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    1. Reply to Andrew at 8.02am “Hi, Yes i agree it’s Bizarre that the government is following this failed private enterprise route to deliver affordable housing. Private enterprise just can’t get it up.’

  1. Instead of all this talk in society these days about ridding churches of their tax exemption status, let’s encourage them to fund more social housing.

    1. Reply to Dan at 8.46am “Hi, Churches should have their tax exempt status taken away because they are very much businesses now. Having weekly concert performances, strobe lights, rock bands. If they want to do social housing nothing is stopping them. If your word ‘encourage’ means give them money to do this. Then what accountability will the funder have? Many non-profits simply lack the professionalism and experience to do housing efficiently and effectively. As a govt contract is simply cheaper and more efficient. Less middle men.

  2. It’s even worse than you highlight.
    Houses used to be 2.75 times medium salary, BEFORE financialisation that started in the mid-late 80’s.
    You used to only be able to borrow 2.5-2.75 times the first salary and 50% of any second (partners) salary, PLUS the bank/building society, wanted to see that you had actually saved up (with THEM) the MINIMUM 20% deposit.
    Like USA education, once people could borrow more, price PURELY went up because they could, and due to ‘money prinring’ caused purposely by Govt/Central banks, what ‘Joe Public’ calls inflation. It is really money depreciation-devaluation.

    1. Reply to Kerman at 10.47am, “Hi thanks for that.Ggreat insights and extra info. Really interesting.

  3. You have made some good points. I agree with point3, that significant intensification (5+stories) needs to happen around areas with good community infrastructure, such as in cities centres, near train stations and malls. Johnsonville town has too much under utilized space, and that is all on the mall owners and council.

    Tax is a tool that either encourages or discourage investment. Labour has penalised private landlords and incentivized large company investments. The new taxes added by labour are an anomaly when compared to tax in other investment classes. Labour tried to fix rise in housing prices, created due to low interest rates, printed billions and easy access to cash, by creating a tax anomaly.

    I do agree that ghost houses should get tax penalty. However 2 weeks will never fly. Houses being empty for 6 months would be more practical.

    I had to laugh at “only govt can build affordable housing”, is that a joke? Govt are good at spending other peoples money, after all someone is always there to pick the tab.

    1. Reply to Benny at 10.51am ‘Hi Benny, you make some good points. I agree that the changes Labour made have favoured large companies holding housing. Particularly ring fencing just targets the ordinary person holding a house. I agree with your point about anomalies and I have written about how to fix that previously but at the same time if you want something done variations can be done by tax changes or fiscal changes. Either can work. it’s true private enterprise can’t build affordable housing. Where is it? 30 square metre or less studio apartments are no good for families. The big growth in affordable housing came with the 1st Labour government. I think Labour/Greens are desperate to fix the affordable housing crisis but everything they do is making it worse because they are listening to the wrong people.

  4. Start planning and building a set of model houses in allowing for individual living with reasonable privacy, but on a neighbourhood style and do this in remembrance of Queen Elizabeth ll. How about that along with this one day to remember someone who carried on with her duties as head of her nation and many offsiders.
    https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/national/474637/remembering-the-queen-new-zealanders-react-to-bonus-day-off

    Queen Elizabeth Drive we have in Nelson. What about a Queen Elizabeth hamlet* in each town and city. When I was in London I lived in a flat in a divided house in Kilburn – it had a short garden in front and at the back which was walled there was a door leading to a large playing area lying along the backs of the houses surrounding it on four sides. Excellent in closely built up housing areas. Go for that and you have a wonderful, great disruption to packing case housing put up by those with calculators where other people’s pleasure in humanity and soul would be found.

    *hamlet – (not a small ham!): a small settlement, generally one smaller than a village,
    and strictly (in Britain) one without a church.

    1. Reply to Grey Warbler at 11.38am. ‘Hi, I’m not against your ideas in some places. It just sounds a bit sprawling and takes up a lot of land and that means more pipes etc. As long as it didn’t take good farm land.

  5. I’ll bet when you walked out of IRD for the last time, it was a load of your shoulders @ Stephen! Now free to see the utter stupidity of the cistern the managerialist ideologues have created.
    If the past 5 years are not evidence enough that any of these brilliant ideas can’t happen, the next election is probably going to be.
    Me thinks things probably have to get worse before they can get better, and probably the sooner the better before you run out of life.
    There used to be an old saying in them there ‘olden days’: Too many Chiefs and not enough Indians.
    Starting in the 80s, and accelerating ever since, it’s got worse. The Chiefs job now is to monitor KPIs and tick boxes; lie (or tell “mis”truths); call meetings; capture their responsible Munster by whatever means; and inculcate the Indians with the latest managerialist ideology with various nudge nudge wink wink promises, often hinted at in their performance appraisals. And it’s worked by and large.
    Strange a it may seem, IRD are the least of the problem, and those such as yourself act, and acted ethically.
    Not so elsewhere – and it will continue until it collapses under the weight of its own bullshit and spin.
    Unfortunately the left politicians, whether Labour or Green don’t and can’t get it because they now have an investment in the very cistern that’s keeping it all going. (UNTIL it no longer can). The sooner it plays out, the better.

