warned that much-needed upgrades to other regional hospitals could be ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    3 days ago
  • No child left behind with STAR system

    Associate Education Minister David Seymour says that the Government is delivering real solutions to get kids back in the classroom, introducing the Stepped Attendance Response (STAR) system. “Any student who reaches a clearly defined threshold of days absent will trigger an appropriate and proportionate response from their school and the ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    3 days ago
  • New Zealand concludes trade agreement with the UAE

    New Zealand and the United Arab Emirates have concluded negotiations on a trade agreement, which will unlock economic opportunities for Kiwi exporters and create stronger supply chains with one of our most important trading partners in the Gulf region. This agreement was concluded in just over 4 months following the launch ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    3 days ago
  • Data shows school attendance is on the rise

    Associate Education Minister David Seymour says data released today shows increased school attendance in Term 2 of 2024 with 53.2 per cent of students regularly attending, an increase of 6.1 percentage points compared to the same term last year. Regular attendance across primary students increased by 7 percentage points, to ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    3 days ago
  • Supercharging schools to teach maths

    The coalition Government is supercharging schools to lift maths achievement by delivering new resources and more support for teachers and students for Term 1 next year.  “$30 million will fund resources including workbooks, teacher guidance and lesson plans for the 2025 school year. Resources will be available in English and ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    3 days ago
  • Tougher sentences on the horizon for criminals

    Sentencing reforms that will ensure criminals face tougher consequences and victims are prioritised have passed first reading in Parliament today, Justice Minister Paul Goldsmith says.  “Despite a 33 per cent increase in violent crime, there has been a concerning trend where the courts have imposed fewer and shorter prison sentences. ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    3 days ago
  • Changes to improve prison safety and rehabilitation

    The Corrections Amendment Bill has passed its third reading in Parliament today, making a number of changes to improve safety and rehabilitation in prisons.   Corrections Minister Mark Mitchell says it’s important the law is reflective of the increasingly complex prison environment.  “Corrections manages some of New Zealand’s most dangerous people, ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    3 days ago
  • Better options for same-sex parents

    Minister of Internal Affairs Brooke van Velden says the Government is delivering better flexibility for same-sex parents in New Zealand by making changes to the Births, Deaths, Marriages, and Relationships Regulations. “Parents notifying the birth of their child will soon be able to choose whether they are named as a ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    3 days ago
  • Speech to the Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder Symposium 2024

    Thank you very much for the generous welcome Reverend Reihana. Thank you to Alcohol Healthwatch and your organising committee, including representatives from: FASD-CAN Aotearoa; Te Iho Tātai-ā-Rongo (the Māori FASD Coalition); Hauora Māori Services and Health Promotion Directorates, Health New Zealand; Oranga Tamariki; and the Centre for Addiction Research, University ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    3 days ago
  • New Zealand welcomes United Arab Emirates Trade Minister

    United Arab Emirates Minister of State for Foreign Trade Dr Thani bin Ahmed Al Zeyoudi will visit New Zealand this week, Trade Minister Todd McClay has today announced.  “I’m delighted to welcome my colleague and friend, Minister Al Zeyoudi to New Zealand. The UAE is one of our closest partners and ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    3 days ago
  • Greater investment in FASD support and prevention

    Health Minister Dr Shane Reti has announced a $4.85 million package of initiatives aimed at understanding the prevalence of Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder (FASD), promoting better education and supporting women to stay alcohol free during pregnancy. “People with FASD can experience lifelong physical, behavioural, learning, and mental health problems. Those ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    3 days ago
  • Restoration of Customary Marine Title test begins

    Legislation that will provide certainty around how Customary Marine Title is granted for New Zealand’s coastlines has passed its first reading in Parliament today, Treaty Negotiations Minister Paul Goldsmith says. “Customary Marine Title gives the holder valuable rights, including the ability to refuse some resource consents in the area, such ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    4 days ago
  • Northland transmission tower collapse report released

