This year I asked for a breakdown by Work and Income Service Centre. That was provided. Then I asked the Ministry of Health for District Health Board birth data for 2015. They very quickly obliged without an OIA. Credit to them.
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Thursday, April 28, 2016
Lindsay Mitchell: Where the benefit babies are born
This year I asked for a breakdown by Work and Income Service Centre. That was provided. Then I asked the Ministry of Health for District Health Board birth data for 2015. They very quickly obliged without an OIA. Credit to them.
Saturday, April 23, 2016
Karl du Fresne: Agenda-driven reformers untroubled by human consequences
The American
economist Milton Friedman once said that it’s a great mistake to judge things
by their intentions rather than by their results. Unfortunately it’s a mistake repeatedly made by
agenda-driven reformers on a mission to create the perfect society. A Radio New
Zealand Spectrum programme brought one such instance to public attention
earlier this month.
Until 2007, intellectually disabled people in New Zealand
were exempted from minimum wage laws. This meant they could be employed doing
menial work in facilities known as sheltered workshops.
Thursday, April 21, 2016
Bryan Leyland: Things you know that ain't so - sea levels are rising
“Things you know that ain't so - the sea level is rising rapidly and this will continue to increase”.
We are constantly being told by the Royal Society of New Zealand and others that the sea level is rising more and more rapidly and we must be prepared for a rise of something like 1 m over the next 100 years or so – 10 mm per year. This is a serious matter because many Councils are now restricting building close to the sea and putting restrictions on existing houses that have substantially reduced their value.
There is no scientific
foundation for this belief. It is based on the output of computer models that,
so far, have been shown to consistently overestimate the rate of sea level
rise.
Anthony Willy: Straws in the wind
Readers will be well familiar with the blame mentality on
which some Maori people thrive and the depressing slide into racial separatism associated
with it which has been gaining momentum over the past few years; connived at by
the Wellington bureaucracy and encouraged by The Waitangi Tribunal and a series
of pronouncements from our highest Court many of which are unnecessary to the
issue before them and seem to be made on the basis of what some of the Judges
would have decided if the facts had been other than those before the court.
Maori lobby interests such as the Iwi Leaders Group, a self-appointed
collection of individuals handsomely funded out of the public purse by way of
past treaty settlements and purporting to speak on behalf of all people of
Maori descent (but do not) have become increasingly bold in their demands.
Sunday, April 17, 2016
Mole News Archive
From the NZCPR archives by Dr Muriel Newman
Race-based Water Rights a Step Closer
Water is being targeted by the Maori elite as the next resource to control. The influential Iwi Leaders Group is pushing ahead with their demand for a proprietary right to freshwater. They want a preferential allocation – in perpetuity – that can be commercialised. They say it’s their right under the Treaty of Waitangi. But it’s not – it’s just another attempted money grab and unfortunately our political leaders are allowing them to get away with it.
Race-based Water Rights a Step Closer
Water is being targeted by the Maori elite as the next resource to control. The influential Iwi Leaders Group is pushing ahead with their demand for a proprietary right to freshwater. They want a preferential allocation – in perpetuity – that can be commercialised. They say it’s their right under the Treaty of Waitangi. But it’s not – it’s just another attempted money grab and unfortunately our political leaders are allowing them to get away with it.
Saturday, April 16, 2016
Richard Rahn from the Cato Institute: Tracing Pathways to Success and Failure
Why is Hong Kong rich, Cuba very poor, and Puerto Rico
struggling? Back in 1955, the islands of Puerto Rico, Cuba and Hong Kong had
roughly the same real per capita income. They each took very different economic
paths.
Now, some 60 years later, Hong Kong is even richer than the United
States on a per capita income basis. Cuba is an economic disaster, having gone
from the richest Caribbean nation to the poorest, next to Haiti. And Puerto
Rico finds itself flirting with bankruptcy, with a per capita income much
higher than Cuba’s but only roughly half that of Hong Kong. Incomes have
increased approximately 22-fold in Hong Kong, 11-fold in Puerto Rico, and only
fourfold at best in Cuba, in a little over a half-century.
Friday, April 15, 2016
Matt Ridley from the UK: The exoneration of dietary fat
Britain’s obesity tsar, Susan Jebb, says that it is not fair to blame fat people for their failure to lose weight. Genetically predisposed, many people cannot realistically lose weight by eating less, especially when the food industry tempts them with snacks. Meanwhile, George Osborne is slapping a tax on sugar to tackle obesity.
The new obsession with sugar definitely makes more sense than the low-fat sermons we have heard for decades. And the prevailing idea in the public-health industry that you get fat simply by eating more calories than you burn is misleading to say the least. While of course that’s true, it says nothing about what causes appetite to exceed need by the tiny amount each day that can turn you obese.
Brian Gaynor: Banks long shadow over NZ economy
One of the most important developments in recent decades has been the growing dominance of the trading banks in New Zealand and other countries.