    1. Reply to Once was Tim at 12.57am ‘Hi, thank you for your insights. My only doubt is I’m not sure its about our politicians having an ‘investment’ in the system, it’s more about a deep seated insecurity around taking actions that may cause criticism. They are economically rudderless and copy many National/Act policy approaches because of their philosophy to facilitate business. A simply look at New Zealand History shows private enterprise consistently failed and had to have government bail it out. That is why we had a Public Trust, A State Insurance, a Bank Of New Zealand. They worked because private enterprise failed. And you have far more of a deterministic framework than me. It could easily just play out to more conservative and controlling governments.

      1. ” My only doubt is I’m not sure its about our politicians having an ‘investment’ in the system, it’s more about a deep seated insecurity around taking actions that may cause criticism.”
        Points taken. Criticism/critique should be welcomed though
        …and …..
        “And you have far more of a deterministic framework than me.”
        Not only is that because I, and a few others at the time have had successful employment court cases brought about by devious and lying senior public servants committed to the managerialist bullshit neoliberal agenda (even though they’d deny a neoliberal label). And also because I closely monitor what’s going on in places like OT, and the Munstry for Everything and some of the other more dysfunctional government agencies. There are some good, and some bad. Unfortunately, the bad are really bad.
        Keep on doing what you’re doing – even if progress is slow, it’s liberating 🙂
        I’ll give you a wink next time you visit S&B

  6. NZ has to look after their existing citizens without allowing more people to move to NZ often with large families that then go into poverty and need Kāinga Ora assistance.

    “Marie Tuu, Paulo Petelo and their five children Sola, Milton, Rosie, Alisi and Solema, lived in emergency housing at the Camberley Court Motel in Hastings for nearly three years.

    They moved to New Zealand from Samoa at the beginning of 2016 and stayed with Tuu’s sister before she moved to Australia.

    When the landlord of the property decided to sell, they had no choice but to move into emergency housing in 2019.”

    While some sympathy for this family, they are a large family that moved to NZ from Samoa and after being in emergency housing for 3 years are now given a NZ state house. Apparently they are crying out for workers, everywhere, but for what ever reason people either don’t have to work or the work they have is so poorly paid they can’t survive in NZ.

    More and more overseas citizens in poverty will come to NZ if you are looked after here and can get NZ residency and benefits very easily, but this is at the expense of Kiwi kids who are then competing with all the newcomers in poverty.

    Likewise today announced government are funding more overseas teachers coming to NZ. Nothing for existing teachers to retain them in NZ with higher wages.

    That is the problem with NZ’s revolving door, poorer people are coming to NZ with children and elderly parents who require a lot of NZ services, this puts pressure on existing services and standards of care for NZ children, and experienced people can’t afford to stay in NZ, while government do nothing to try and incentivise them to stay.

    Soon NZ is going to be a place full of crime and poverty, if government keep pushing experienced professional people out of NZ while incentivising large families to come here, that can’t make ends meet.

    1. “Soon NZ is going to be a place of crime and poverty”

      The stats support your assertion. NZ style of immigration while it makes business owners richer makes eveyone poorer on average.

      1973 population 3 million. Per capita GDP. OECD rank #16

      2003 population 4 million. Per capita GDP. OECD rank #22

      2021 population 5 million. Per capita GDP. OECD rank #26

      1. The right wing and woke wet dream is NZ to have a population of 30 million.

        So I guess the disabled and poor will be begging in the street and like China and India, no welfare as the low wage economy is the woke and right wingers desired choice.

        1. Two Kiwi teenagers murdered – with their bodies being found in drums in abandoned state house and in a burnt out car.

          More focus needed on Kiwi kids!!!! Who seem to be missing out.

          ‘Our little girl’: Family pay tribute to teen homicide victim found in torched car
          https://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/our-little-girl-family-pay-tribute-to-teen-homicide-victim-found-in-torched-car/7ZOJPDOIH357DXAWZ6VUUJIUQU/

          Torture trial: Duo found guilty of teen’s murder in ‘house of horrors’
          https://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/torture-trial-duo-found-guilty-of-teens-murder-in-house-of-horrors/EI6PV6UCNAOGHCS7ODA3DHWHDE/

      2. Reply to Joseph at 5.34. “Hi immigration does not bring crime; low wages and lack of opportunities does. Crime is like a disease but it can be cured by having a distributive economy rather than having a growth economy.

    2. Reply to saveNZ at 2.07pm “Hi I agree with a few of your points. On education the government should have given a much better pay settlement to teachers. That would bring up the quality of the teachers and their ability to stay in the profession. Labour seems always to want to spend on infrastructure not people. National would always ‘spend’ on it’s ‘core’ people. We are a pacific nation and I welcome our pacific people coming here. Yes there does need to be rules otherwise the islands might be stripped of their best and brightest. Business people are the main people who want immigration as they are more pliable for work and pay rates. They don’t want to raise wages and they don’t want employees they perceive as difficult. So it’s not about the Samoan family coming here its the ability of the work they get as being able to support them. National has made New Zealand a low wage economy by attacking unions.

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