Scoop has an Ethical Paywall
License needed for work use Register

Gordon Campbell | Parliament TV | Parliament Today | News Video | Crime | Employers | Housing | Immigration | Legal | Local Govt. | Maori | Welfare | Unions | Youth | Search

 

Those with lowest living standards face highest price rises

Media release – Council of Trade Unions

8 November 2016

New information shows households with lowest living standards face highest price increases

“The new information on prices facing different types of households released by Statistics New Zealand today means we should be even more concerned about inequalities and poverty in New Zealand,” says CTU Economist Bill Rosenberg.

“The new Household Living-Cost Price Indexes show that since June 2008, households with the lowest expenditure per person faced price rises at twice the rate of the highest expenditure households – 18.2 percent compared to 9.1 percent. A typical household experienced prices rising by 12.9 percent over the same period.”

The differences are due to the different goods and services that different types of households buy.

For example lowest income and expenditure households spend much more on rent and energy which went up much faster than other prices, while high income and expenditure households spend much more on interest, and interest rates have been falling.

“Similarly, Superannuitant households faced price rises of 18.9 percent and Beneficiary households faced price rises of 16.0 percent. While New Zealand superannuitants were protected by being indexed to the average weekly wage which rose 27 percent over the period since June, benefits were increased by only 12.0 percent, so beneficiaries fell behind in their living standards as well as further behind the incomes of the rest of New Zealand.”

Advertisement - scroll to continue reading

Are you getting our free newsletter?

Subscribe to Scoop’s 'The Catch Up' our free weekly newsletter sent to your inbox every Monday with stories from across our network.

Over the most recent period available, in the year to September, while a typical household experienced price increases of 0.1 percent according to these new measures, the lowest spending households saw prices rise by 0.6 percent, beneficiaries by 0.8 percent and superannuitants by 0.4 percent. At the end of the scale, the highest spending households saw prices fall by 0.3 percent.

These new measures should be used to re-examine inequality measures which have been based on the CPI, Rosenberg says. They may well show income inequality rising more quickly than previously thought.

Rosenberg concluded: “Statistics New Zealand is to be congratulated on publishing these new statistics. However I still have concern that the rapid rise in the cost of buying a house is underrepresented in these indexes, as it is in the CPI. Nonetheless the new indexes are a major step forward in understanding the pressures facing New Zealand families.”

Ends.


© Scoop Media

 
 
 
Parliament Headlines | Politics Headlines | Regional Headlines


Gordon Campbell: On The Government's Assault On Maori

This isn’t news, but the National-led coalition is mounting a sustained assault on Treaty rights and obligations. Even so, Christopher Luxon has described yesterday’s nationwide protests by Maori as “pretty unfair.” Poor thing. In the NZ Herald, Audrey Young has compiled a useful list of the many, many ways that Luxon plans to roll back the progress made here over the past 40 years in race relations... More


 
 
Public Housing Futures: Christmas Comes Early For Landlords

New CTU analysis of the National & ACT coalition agreement has shown the cost of returning interest deductibility to landlords is an extra $900M on top of National’s original proposal. This is because it is going to be implemented earlier and faster, including retrospective rebates from April 2023. More


Green Party: Petition To Save Oil & Gas Ban

“The new Government’s plan to expand oil and gas exploration is as dangerous as it is unscientific. Whatever you think about the new government, there is simply no mandate to trash the climate. We need to come together to stop them,” says James Shaw. More

PSA: MFAT Must Reverse Decision To Remove Te Reo

MFAT's decision to remove te reo from correspondence before new Ministers are sworn in risks undermining the important progress the public sector has made in honouring te Tiriti. "We are very disappointed in what is a backward decision - it simply seems to be a Ministry bowing to the racist rhetoric we heard on the election campaign trail," says Marcia Puru. More

 
 
 
 
 
 

LATEST HEADLINES

  • PARLIAMENT
  • POLITICS
  • REGIONAL
 
 

InfoPages News Channels


 
 
 
 

Join Our Free Newsletter

Subscribe to Scoop’s 'The Catch Up' our free weekly newsletter sent to your inbox every Monday with stories from across our network.