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13
June 2011
A
scandal of wasted opportunity
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The 70
job losses announced last week by KiwiRail in Dunedin and
Wellington, and the 41 from Yarrows bakery in South Taranaki
are reminders of how difficult business conditions are in New
Zealand at the present time. Herald reporter Simon Collins
spelt it out in a story on Saturday that outlined the problems
faced in Northland - the region with the country’s highest
rate of unemployment. At 9.8 percent at the end of the March
quarter, Northland’s unemployment rate is almost 2
percentage points above the next-highest regions of Auckland
and Gisborne/Hawkes Bay. With unemployment amongst young
people aged 18 to 24 running at 29 percent and amongst Maori
at 48 percent, more than half of all young Maori in Northland
are on welfare.[1]
Haami
Pipiri, the leader of the Northland iwi Te Rarawa, claimed
that the shocking rate of unemployment amongst Maori youth
indicated that Maori have been “marginalised”. He said,
“The feature of that experience has been the development of
our economy in this region without
us”.
What he
failed to mention is the vast amounts of Treaty-related money
that has gone into the region. The Crown Forestry Rental Trust
alone has pumped over $20 million into Northland over the
years to help iwi prepare their Treaty of Waitangi claims. A
further $13 million has been provided to Northland claimants
over the last three years. In addition, tribes have received a
share of the millions of dollars in funding provided by the
Office of Treaty Settlements and the legal aid system each
year.
Documents
from the Crown Forestry Rental Trust show that Te Rarawa
received over $1.2 million during the last three years to help
prepare their Treaty claim.[2] Their settlement will be worth
$20 million in taxpayer funds and assets. As well as cash,
they will receive forests, a local Court House and Police
Station, 10 local schools, and two Landcorp farms (along with
a number of other deals that include changing the names of
Northland towns, harbours and beaches).[3]
In
addition to land claims, the Treaty of Waitangi fisheries
settlement gave Maori 37 percent of the country’s total
fishing quota, which is currently worth $4 billion. Iwi
allocations were based on their population and share of the
coastline. The eight iwi in Taitokerau in the North received
almost $30 million in cash and shares, with Te Rarawa gaining
a $7 million asset base. In 2005, Northland-based Ngapuhi
alone received the equivalent of $67 million for its fisheries
settlement.[4]
What all
of this means is that talk of Maori marginalisation is
self-serving nonsense. A recent government report estimated
the total value of Maori corporate assets at a whopping $37 billion.[5]
Thanks to the generosity of New Zealand taxpayers, the Maori
aristocracy has become very rich, and is getting richer. Maori
leaders could use their vast resources to lift the performance
and aspirations of their people. They choose not to.
The sad
fact is that while most New Zealanders believe that the
proceeds of public assets transferred to corporate Maori
through the Treaty settlement process are being used to look
after the whole iwi, this is not the case. Long ago iwi
leaders realised that race-based claims of disadvantage could
work in their favour - not only did they attract substantial
government funding, but they also guaranteed the on-going
fawning and pandering of politicians seeking to outdo each
other by providing never-ending benefits to Maori
organisations that were already awash with money. In fact in
2006 the Labour government even went so far as to change the
law to allow the commercial arm of Maori tribes to be granted
charitable exemptions so they don’t have to pay income tax
on their business profits! This is in addition to the
long-standing special tax status of Maori authorities which
sees them paying a lower rate of 19.5 percent than all other
businesses, which must pay 28 percent.
The
elitism of iwi leaders is reflected in what is going on with
their fisheries settlement. While iwi own almost 40 percent of
New Zealand’s entire quota, instead of providing employment
opportunities on fishing boats and in processing plants for
thousands of unemployed Maori, most of the 57 iwi who jointly
own the quota use foreign crewed fishing vessels and fish
processing factories in China. The ageing fishing boats are
manned by crew who are forced to work under sweat-shop
conditions earning as little as $65 a week. According to
industry sources, the catch is then shipped to China where it
is processed using Chinese labour, labelled as produced in New
Zealand and sold in our supermarkets - as if it had never left
our shores.
The
dreadful conditions on these fishing boats came into focus
last year when the 38-year-old FCV Oyang 70 sank in August
with the loss of 6 lives. That was followed by the sinking of
the 31-year-old No 1 Insung in December, with the death of 22
crew. In an exposé
in the Sunday Star Times last month, Michael Field outlined
how Ngapuhi has a 50/50 joint venture company Northland
Deepwater JV Ltd (with an Auckland firm DSM Ltd), which
has lobbied to be able to keep using aging foreign
vessels. Hawkes Bay’s Ngati Kahungunu now deals through
Northland Deepwater, while Tainui and Ngati Porou also use
foreign vessels. Under their treaty settlements Maori formed
the pan-tribal Aotearoa Fisheries Limited, which has a 50
percent shareholding in Sealord Fisheries, which also uses
foreign vessels. The rest of the shares are held by Nissui, a
major shareholder in Japan's Antarctic whaling fleet.[6]
When
asked about the foreign vessel scandal, the Minister of Maori
Affairs, Pita Sharples said that he was concerned that 60,000
young New Zealanders were out of work, but that he understood
the reason iwi weren’t catching their own quota was that
“many Maori find it hard to be out for long periods of time
away from their whanau”!
