Red Alert

Archive for the ‘inequality’ Category

Sir Michael Marmot- Health Equity

Posted by Grant Robertson on July 13th, 2011

Today I am attending a symposium organised by the NZMA on health inequities to coincide with the visit of Sir Michael Marmot from the UK. I have blogged before about the influence of Sir Michael on the excellent NZMA statement on health equity.

Its occasions like this that highlight just how ridiculous are the assertions of Maori privilege made by Don Brash. Just a couple of examples have been highlighted by Tony Blakely from Otago University and Don Simmers and Norman Sharpe from the NZMA.

- despite improvements in the first decade of this century Maori life expectancy is 7-8 years short of non-Maori.
- mortaility rates for Maori in middle age are 2-3 tomes higher than non-Maori including all causes such as heart disease.
- Maori babies are 5 times more likely to die of sudden infant death syndrome than non-Maori
- diabetes rates, suicide rates and infectious disease rates and mortality are all higher for Maori than non-Maori

Health inequities are certainly relate to economic depravation,and it was a good achievement that income inequality in New Zealand did reduce slightly in the 2000s under Labour, but there is much more to do. It is also clear that there is an ethnic component above and beyond that. Addressing this is not privileging a group, it is in fact correcting a systemic disadvantage. Doing so, with early intervention, will benefit us all in promoting social inclusion and reducing the cost of expensive health interventions at a later stage.


Sir Paul Callaghan – Mapping our Future – here is a plan

Posted by Trevor Mallard on July 6th, 2011

Sir Paul Callaghan – StrategyNZ: Mapping our Future – March 2011 Mapping our Future

This is a great presentation. Watch it all. Or just skip to 7.47 to look at why we go backwards if the focus of the leader of the national party is all on tourism.


the leader of the national party sends even more kiwi jobs to China

Posted by Trevor Mallard on June 24th, 2011

Very interesting that the leader of the national party and Steven Joyce have left it to a Chinese website to announce that they have on our behalf purchased another 20 locomotives that should have been built at Hillside and Woburn. No tender. And the first 20 over a year late from the same Chinese source.

Maybe it was because Kiwirail were at the same time firing staff in Dunedin and the Hutt Valley.

Because it is Kiwirail not Chinarail it is time the economic benefits of these purchases (jobs created, skills developed, tax paid, benefits avoided) rather than just the accounting costs are taken into account.

KIWIRAIL Purchase Additional 20 sets of “MADE IN CHINA CNR” Diesel-electric Locomotives
Source?Author?Date?2011-06-17
On June 2, CNR Import & Export Corp. Ltd of CHINA CNR Corp. Ltd. Singed another contract for 20 diesel-electric locomotives with KIWIRAIL New Zealand. The partner PPD company in New Zealand of CNR Import & Export Corp. Ltd has been strongly supporting this contract. This is KIWIRAIL to the CNR purchase after first 20 locomotives in 2009.


Nice to have ?

Posted by Trevor Mallard on June 22nd, 2011

Went to the gym this morning 30 min on bike with no pressure and 20 min walking or hopping  in pool. Leg still hurts.

But that’s not what this blog is about.

The leader of the national party arrived at work as I did. Around 7am. He had five DPS police officers with him.

His car CR1 was left parked blocking the emergency entrance between the Beehive and Parliament while his driver ran along behind with his bag.

I suppose it makes him look important. But it is not necessary.


The inequality of news

Posted by Clare Curran on June 18th, 2011

Came across this just now on Twitter. From the UK’s Financial Times. It seems relevant.

Two extracts below and you can read the whole piece here

Now the rich are always with us …

By Simon Kuper

Published: June 17 2011 22:14 |

Forty years ago, the typical person in the western world read the local newspaper. It told you which local butcher was retiring, who had celebrated their fiftieth wedding anniversary, and it covered the local politicians, athletes and business owners. Twenty years ago, the typical person read the national paper. It covered the national elite. Today that person gets news or Twitter feeds from websites that cover the global elite: everyone from Lady Gaga to Barack Obama.

