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	<title>Auditor-General &#8211; Evening Report</title>
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		<title>Govt should defuse NZ’s social timebomb – but won’t</title>
		<link>https://eveningreport.nz/2025/05/23/govt-should-defuse-nzs-social-timebomb-but-wont/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Asia Pacific Report]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 22 May 2025 13:19:46 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[We have been handed a long and protracted recession with few signs of growth and prosperity. Budget 2025 signals more of the same, writes Susan St John. ANALYSIS: By Susan St John With the coalition government’s second Budget being unveiled, we should question where New Zealand is heading. The 2024 Budget laid out the strategy. ]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>We have been handed a long and protracted recession with few signs of growth and prosperity. Budget 2025 signals more of the same, writes Susan St John.</em></p>
<p><strong>ANALYSIS:</strong> <em>By Susan St John</em></p>
<p>With the coalition government’s second Budget being unveiled, we should question where New Zealand is heading.</p>
<p>The 2024 Budget laid out the strategy. Tax cuts and landlord subsidies were prioritised with a focus on cuts to social and infrastructure spending. Most of the tax package went to the well-off, while many low-income households got nothing, or very little.</p>
<p>Even the tiny bit of the tax package directed to low-income people fell flat. Family Boost has significantly helped only a handful of families, while the increase of $25 per week (In Work Tax Credit) was denied all families on benefits, affecting about 200,000 of the very poorest children.</p>
<p>In the recession, families that lost paid work also lost access to full Working for Families, an income cut for their children of about $100 per week.</p>
<p>No one worked out how the many spending cuts would be distributed, but they have hurt the poor the most. These changes are too numerous to itemise but include increased transport costs; the reintroduction of prescription charges; a disastrous school lunch system; rising rents, rates and insurance; fewer budget advisory services; cuts to foodbank funding and hardship grants; stripping away support programmes for the disabled; inadequately adjusted benefits and minimum wage; and reduced support for pay equity and the living wage.</p>
<p>The objective is to save money while ignoring the human cost. For example, a scathing report of the <a href="https://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/PO2505/S00106/children-pay-price-of-oranga-tamariki-contracting-fiasco-auditor-general-issues-damning-indictment-of-govt-cuts.htm" rel="nofollow">Auditor General confirms that Oranga Tamariki</a> took a bulldozer to obeying the call for a 6.5 percent cut in existing social services with no regard to the extreme hurt caused to children and struggling parents.</p>
<p>Budget 2025 has already indicated that Working for Families will continue to go backwards with not even inflation adjustments. <a href="https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/national/557850/annual-report-finds-more-nz-kids-living-in-material-hardship-than-last-year" rel="nofollow">The 2025 child and youth strategy</a> report shows that over the year to June 2024 the number of children in material poverty continued to increase, there were more avoidable hospitalisations, immunisation rates for babies declined, and there was more food insecurity.</p>
<p><strong>Human costs all around us</strong><br />We can see the human costs all around us in homelessness, food insecurity, and ill health. Already we know we rank at the bottom among developed countries for <a href="https://unicef-nz.cdn.prismic.io/unicef-nz/aCO_OCdWJ-7kSCq__UNICEF-Innocenti-Report-Card-19-Child-Wellbeing-Unpredictable-World-2025.pdf" rel="nofollow">child wellbeing and suicide rates</a>.</p>
<p>Abject distress existing alongside where homes sell for $20 million-$40 million is no longer uncommon, and neither are $6 million helicopters of the very rich.</p>
<figure class="wp-caption alignnone"><figcaption class="wp-caption-text">Changes in suicide rates (three-year average), ages 15 to 19 from 2018 to 2022 (or most recent four-year period available). Source: WHO mortality database</figcaption></figure>
<p>At the start of the year, Helen Robinson, CEO of the Auckland City Mission, had a clear warning: “I am pleading with government for more support, otherwise what we and other food relief agencies in Auckland can provide, will dramatically decrease.</p>
<p>“This leaves more of Auckland hungry and those already there become more desperate. It is the total antithesis of a thriving city.”</p>