    The Electricity Authority’s report into the collapse of a Northland transmission tower on 20 June 2024 that left 88,000 people without power has been released, Energy Minister Simeon Brown says.“The report highlights that several key failures led to the transmission tower collapsing and that the economic impact for Northland was ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    4 days ago
  • Lifting education outcomes for young Kiwis

    Associate Education Minister David Seymour says the passing of the Education and Training Amendment Bill shows the Government is making significant progress to lift education outcomes. “Establishing charter schools, lifting attendance, and streamlining early learning regulations are all essential to raising achievement. This legislation will set in motion the system ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    4 days ago
  • Rollout of onboard cameras to continue

    The rollout of onboard cameras on commercial fishing vessels will continue and discard rules will be amended under fisheries reforms proposed by Oceans and Fisheries Minister Shane Jones. Mr Jones is proposing practical changes that will reduce red tape, provide a boost to commercial fishers, and ensure a thriving and ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    4 days ago
  • Milestone for return of petroleum exploration

    Legislation reinstating offshore petroleum exploration has been introduced by the Coalition Government, a key step in addressing the significant energy security challenges felt by Kiwis across the country this winter. The Crown Minerals Amendment Bill reverses the ban on new oil and gas exploration beyond onshore Taranaki, signals the Government’s ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    4 days ago
  • Significant progress on SH1/29 intersection upgrade

    Motorists and freight will now drive through a new roundabout at the SH1/SH29 intersection at Piarere, marking a major milestone for one of the Government’s Roads of Regional Significance that will improve safety and reliability for motorists and freight using this strategic corridor, Transport Minister Simeon Brown says.“The Government is ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    4 days ago
  • Parliament Bill passes first reading

    The Parliament Bill has passed its first reading this afternoon, Leader of the House Chris Bishop says.  “Today Parliament has taken an important step towards modernising the legislation that supports its operations.  “The Parliament Bill will consolidate and modernise the four Acts comprising Parliament’s statutory framework: the Clerk of the ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    4 days ago
  • Tougher sentences to improve transport safety

    The Government is introducing a new aggravating factor for offences against public transport workers as part of its plan to restore law and order, Justice Minister Paul Goldsmith and Transport Minister Simeon Brown have today announced. “In recent months, there has been a worrying increase in abuse and attacks on public ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    4 days ago
  • Workforce boost in specialist mental health training welcomed

    Minister for Mental Health Matt Doocey welcomes the significant increase in Health NZ-funded psychiatry registrar places and the increase of Health NZ-funded clinical psychology internships, as today’s plan supports this Government’s commitment to double clinical psychology intern numbers between 2023 and 2027. Today, Health NZ published its Mental Health and ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    4 days ago
  • Speech to the Caring Families Aotearoa National Conference

    Thank you for the introduction and the invitation to speak to you here today. I would like to start by saying a big thank you to all the caregivers in the room, and those not able to be here today, for all that you do for our children and young ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    4 days ago
  • Speech to Caring Families Aotearoa National Conference

    Thank you for the introduction and the invitation to speak to you here today. I would like to start by saying a big thank you to all the caregivers in the room, and those not able to be here today, for all that you do for our children and young ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    4 days ago
  • Caregivers thanked at their national conference

    “Today at the Caring Families Aotearoa National Caregiver Conference I got to say a big thank you to all the caregivers in the room for all that they do for the children and young people of New Zealand. “Without caregivers providing safe, stable homes for children, Oranga Tamariki would not be ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    4 days ago
  • Government introduces revised clubs and ranges rules

    Improving the way shooting clubs and ranges are regulated will be the outcome of a Bill introduced today Associate Minister of Justice Nicole McKee says.   “Cabinet has agreed to a package of reforms to amend Part 6 of the Arms Act 1983 which will enable simple and effective regulation ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    5 days ago

Page generated in The Standard by Wordpress at 2024-09-28T13:12:54+00:00