This shift – from local news to global – is well-known. Less well-known is one of its consequences: news has become news about rich people. Today’s economic inequality is reflected and driven by inequality of news.

and this:

The daily focus on the rich has two consequences. First, these people become part of our own imagined peer group, and so we grow dissatisfied with our own income. It was more soothing to read about the local butcher than about the commodity trader Ivan Glasenberg and his £5.8bn.

Second, we forget the poor. They may always be with us, but not in the media. The perhaps 2.5 billion people with less than $2 a day get ignored, due to the triple whammy of being poor, non-white and non-Anglophone.

For instance, there’s a new treatment that stops the spread of Aids, but rich countries are reluctant to fund it. This has generated a few worthy editorials in highbrow publications, but otherwise is considered too boring to tweet.

In this country we know there’s need and that the cost of living is way too high for vast numbers of us. Not just the people who are described as the traditional poor. But the new poor; the people who have lost incomes, houses and quality of life and are struggling for their very existence. They are growing in number.

Let’s not hide the increasing desperation and hardship many people are feeling. And when considered ideas and solutions get put up, let’s not brush them aside and hide them behind a slogan put up by the other side.


2 min 38 secs on the national party leader’s plan – have a look

Posted by Trevor Mallard on June 17th, 2011


Treasury wants us to be happy too

Posted by Darien Fenton on May 27th, 2011

In his last public speech before he steps down, Treasury Secretary John Whitehead announced a new direction for Treasury to accompany a report released on Wednesday entitled “Working Towards Higher Living Standards for New Zealanders”.

In the report, Treasury published the results of 18 months of research on a living standards framework with standards beyond economic growth – such as contentedness, the value of unpaid work and leisure time. Apparently, this is in response to criticism that Treasury does’t pay enough attention to whether higher incomes are the ultimate objective or a way of increasing happiness.

The happiness indicator idea was begun in Bhutan, but has been taken up by other countries, such as the UK and France. Australia has also developed a well-being framework. Grant Robertson and I have blogged on this earlier.

Now our Treasury wants in :

“Treasury’s understanding of the term living standards goes beyond the narrow material definition – often proxied by GDP – to incorporate a broad range of material and non-material factors such as trust, education, health and environmental quality.  In taking a broad approach to understanding living standards, Treasury is in line with other economic institutions internationally.

The Framework recognises the following five elements:

  1. there is a broad range of material and non-material determinants of living standards (beyond income and GDP);
  2. freedoms, rights and capabilities are important for living standards;
  3. the distribution of living standards across different groups in society is an ethical concern for the public, and a political one for governments.
  4. the sustainability of living standards over time is central to ensuring that improvements in living standards are permanent, with dynamic analysis of policy needed to weigh up short and long-term costs and benefits;
  5. measuring living standards directly using self-assessed subjective measures of wellbeing provides a useful cross-check of what is important to individuals.

It’s an interesting report and well worth a read. I hope it demonstrates a shift in thinking away from the relentless pursuit of growth for the benefit of a few and that things like closing the inequality gaps actually is one of the best ways of ensuring the happiness (and security) of a nation.

I will watch carefully to see if the new framework applies to the advice from Treasury for the government’s planned asset sales, for example, where the government is already seeking advisers to work on the sell down, despite them saying the electorate will get to vote on it.

I will watch with interest to see whether the NACTs take any notice and how this framework is applied in a whole raft of Treasury advice.


Tackling inequality

Posted by A Guest Poster on May 17th, 2011

OECD inequality

In recent decades, inequalities in New Zealand have grown faster than in most other OECD countries.  This trend was halted under the last Labour Government, but other governments have more than made up for it.

Rising inequality is bad for a country that prides itself on its egalitarianism. 

Large wealth disparities are bad for nearly everyone.  High levels of inequality in society have been linked to higher chances of poor health outcomes, poor education outcomes and anti-social behaviour. These things have both social and economic costs for a country.

Last month I posted for Red Alert on why inequality is bad.   But how does one go about tackling inequality?

Increasing GST, and taking the income to give the biggest tax-cuts to the wealthiest people is clearly not the answer.  National’s tax ‘switch’ has hurt those at the bottom, and squeezed those in the middle, who are now worse off than they were before. Inequalities are even worse now than the graph above suggests.