<p>The theory held by this government is that by reducing the role of government and taxes, the private sector will flourish, and secure well-paid jobs will be created. Instead, as basic economic theory would predict, we have been handed a long and protracted recession with few signs of growth and prosperity.</p>
<p>Budget 2025 signals more of the same.</p>
<p>It would be a mistake to wait for simplistic official inequality statistics before we act. Our current destination is a sharply divided country of extreme wealth and extreme poverty with an insecure middle class.</p>
<p><strong>Underfunded social agencies</strong><br />Underfunded and swamped social agencies cannot remove the relentless stress on the people who are invisible in the ‘fiscally responsible’ economic narrative. The fabricated bogeyman of outsized net government debt is at the core, as the government pursues balanced budgets and small government-size targets.</p>
<p>A stage one economics student would know the deficit increases automatically in a recession to cushion the decline and stop the economy spiralling into something that looks more like a depression. But our safety nets of social welfare are performing very badly.</p>
<p>Rising unemployment has exposed the inadequacy of social protections. Working for Families, for instance, provides a very poor cushion for children. Many “working” families do not have enough hours of work and face crippling poverty traps.</p>
<p>Future security is undermined as more KiwiSavers cash in for hardship reasons. A record number of the talented young we need to drive the recovery and repair the frayed social fabric have already fled the country.</p>
<p>The government is fond of comparing its Budget to that of a household. But what prudent household would deliberately undermine the earning capacity of family members?</p>
<p>The primary task for the Budget should be to look after people first, to allow them to meet their food, dental and health needs, education, housing and travel costs, to have a buffer of savings to cushion unexpected shocks and to prepare for old age.</p>
<p><strong>A sore thumb standing</strong><br />In the social security part of the Budget, NZ Super for all at 65, no matter how rich or whether still in full-time well-paid work, dominates (gross $25 billion). It’s a sore thumb standing out alongside much less generous, highly targeted benefits and working for families, paid parental leave, family boost, hardship provisions, accommodation supplement, winter energy and other payments and subsidies.</p>
<p>Given the political will, <a href="https://www.auckland.ac.nz/assets/business/PIE%20WP%20%202025%20NZS%20as%20basic%20income%205th%20March%20final%20.pdf" rel="nofollow">research shows we can easily redirect at least $3 billion from very wealthy superannuitants</a> to fixing other payments to greatly improve the wellbeing of the young. This will not be enough but it could be a first step to the wide rebalancing needed.</p>
<p>New Zealand has become a country of two halves whose paths rarely cross: a social time bomb with unimaginable consequences. It is a country beguiled by an egalitarian past that is no more.</p>
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<p><em><a href="https://newsroom.co.nz/author/susan-john/" rel="nofollow">Susan St John</a> is an associate professor in the Pensions and Intergenerational Equity hub and Economic Policy Centre, Business School, University of Auckland. This article was first published by <a href="https://newsroom.co.nz/" rel="nofollow">Newsroom</a> before the 2025 Budget and is republished with permission.</em></p>
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		<title>$9.6m scandal – Post Fiji to pay huge bill to Australia-based mail company</title>
		<link>https://eveningreport.nz/2023/04/08/9-6m-scandal-post-fiji-to-pay-huge-bill-to-australia-based-mail-company/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Asia Pacific Report]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 08 Apr 2023 01:17:55 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[By Anish Chand in Suva Post Fiji Ltd has engaged a law firm to recover $9.6 million from an Australia-based mail logistics company that used Post Fiji’s logo to conduct business dealings with postal agencies around the globe. This, according to the Auditor-General in his report on the review of public enterprises 2020-2021 that was ]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>By Anish Chand in Suva</em></p>
<p>Post Fiji Ltd has engaged a law firm to recover $9.6 million from an Australia-based mail logistics company that used Post Fiji’s logo to conduct business dealings with postal agencies around the globe.</p>
<p>This, according to the Auditor-General in his report on the review of public enterprises 2020-2021 that was tabled in Parliament this week.</p>