These banks completely dominate the lending sector, have been primarily responsible for the housing market boom and are becoming more and more prominent in KiwiSaver, which is also supporting the housing market through its first home withdrawal scheme.
Wednesday, April 13, 2016
Mike Butler: Waitara leaseholders pressured
A further step in a long-running dispute over leasehold land at Waitara, 16km from New Plymouth, was made last night when the New Plymouth District Council voted unanimously in favour of a proposed local bill.
That bill would give 76 hectares of land to Taranaki tribe Te Atiawa and give Waitara leaseholders the right to buy the land under their homes.
Tuesday, April 12, 2016
Mike Butler: Maori council seats vote petition
Maori wards could be set up on every district council in New Zealand without requiring a public vote, according to a Maori Party petition, which is the latest battle in a 20-year push to get separate voting into local government.
Co-leader Te Ururoa Flavell will present a petition to Parliament at the urging of New Plymouth mayor Andrew Judd, who championed a Maori ward in his city - a move blocked by a public vote last year.
Monday, April 11, 2016
Viv Forbes: Carbon Delusions and Defective Models
The relentless war on carbon is justified by the false assumption that global
temperature is controlled by human production of two carbon-bearing “Greenhouse
Gases”.
The scary forecasts of runaway heating are based on complicated but
narrowly-focussed carbon-centric computerised Global Circulation Models built
for the UN IPCC. These models omit many significant climate factors and rely
heavily on dodgy temperature records and unproven assumptions about two trace
natural gases in the atmosphere.
Matt Ridley from the UK: Green costs are killing heavy industry in Britain
Before Redcar and Port Talbot, remember Lynemouth, where Britain’s last large aluminium smelter closed in 2012. In aluminium, as in steel, China is now by far the largest producer, smelting five times as much as any other continent, let alone country.
The chief reason aluminium left (though a small plant survives at Lochaber) was the sky-high electricity prices paid in Britain: electrolysis is how you make aluminium. For extra-large industrial users, British electricity prices are the highest in Europe, twice the average, and far higher than in Asia and America.
The chief reason aluminium left (though a small plant survives at Lochaber) was the sky-high electricity prices paid in Britain: electrolysis is how you make aluminium. For extra-large industrial users, British electricity prices are the highest in Europe, twice the average, and far higher than in Asia and America.
Saturday, April 9, 2016
Theodore Dalrymple: Trawling the trolls
I am no respecter of persons, particularly politicians, but even politicians are human -- more or less -- and are therefore deserving of some kind of elementary courtesy.
When, shortly after my arrival in
Australia to spend April at CIS, I read a Guardian article reporting the
Treasurer's remarks on state taxation, I read with mild dismay, but not
surprise, the readers' on-line responses; for example the following:
Friday, April 8, 2016
Lindsay Mitchell: CYF overhaul - crux of the matter overlooked again
Another voluminous report into CYF; a long-winded ministerial response; multiple cabinet papers and a proposed radical overhaul promised
But when will the system that turns children into careless accidents or meal tickets be radically overhauled?
Because until then, none of these other investigations and re-inventions will matter a damn.
Brian Gaynor: ‘Free market’ failings fuel the Trump movement
Robert B. Reich’s book Saving Capitalism is an excellent read for those wanting a better understanding of the Donald Trump phenomenon. It also highlights why the traditional political order has been disrupted in many other countries and why New Zealand could also have a “Trump experience”.
Reich, who was Secretary of Labor in the Clinton Administration, is a strong supporter of capitalism but he believes that its rules are strongly skewed in favour of a number of elites and against the majority of ordinary citizens.
Sunday, April 3, 2016
Mike Butler: Two Ministers and a kura
A stoush between a retired principal and the government over the provision of a new primary school for the Hastings suburb of Havelock North stepped up a notch at the weekend with the National Party MP for Tukituki blaming the Labour Party.
Frustrated by a continued lack of response from both Tukituki MP Craig Foss and Education Minister Hekia Parata, the retired principal, Malcolm Dixon, yesterday launched a website www.schoolforhavelocknorth.co.nz to fight for the new primary school that was promised in 2010.
Karl du Fresne: 'Did anyone get that on camera?' Yes they did, and we could all see who was at fault
Protesters, eh? I’ve been one myself, so I’m not entirely hostile to the idea of marching in the street and waving banners. But sometimes protesters push their luck.
Consider what happened last week in Wanganui, where a car driven by National MP Chester Borrows allegedly drove over the foot of a woman protesting against the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement.
Saturday, April 2, 2016
Barend Vlaardingerbroek: ‘People of the Book’, ‘People of No Book’, and the ‘clash of civilisations’
“I think Islam hates us.
There's a tremendous hatred… There is an unbelievable hatred of us.” – Donald
Trump, 9 March
Islamist
extremists certainly hate us. But exactly who is ‘us’? The ‘Christian West’
would be a common answer especially in the US, but it’s not a very satisfactory
answer – there was little ‘Christian’ about the twin towers and even less
‘Western’ about the victims of the Lahore atrocity last week.