The OECD held a forum on tackling inequality at the start of this month. The background paper is instructive.

Aside from asking if who you marry matters, the report also asks what policy-makers can do about the problem of inequality.  Answers focus in the area of skills training and education, particularly where they are available for disadvantaged groups.  Looks like National’s cuts to education in the early childhood (ECE) and adult and community (ACE) area aren’t the right answer either.

Labour has promised to reverse the ECE and ACE cuts.  We’ve also said we’d make the first $5000 of earnings tax free.  And we’ll raise the minimum wage to $15. All of these things are useful first steps in tackling inequality.

In line with the OECD view, an economy that provides skills, jobs and opportunity for all New Zealanders has both social and economic benefits.

Hat-tip Jeremy Warner at The Telegraph

Dr David Clark is the Labour Candidate for Dunedin North. He has worked in shops, in a factory, as a Presbyterian Minister, as a University Tutor and as an analyst at the New Zealand Treasury. He currently runs a University Hall of Residence. 


Campbell Live – Cost of Living

Posted by Trevor Mallard on May 13th, 2011

The rising cost of living will be a feature of the election campaign. The median real wage has dropped substantially under the National government.


Budget FAQs

Posted by David Cunliffe on May 11th, 2011

Some quick answers to a couple of good questions about debt and Kiwisaver from recent Facebook inquiries:

Q:  Has NZ’s debt really cimbed from $300 m per week to $380 m per week?  Why?

A:  The difference between $300 m and $380 m is the fact that NZDMO is in the market issuing more debt securities than it needs beacuse demand is good and prices low. In other words it is bringing forward next years borrowing, and that is all.  Of the $300m about half is rollover of exisitng debt.  So next year it can say it reduced the borrowing, beacuse it will have pre-borrowed some of what it needs already.

Q:  How much will the cuts to Kiwisaver Key announceed today save?  $40m a year ?

A:   Kiwisaver cost savings are unknown untill policy is made clear in the Budget.  The Member Tax Credit costs about $880 m per year.  Half that would be ($440m pa) would be  ”saved” to Govt if MTC halved to $10 per week.  But that ’saving’ but would have to be offset against lower private savings from weaker incentices.   That is a problem beacuse private debt is huge  – in fact 90% of NZ’s total international debt is private.   Govt debt is only 10% of the problem.

Q:  Is it true that Dr Cullen’s books in 2008 showed a fiscal surplus in 2008?

A:  Yes   Dr Cullen’s 2008 books showed a net debt (incl NZSF assets) to GDP ratio surplus of 7.6%   In other words we were in positive CREDIT, though the GFC meant a forecast net deficit up to around 2% of GDP.    Gross debt to GDP is ow 34%and climbing under National.  It is hard to believe that National still gripes and tries to shift blame.   Time they manned up and took some responisbility for their own choices – like $23 Billion of tax cuts over 4 years in Budgets 2009 and 2010.

Q:  Are our incomes catching up with Australia like National promised?

A: No, we are going backwards.  When National took office in 2008 the gap was about 30% of GDP per capita   It was 34.7% and growing last time I checked.

Bottom line – NZ’s problems are serious and need serious fixes, but don’t buy the panic line that it is only public debt that matters.   Responsible fiscal management, including reducing debt across the cycle, is essential- but it is not the ONLY thing that matters.  We have to grow jobs, exports and savings at the same time as reducing debt.  And we have to build a country that is fair, caring and ready to take on the world, not slide into two NZs – one for the haves and another for the have nots.

PS happy to take your budget questions – message me on http://www.facebook.com/david.cunliffe.labour.


Don and Hone’s sideshow

Posted by Grant Robertson on May 8th, 2011

This morning I finally got around to watching Don and Hone on Close Up. I did so in the context of everything else that these two got up to last week (comparisons to Hitler, calling each other racists, re-writing the Treaty, eulogies for Osama, subsequently withdrawn).

Fundamentally I felt sad watching them together as the debate went back down the divisive approach to race relations. There is so much for New Zealanders to be focused on now, re-hashing this debate is just not it. Of course we need to keep working on race relations in NZ, but the Brash/Harawira approach is not it, and it is not where New Zealanders are at.

