Poor
get poorer, inequality reigns - survey
Inequality
is at its highest level ever as low earners' pay packets decrease
while high earners are paid more, a new report suggests.
23
August, 2012
Median
household incomes fell 3 per cent, taking inflation into account,
between July 2010 and June 2011, the Household Incomes in New
Zealand: Trends in Indicators of Inequality and Hardship 1982 to 2011
report said.
That
was the worst trend in more than a decade, as incomes rose steadily
throughout the 90s at an average of 3 per cent a year, the Ministry
of Social Development report revealed.
The
report, prepared by Bryan Perry, showed that low earners' incomes
fell between mid 2009 and mid 2011, while high earners pay packets
increased.
It
also painted a damning picture into child poverty, with 21 per cent
of Kiwi kids living in poverty, compared to 15 per cent in 2007.
Critics
have said the report shows the failings of the National Government,
but Social Development Minister Paula Bennett hit back at those
claims in Parliament today, saying that the real culprit was the
international economic downturn.
"I
think that what we have seen is that the effects of the global
economy have really hit those people hard ... jobs were lost, people
on part-time work lost some hours, and that, unsurprisingly, has had
a direct effect on some of those people's household incomes."
Labour
leader David Shearer said the widening gap was an indictment on
National.
"Income
inequality and poverty have a corrosive effect on the lives of
individuals and society as a whole. The National Government has sat
back and watched New Zealand slide backwards - that's just not good
enough."
Service
and Food Workers Union National Secretary John Ryall said inequality
and poverty was growing at an "alarming rate".
"Members
of our union, many of whom are employed in the very lowest paid jobs
in New Zealand, increasingly tell us they can no longer afford the
basic necessities and struggle to provide school uniforms for their
children or afford decent food," Ryall said.
"With
inequality at its highest level ever, and the child poverty rate over
20 per cent, the report clearly backs what an increasing number of
New Zealanders are saying: low household incomes are the problem."
A
number of organisations had come together to launch the Living Wage
Aotearoa New Zealand campaign next week, he said. They included the
union, Auckland Action Against Poverty and Lifewise.
The
report was based on data from Statistics New Zealand.
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