There is
no doubt at all that the abolition of the youth wage (which
paid 16 and 17 year old workers 80 percent of the adult
minimum wage) by the Labour Government in 2007 has made New
Zealand’s youth unemployment problem much worse. I asked
this week’s NZCPR Guest Commentator Alasdair Thompson, the
Chief Executive of the Employers and Manufacturers
Association, to share his view of the impact of that law
change:
“Six
years ago when the Labour government was planning to abolish
minimum pay rates for youth, our organisation, the Employers
and Manufacturers Association (EMA), said the move was certain
to hurt the very people it was intended to help. So it has
proved.
“In
2005 EMA said if the Bill introduced to Parliament on February
22nd became law, the unemployment rate then at 12 per cent for
15 to 19 year olds, was very likely to rise. Regrettably our
prediction was way off beam. Youth rates of unemployment have
more than doubled to 27.5 per cent of those unemployed.
“They
are still rising; over the past year the youth unemployment
rate went up 2.3 per cent from 25.2 per cent in 2010, at a
time when unemployment overall declined slightly. This rate of
unemployment for young people represents a terrible risk for
the future of all of us. Its coming at a time of life for
these young people when they need to establish regular work
habits and learn the basic skills needed to hold down a job
with prospects.
“When
young people leave school they find it hard enough to get
started; earning a minimum youth rate often got a teenager’s
career underway. Besides, for an employer with a choice
between an experienced worker and an inexperienced worker it
makes sense for them to take on the experienced worker every
time.” To read Alasdair’s full article Young
people need youth rates of pay, click
here >>>
New
Zealand’s high rate of teenage unemployment is a national
disgrace. It has been estimated that Labour’s abolition of
the youth wage could have cost over 9,000 jobs. As a result,
many young people are now condemned to live on benefits for
the equivalent of $4.70 an hour, when they could have earning
a living for $10.40 an hour. For a young person, getting their
foot onto the bottom rung of the employment ladder is a
crucial first step, as that entry-level job gives them the
skills and workplace experience to enable them to get a better
job at a higher rate of pay.
The
tragedy is that many unemployed young people have been doubly
penalised by government policy: first they are forced to
attend schools where they are educated so poorly that they
leave without the skills necessary to get a good job, and then
secondly, they are prevented from working for an employer who
would be prepared to provide them with on-the-job training -
in return for paying lower wages.
When
considering the issue of minimum wages, it is important to
remember that essentially wages are the payment workers
receive for the productive services that they provide to
others. As workers become more experienced and efficient,
their services increase in value, driving up their wages. It
is this increased output that helps to lift living standards.
However,
when wages are increased by government decree – such as the
major rise in the minimum wage from $13 to $15 an hour
promised by the Labour Party if they win the election -
productive output will decline as jobs are lost and consumer
demand falls. That means in spite of all of the promises,
raising the minimum wage will not lift overall living
standards. While employees on the minimum wage would obviously
gain a pay rise, the Department of Labour has estimated that
around 6,000 workers would lose their jobs as employers who
can no longer afford to hire them at the higher rates of pay,
are forced to let them go. To make matters worse, unemployed
workers would find it even harder to get a job, and consumers
would be forced to pay more for goods and services as
businesses raise their prices to cover the additional cost of
labour. Rather than being the panacea claimed by unions and
some politicians, because they do not increase productive
output, minimum wage increases have a detrimental impact on
the economy as a whole.
At a
time when so many New Zealanders are in desperate
need of jobs, the revelation that the elite of Maoridom are
prepared to leave Maori on benefits and their families at
risk, by sending New Zealand fish to be processed in China,
comes as a shock. After years of providing on-going funding
and tax privileges to iwi corporations, the New Zealand public
had been fooled into thinking that they would look after their
whole iwi. However we now find that instead of creating
employment for their people in the fishing industry, thousands
of foreign crew and many thousands of Chinese workers are
doing the job that unemployed Maori could be doing. Corporate
iwi should have to explain to the New Zealand public, why they
prefer their young people to go to WINZ instead of going to
work - why are they prepared to see young Maori sitting around
smoking dope and growing
cash crops, when they could be gainfully employed in a Maori
fishing industry with meaningful jobs and the hope of a better
future? This wasted opportunity is the real scandal.
This
week’s poll asks: Should
the youth minimum wage be reintroduced? Click here for poll >>>
FOOTNOTES:
1.Simon
Collins, Where
are the jobs? Youth unemployment crisis in the north.
2.Crown
Forestry Rental Trust Report
3.Office of Treaty
Settlements, Te
Rarawa Agreement in Principle
4. Te Ohu Kaimoana, Iwi
decisions register
5.Te Puni Kokiri, The
Maori Economy
6.Michael Field, Iwi
blamed for state of fishery
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