The day after the programme I travelled through South Taranaki with Phil Goff and our candidate up there Hamish McDouall. We talked with people in small towns like Manaia about their struggles to make ends meet, to get jobs, their desire for apprenticeships for the young people in town and for better funding for the school. We went on to Hawera where we met business people who were working hard to climb out of the recession, social service providers hit by government funding cuts to anti-violence programmes which are more stretched than ever. We heard about the pensioner who had not eaten for two days so she had enough money to pay her bills.

Don and Hone will no doubt try and out extreme each other, pump up the rhetoric, and scratch about for votes to give them an extra MP or two. In terms of the campaign, we will be focusing on dealing with the issues we heard in South Taranaki. Giving people a vision and a plan. Getting government priorities in line with people’s priorities. That’s a plan that will give New Zealanders some hope that they will get a fair go, an economy that works for everyone, a job, and a good future for them and their families.


A Brash reminder on minimum wage and benefits

Posted by Trevor Mallard on May 7th, 2011

Brash on Health 2


State subsidised wages or bargaining equality?

Posted by Darien Fenton on April 29th, 2011

I’m doing this post knowing that it will send the right wingers scurrying to their keyboards in a high dudgeon, but it’s a risk I’m prepared to take. Because, like it or not, we have to have the conversation about the how the inequality of bargaining power has contributed to NZ’s low wages.

I was surprised to find this article in the NZ Herald which very succinctly outlines the link between weakened collective bargaining rights and low wages. The authors, Andrew Gawith and Susan Guthrie, describe how the era of the 1930s and 1940s were labelled the “Great Compression” because the gap in incomes between the haves and the have-nots narrowed significantly.

“The policies that delivered this compression – including a strengthening of collective bargaining regulations, which provided a floor to wages and high tax rates on capital – were follow by unprecedented income and output growth that persisted until the 1970’s.”

By contrast, economist Professor Paul Krugman describes the post-1980s as resembling the “gilded age” of the 1920’s – one characterised by a high and rising concentration of income in the hands of a narrow elite.

Gawith and Guthrie ask :

Do our current labour market laws and institutions deliver the wage “floor” that Krugman (and the IMF) see as valuable to lifting output and incomes?
The fact that we have had to introduce a significant income subsidy – Working for Families – suggests not.

The Employment Contracts Act 1991 undermined the bargaining power of workers, which probably goes some way to explaining why from 1992 to 2009 average real output per worker rose on average by 2% a year, but real wages rose at less than half that price…….”

They go on to describe how the Labour Government recognised that wages were too low, particularly for those trying to raise a family and how Working for Families was introduced to top up the incomes of low and middle income wage workers.

Gawith and Guthrie acknowledge that Working for Families has definitely alleviated financial stress among low and middle income families, but they say it has distorted “market signals”.

Low paid jobs are a traditional route for younger workers to get more experience. However, under Working for Families, low-paid jobs are more likely to be accepted by older workers with dependents; their living costs are higher and not normally covered by a low wage, but unlike younger workers, their take-home pay (thanks to Working for Families) can far exceed what the employer pays.

That’s an interesting proposition. Not sure if I totally agree, because my experience of low wage workers is that’s it’s far more complex than that. However, they make the point that experienced workers being employed in jobs that don’t use their full potential detracts from productivity growth and because of Working for Families, they are employed at “artificially” low wages to the detriment of workers without dependents.

And I like this :

Rather than chasing the dream of matching Australian incomes, let’s first make sure workers with families can live with dignity from the wages their employers pay them instead of having to rely on selective income subsidies from the Government. That may involve giving workers more bargaining power to negotiate an increase in their share of national income. That should be a step towards narrowing the distribution of income and wealth in New Zealand which has broadened over the past three decades and may be cramping our ability to grow.”

And this :

“Joseph Stiglitz states that ….”growing inequality is the flip side of something else : shrinking opportunity. Whenever we diminish equality of opportunity, it means we are not using some of our most valued assets – our people – in the most productive way possible.”

Expect to hear more from Labour on these themes.


Tell the Government: Don’t Cut Our Future!

