Neoliberal free market capitalism + lazy mass immigration policies = a collapse in NZ’s social cohesion

New Zealand’s social cohesion isn’t collapsing by accident — it’s the result of decades of economic design colliding with population pressure and a cost-of-living crisis that is pushing people to breaking point.
Neoliberal free market capitalism…
Financial stress is fraying New Zealand’s social fabric as trust and unity fall, new report claims
A new report is warning New Zealanders the “country’s social fabric is fraying on almost every measure”, amid growing isolation, financial stress and institutional distrust.
Findings from the Helen Clark Foundation’s second annual Social Cohesion in New Zealand report were “both frightening and hopeful”, economist and report co-author Shamubeel Eaqub said.
“New Zealand still has strong foundations, but there are growing cracks in how people experience fairness, opportunity and connection,” Eaqub said.
“Financial stress is the dominant driver.”
Surveying nearly 3,000 Kiwis, the annual report measures the “social glue” binding New Zealand society together and compares changes between years.
NZME
…plus lazy mass immigration policies…
New Zealand has its head in the sand about how to manage dramatic changes to its population: fewer births, fewer workers, an emptying of rural centres and, within a few years, more Asians than New Zealand Europeans in Auckland.
That’s according to Sir Peter Gluckman and emeritus professor Paul Spoonley, who spoke exclusively to the Herald about their new report People, Place and Prosperity: The Case for a Population Strategy.
“New Zealand now faces a pivotal decision regarding our demographic trajectory,” the report, released today by the Koi Tū Centre for Informed Futures, says.
“The colliding trends of slowing population growth and a reliance on immigration to drive workforce and population growth, an ageing population requiring more public services and growing ethnic diversity present both opportunities and challenges.”
Those opportunities include making the most of the skills, innovation and creativity that such diversity can offer, but this can be undermined by political populism appealing to xenophobic tendencies, the paper warns.
NZME
…equals a collapse in NZ’s social cohesion…
Why social cohesion in New Zealand is breaking down
Does hard work make you better off? More New Zealanders aren’t convinced
Trust in government dropped from 42% to 39%. The share of people who believed that hard work would lead to a better life fell seven points to 45%.
“Interesting people who are currently prosperous are not really sure that hard work in and of itself is enough. There’s a broadening acceptance, a fear, that just working hard is not enough – there are other structural barriers we need to work on,” he told RNZ’s Nine to Noon.
Attitudes to immigration were also becoming more negative.
Eaqub said there were three key groups of New Zealanders. Thirty percent could be counted as connected with high levels of belonging, institutional trust and acceptance.
Another 41% were ambivalent – this was often older homeowners, retirees and centre-right voters.
Another 28% were alienated, and often engaged in protest and online political activity. Almost half of Māori and Pasifika respondents fall into this group, as do nearly half of Green voters and seven in 10 NZ First voters.
“We have three very different New Zealand’s living alongside each other,” Eaqub said. “Financial stress, political allegiance, institutional distrust, and social isolation are reinforcing each other, producing a population that is frustrated and disconnecting from the conventional institutions we rely on for collective decision-making.”
He said the research showed financial stress was the single biggest driver of low social cohesion.
“People struggling to make ends meet are significantly less likely to feel connected, trust institutions, or participate in community life. At the same time, loneliness and isolation are rising. “Isolation doesn’t mean people disengage entirely,” he said.
RNZ
New Zealand’s economic model is broken. After 40 years of neoliberal free market capitalism, the country is facing crumbling infrastructure, climate shocks, housing stagnation and an economy built on speculation rather than resilience.
The tsunami of inflation Trump’s illegal war with Iran will generate is going to swamp any green shoots of recovery and the rotten hollowed out neoliberal user-pays model of Broken Old Zealand Inc is going to viciously whiplash our economy again…
Iran conflict could sink the economic recovery … and Christopher Luxon – Liam Dann
NZ Herald
…Since Roger-nomics, the hollowing out of NZ for corporate interest has accelerated with corporate lobbyists now influencing every sector of the media…

…the single problem with NZ is we haven’t reformed away from the failed 1980s neoliberal free market capitalism experiment!
The failed 40 year neoliberal experiment has mutated us into Broken Old Zealand Inc where oligopoly, duopoly and monopoly gets to run the country for their private wealth, not the common good.
Thomas Coughlan: Infrastructure Commission asks Labour and National to do something unpopular
THE FACTS:
- An Infrastructure Commission report warns more money needs to be spent on maintaining infrastructure.
