Lack of lockdown support cancels “basic human rights” says microloan service

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High numbers of people are asking a microloan service to reduce their debt repayments because they can’t afford food.
“For many people we work with, this lockdown is dire,” says Ngā Tangata Microfinance general manager Natalie Vincent. “People who usually repay $20 or $30 a week have been asking for their repayments to go on hold or to be cut in half because they feel that will make a difference as to whether they can feed their families or not. That’s a devastating position for them to be in.”
Repayment reduction requests to Ngā Tangata, a non-profit zero-interest microloan service, have been far greater this current lockdown than they were at any time last year. “Facing unexpected lockdown bills like groceries, internet and power is gutting. On a fixed low income, you might use rent money to top-up food but that means you fall behind in bill payments and you just never catch up. So people try to stay on top of things by skimping on meals – food insecurity is caused by inadequate incomes.”
Vincent said that foodbanks could only ever be a stop-gap measure and that government response needs to include immediate emergency income relief for those on cut or fixed low incomes. “The Government offered some lockdown-related income relief last year, but very little this year so far in spite of high need,” says Vincent. “Being able to appropriately feed yourself and your family is a basic human right, and it is currently not guaranteed here in our land of plenty. People need income so they can make decisions that are right for themselves and their families – and that includes decisions about nutrition.
“The Government needs to ensure people have enough income now and over the coming months to deal with the high bills that have already been rolling in for weeks.”
Ngā Tangata Microfincance has granted repayment reductions to everybody who requested one.

1 COMMENT

  1. Interest Rate Apartheid:

    If you’re close to the RBNZ you can borrow NZ dollars at 0.25% – if you’re part of the “landed gentry” or a speculator you call borrow NZ dollars at sub 3.00%. If you a business owner, you can receive wage support, cash handouts, whatever – NZ dollars Interest Free!

    Most other borrowers are looking at double digit interest rates. Savers of NZ dollars lose because interest rates are less than inflation, therefore money effectively has a negative time value.

    The Labour sanctioned/condoned RBNZ money printing increases the amount of money chasing assets, then dilutes the purchasing power of savers/peons whom only see the new money once its purchasing power has diluted.

    It’s socialism in action:
    1. Prices increase because money printing is abused
    2. Poor people can’t afford food because prices increased due to money printing.
    3. Poor people demand government assistance in the form of more printing
    4. Poor people get poor
    5. Repeat: Steps 1 – 4.

    Socialists can’t be reasoned with, they’re hopelessly brainwashed.

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