Posted by Trevor Mallard on April 27th, 2011

Flyer

t Cut Our Future


The Social Democratic Challenge: An Easter Perspective

Posted by A Guest Poster on April 25th, 2011

Michael Wood pic

Introducing Michael Wood

Michael is 30 and lives in Mt Roskill with his family. A member of the Puketapapa Local Board of the Auckland Council, he has a keen interest in local government, community development, and the development of a robust local civil society. He has spent most of the past decade working in the union movement, most recently as a negotiator for the finance sector union Finsec.

His main interest in politics is inequality, its structural causes, and the development of a social democratic programme that fundamentally re-balances the current skewed distribution of resources. An active Anglican, he is also focussed on the role of faith in public discourse, and the need for the left to re-examine its heritage and re-connect with the broad faith community.

Michael is the former Botany by-election candidate and a Labour List candidate

The central theme of the Easter story is that of resurrection – the idea that out of the very darkest places, renewal and new life can emerge. It’s a powerful theme, and one that no particular faith or political creed can claim exclusive ownership over.

For those of us on the left who have a Christian faith (Anglican for the record) however, the notion of resurrection, the promise of something better to come, has particular resonance. Labour Parties across the world were often driven by strong base of Christian activism when they were being founded in the early 20th Century, and a common objective was to build a “new Jerusalem” in place of the dark, squalid, and brutal conditions of industrial society at that time.

I believe that the theme is just as relevant, if not more so, for social democratic politics today. The right’s wholesale adoption of amoral free-market values represents a complete abdication of responsibility for ever hoping or planning for something better. Politics is reduced to a bloodless, technocratic administration of market forces in which the lives of real people are in reality solely governed by aggregate forces of supply and demand. Their language dismisses the prospect of anything better as “utopian” and we have it drilled into us that “there is no alternative”. To me the most horrifying spectacle to unfold under this government has been the casual dismissal of rising unemployment (Key: “The figures bounce around”) as if it is by its nature uncontrollable and inevitable.

It is that hopeless inevitability that the theme of resurrection addresses. We say that a better future is always possible if we plan for it and work for it. It was out of the ashes of depression and war that social democratic movements across the western world built fair and just economic systems and social institutions when they achieved power in the 1930s and 40s. That was real resurrection in action – millions lifted out of poverty and despair, given hope, and told that they were worth caring about and had a stake in their society.

As now as we face entrenched recessionary conditions across the western world, and in many cases governments whose faith in a valueless market based system is unshakeable, it seems to me that a huge opportunity exists for social democrats to harness the values of resurrection again. This is about outlook, policy, and language – being clear with people that we are not just a differently coloured management team, but that that we are the party that believes that the current imbalances and inequities are not only wrong, but that they can be changed, and hope resurrected, through political action.

Talk to the victims of the recession – people in the poorer parts of town, the volunteers at the local CAB, or the small business owners who are going under by the score and you’ll find that they are all looking for resurrection of a kind.

Happy Easter!


Inequality is bad for us

Posted by A Guest Poster on April 10th, 2011

by David Clark
Labour candidate, Dunedin North

Good article in the May issue of Vanity Fair by Nobel Prize winning economist Joseph Stiglitz spelling out in straight-forward terms why inequality is bad – for most people always, and for everybody eventually.

At one level, this is simple stuff.  Some people having all of the opportunities while others have very few – just doesn’t feel right.  Most of us understand that instinctively.  But Stiglitz explains why it makes no economic sense either.

The article uses examples from the USA but the principles apply equally to New Zealand:

1/ Growing inequality equals diminished opportunity.  If some of our people are not trained and available for their best contribution to society, we all miss out.  In New Zealand one in five children is born into poverty.  These kids have to battle the odds.  They are more likely to suffer from diseases of poverty, less likely to succeed in the education system, and have higher chances of ending up in the justice system.  For our country to get ahead, we need all children to grow up to be net contributors to our economy.

2/ If our brightest are tempted by financial awards away from professions that support the whole of society, and towards those that preserve the interests of a wealthy few, we all miss out.  As Stiglitz dryly puts it: “many of the distortions that lead to inequality—such as those associated with monopoly power and preferential tax treatment for special interests—undermine the efficiency of the economy”.