<p>The Auditor-General said Post Fiji Ltd had no legal contract with the company that racked up the $9.6 million debt.</p>
<p>“To ensure that the company’s (Post Fiji Ltd) interests are always protected, any business engagements with external parties must be formalised with an agreement endorsed by the board,” said the Auditor-General.</p>
<p>“An international mail logistics company based in Australia used the logo of Post Fiji (Pte) Ltd for its business dealings with various postal agencies around the globe.</p>
<p>“Consequently, the international postal agencies recognised Post Fiji Ltd as the sender of all the international mails sent by the international company.</p>
<p>“As a result, Post Fiji (Pte) Ltd was invoiced by the international postal agencies for doing business with the international company.</p>
<p>“In addition, under the Universal Postal Union Agreement, Post Fiji (Pte) Ltd has a legal obligation to pay the international postal agencies through an invoice amount.</p>
<p>“To recover its costs, Post Fiji Ltd invoiced the international company for the amount it paid plus a percentage mark-up.</p>
<p>“Post Fiji (Pte) Ltd was unable to recover the cost as there was no legally binding agreement with the international company.”</p>
<p>The Auditor-General recommended that Post Fiji should explore all avenues to recover the significant debt owed and ensure that all significant business engagements in the future are endorsed by the board and an agreement is in place.</p>
<p>Post Fiji Ltd said lawyers were handling the matter and the legal battle between PFL, and the international company would take some time to resolve.</p>
<p>The balance of $9.6 million remains outstanding since June 2020.</p>
<p><em>Anish Chand</em> <em>is a Fiji Times reporter. Republished with permission.</em></p>
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		<title>Prasad warns Fiji government will end 2021 as ‘laughing stock’ over audit inquiry</title>
		<link>https://eveningreport.nz/2022/01/02/prasad-warns-fiji-government-will-end-2021-as-laughing-stock-over-audit-inquiry/</link>
		
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		<pubDate>Sun, 02 Jan 2022 04:17:54 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[By Luke Nacei in Suva National Federation Party leader Professor Biman Prasad has asked if the Fiji government inquiry into the Office of the Auditor-General will be held in public. Professor Prasad was responding to the announcement this week of a Commission of Inquiry into the OAG “to inquire into and report on: the conduct, ]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>By Luke Nacei in Suva</em></p>
<p>National Federation Party leader Professor Biman Prasad has asked if the Fiji government inquiry into the Office of the Auditor-General will be held in public.</p>
<p>Professor Prasad was responding to the announcement this week of a Commission of Inquiry into the OAG “to inquire into and report on: the conduct, operations and performance of the Office of the Auditor-General” and other issues concerning the office.</p>
<p>Prasad, an economist before his political career, said commissions of inquiry were usually held in public.</p>
<p>“So we ask the government if this will be a public inquiry?” he said.</p>
<p>“Will the public hear the allegations against the Auditor-General’s office? Will the Auditor-General be allowed to respond in public to the Government’s complaints?”</p>
<p>Professor Prasad claimed the commission of inquiry was being formed “to deflect questions about the tens of millions of dollars [the government] has spent on Walesi [<a href="https://www.facebook.com/WalesiFiji/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Fiji’s controversial free new digital television platform</a>]”.</p>
<p>“The government refuses to talk about <a href="https://asiapacificreport.nz/2021/12/24/consumer-demand-should-be-driving-tv-to-digital-platform-not-by-force/" rel="nofollow">Walesi’s accounts</a>. Even though Walesi’s accounts up to 2017 are ready, the government refuses to release them.”</p>
<p><strong>Petty argument while people in poverty</strong><br />The NFP leader said the government would end 2021 as a “laughing stock”.</p>
<p>He said government “only cares about winning a petty argument even when tens of thousands of people are still living in poverty and despair because of the pandemic”.</p>
<p>“We are once again threatened by the omicron variant,” he said.</p>
<p>“Many families are in isolation because they have tested positive in homes, in villages and settlements on Vanua Levu, are struggling and are in need of help.</p>
<p>“What is the government doing to help? We should be preparing for the cyclone season and ensuring our people are safe.”</p>
<p><em>Luke Nacei is a Fiji Times reporter. Republished with permission.</em></p>
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