What Are New Zealand’s "Bare Necessities?"
Tuesday, 31 March 2015
What Are New Zealand’s "Bare Necessities?"
What is the bottom line standard of living we would expect any New Zealander to enjoy? Maxim Institute wants Kiwis to be given the chance to define a minimum “basket of goods,” establishing the bare necessities any of us would need to participate in New Zealand society.
The paper’s author, Kieran Madden says, “Any definition of poverty has to be meaningful to all New Zealanders. So it makes sense to find out what most of us would consider the basic needs of life in present day New Zealand, and set the poverty line at the income level it would take to have those things.”
Madden also calls for measures of poverty to be more practical, capable of identifying different groups who need specific solutions: “What helps a single mother in Auckland with high levels of debt is not going to be the same thing as what is needed to help a single mother in rural New Zealand with no local jobs.”
These are some of the nine recommendations in the policy paper Maxim Institute releases today: The Heart of Poverty – Defining and measuring what it means to be poor in New Zealand.
LINKS:
Download Two Page Summary Of
Report
Download the Maxim Poverty Policy
Paper
ENDS
Gordon Campbell: On The Risks Of AI In The Workplace
Tauranga City Council: Mauao Restoration Work Has Begun
Horizon Research: New Poll Finds High Concern About Fuel Situation
Tiaki Wai: Over 1,150 People Give Feedback On Tiaki Wai Water Services Strategy
Greenpeace Aotearoa: Israeli Forces Illegally Attack Peaceful Humanitarian Flotilla
Zero Waste Network: Container Return Scheme Bill Could Save Councils $50m A Year And Put Money Back In Households
Office of the Privacy Commissioner: Privacy Commissioner Does Not Support Policing Amendment Bill