3/ ‘Collective action’ is a requirement for any modern growing economy.  Infrastructure is an example: witness growth in China’s high speed rail network.  It’s more than 12 times bigger than it was in 2008, four times larger than that in any other country, and projected to continue growing at an astonishing rate.  This could not happen in the USA.  The truly wealthy cease to value common assets; able to buy what they desire, they have no need for them.  Where a critical mass of the truly wealthy exert undue influence on the political process—investment: in infrastructure, education, research, healthcare and other matters related to the common good, dwindles.   And we all suffer.

Stiglitz’s article offers some clear reasons why a fairer society is better for everyone.  But I’d add a fourth reason why societies where there are fewer disparities tend to be more successful.  People work harder when they know the rules of society are fair: when everyone has to do a fair day’s work to live well; when it is always possible for someone born in a family of modest means, to be truly successful in their chosen field.


Remember when Key wanted to close the wage gap with Aussie – now English is proud of it

Posted by Trevor Mallard on April 9th, 2011

John Key’s promise to close the wage gap with Australia was an important policy plank.

Yesterday Bill English formally abandoned that policy and used the fact that our wages are 30% lower to try and sell New Zealand as a long term investment option.


The fundamental competition is for capital, including Australian capital, he said, and over the next few years New Zealand’s advantages would become more apparent.

“One is the wage differential. We have a workforce that is better educated, just as productive and 30 per cent cheaper,” he said.

I suppose it should be refreshing to see honesty from the government but I do feel sad the the first appearance of a plan openly involves keeping wages low.


What happened to crony watch?

Posted by Chris Hipkins on April 8th, 2011

When Labour was in government the NBR used to have a regular column called ‘Crony Watch’ where they would chronicle any government appointments that had any sort of political connection. Strangely, since National came go power it seems to have disappeared.

I’m wondering whether this is because they don’t feel that the National Party appointing their own activists and funders to taxpayer funded Roles is cronyism, or is it just that there are now so many of them they don’t have room?

I’m not opposed to political appointments based on merit, you shouldn’t be disqualified from public service just because you happen to have history with one party or another. I supported Labour’s decision to appoint Jim Bolger to head NZ Post and I support National’s decision to replace him with Michael Cullen.

But National’s appointments should get the same level of scrutiny as Labour’s appointments. Are we getting value for money from Don Brash’s task force given the govt reject his recommendations before they even read them? (mind you, Key doesn’t seem to be a particularly big reader of important documents).

Will ACT Party candidate Graham Scott add value to the Productivity Commission. Is Jenny Shipley the best person go head one of our largest energy companies? Should Steven Joyce have given massive taxpayer loans to a company he used to own that operates in direct competition with a government owned enterprise?

Is it a good thing that Murray McCully has decided to abandon past practice and hand-pick appointees for overseas diplomatic roles? Will that lead to cronyism? Given McCully has just appointed a sitting National MP to what should be an independent role, it’s fair to ask.

These are all legitimate questions that the media would have been asking Labour in the same circumstances. It’s a shame different standards seem to apply when the Tories are in charge.


Where is the plan?

Posted by Trevor Mallard on March 27th, 2011

Lloyd Morrison is a great source of thought provoking material. Today he has circulated Losing our way from Bob Herbert of the New York Times.

There is plenty of economic activity in the U.S., and plenty of wealth. But like greedy children, the folks at the top are seizing virtually all the marbles. Income and wealth inequality in the U.S. have reached stages that would make the third world blush. As the Economic Policy Institute has reported, the richest 10 percent of Americans received an unconscionable 100 percent of the average income growth in the years 2000 to 2007, the most recent extended period of economic expansion.

Filed under: inequality

So who are the bludgers ?

Posted by Trevor Mallard on February 22nd, 2011

No Right Turn has a good short post pointing out that Baclays Bank paid £113 million on a profit of £15 billion after paying bonuses of £1.5 billion.

Highlights the issue of how using offshore tax havens and complex company and trust arrangements mean some individuals and companies avoid tax.

Our problems are probably of a smaller scale but the principle is the same.

It is one of the reasons I want to close loopholes in our tax system – a much better approach than criticising Kiwis on average incomes who have problems with their budget some months.

Filed under: Tax, inequality