| Tidy The Spare Room! |
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| Tuesday, 14 October 2008 03:09 |
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Tidy the spare bedroom, Maori warned! “In fact, in Treasury-speak, their report “assumes net inflow of permanent and long-term migrants will increase as outflows, particularly to Australia, ease and inflows, including returning New Zealanders, increase as economic growth slows elsewhere.” “The problem for whanau here is our own economic downturn. The largest single change in government spending in the PREFU is an increase in the expected cost of benefits. “Unemployment is forecast to rise around 50%, from 3.7% of labour force to 5.1% in 2-3 years, especially in the construction, meat and manufacturing industries,” said Dr Sharples. “That increase is the national average. Just looking at the industries at risk, we know for certain Maori will suffer worse than that. There is a crisis looming for our people," he said. The June 2008 Household Labour Force Survey revealed that the Maori unemployment rate at 7.1% was much worse than that for European NZers 2.8%. "What today's update tells us is that life is going to get pretty grim with the increasing cost pressures of electricity, fuel and food, with a much lower growth rate expected to have immediate flow on effects to the economic outlook" “We must be strategic in our response. We will not turn our whanaunga away, but coming together also creates an opportunity to take stock and respond collectively. "Whanau might look at who could get the best jobs, or who should get further education or training, and organise to support them with child care. Others at home could start a big garden for the whanau, and help kids with homework, shop in bulk and cook big meals for everyone. There are lots of ways to take control, cut costs, and to invest in our own future,” said Dr Sharples. “At the same time, the government has a duty to support the most vulnerable people, and that is why we in the Maori Party are promoting bold policies to eliminate poverty and boost economic participation and performance alongside our support for whanau ora,” he said. |