- It also calls for restoring the principle of user-pays to network infrastructure such as roads.
- In 2018, a Labour-era transport plan proposed spending more on maintenance and was met with backlash.
Parliament today lays all this out.
Too much money is being spent on transport, not enough on hospitals; too much money is being spent on what it literally describes as “new and shiny” and not enough is being spent on looking after what we already have; roads no longer fund themselves, relying on money from the core Crown budget, and too many projects are hurried for presumably political purposes, causing their costs to inflate rapidly.
Everyone agrees with this. Bishop seems to be rolling the pitch for a strategic climb down from some of the roads of national significance, and Labour, burnt by the Ardern-Hipkins Government’s infatuation with mega-projects that never got built, seems poised to run on a more modest platform this election.
NZ Herald
The economic model that hollowed out New Zealand
It seems to me that there is an economic reality about NZ that Labour and National are refusing to acknowledge.
NZ has always been three enormous and sparsely populated Islands that have always relied on the State to be the 40% foundation stone. The free market dynamics of competition don’t work well when the population density is low. The State is the egalitarian backbone of this country, the Right want to gut it and hand the organs over to their rich mates.
Bernard Hickey explains the fundamental problem, we can’t just keep selling each other more expensive houses built upon mass immigration and pretend that is economic growth any more…
- In my view, the data on retail spending, jobs, real incomes and housing equity are increasing the chances the ‘green shoots’ of better business confidence and manufacturing don’t convert into voters ‘feeling’ the economic recovery enough to emphatically award the Government a second term in our housing-market-with-bits-tacked-on.
- In my view, that’s because forecasters and Treasury haven’t taken into account how important a stagnant housing market and lower real incomes after food, power and rent costs are for household spending and business investment.
- The bottom line: An economy powered for 30 years by leveraged and tax-free house price inflation can’t handle the truth that another trebling of prices isn’t possible again. That’s because interest rates can’t fall again by nine percentage points, household debt can’t treble again relative to disposable incomes, and employment growth from a 15 percentage point increase in workforce participation can’t be repeated in an ageing population.
…exactly, the one trick property speculation pony that has powered the last 30 years of ‘economic growth’ has had a stroke and is off to the glue factory.
Catastrophic Climate Change, geopolitical trade tensions and the hollowing out of public infrastructure to cheap management teams who milk monopoly rentals while the asset deteriorates.
I’m not asking for socialism from the NZ Left, I’m just looking for basic regulated capitalism!
The 30/30/30 neoliberal debt straightjacket is designed to ensure the public never get fully funded public services.
How on earth can more user-pays mythology be the answer when it’s the cause of the current malaise!
Adopting more user-pays to solve our problems is like using cancer to cure syphilis.
- We need new ideas.
- We need to consider new taxes aimed at the wealthy and the speculative.
- We need to remove the tax yoke from the working and middle classes and put them on the wealthy.
- We need to consider Sovereign Credit as a means to fund new infrastructure.
- We need to resource our Communities and make them resilient.
- We need way more artists.
- We need sustainability.
- We need to defend our economic zone.
- We need to be 100% electrified and 100% sustainable.
- We need a pharmaceutical industry.
- We need a data centre industry.
- We need a drone industry.
- We need to produce things here rather than be a raw material producer.
- We need way more native forests.
- We need way less pine forests.
- We need a new inshore shipping network.
- We need more rail.
- We need more food security via a third state backed supermarket.
- We need less trucks.
- We need less cows.
- We need more wool production.
- We need local investment in R&D.
- We need research into tidal electrical generation.
- We need more democracy.
- We need universal migrant labour unions.
- We need universal student union memberships.
- We need a Māori Parliament.
- We need Tenant Unions at retirement villages.
- We need Pensioner Unions.
- We need Unions.
- We need post-growth capitalism.
Now you might argue that none of this is necessary.
You would be wrong.
While the NZ Right cling to the claim that climate change is just a socialist hoax, the latest research shows us that climate change is actually speeding up…
Humanity heating planet faster than ever before, study finds
Researchers identify sharp rise to about 0.35ºC every decade, after excluding natural fluctuations such as El Niño
Climate change will shatter the old economic model
…that’s right.
Catastrophic climate change is speeding up and getting more intense.
The disconnect between news stories on the extreme weather events we are seeing and their connection with the global warming future we are locked into thanks to human pollution continuing to warm the planet beyond tipping points that once breached can’t return from – is a chasm.
The reality vs our weaponised apathy.
The distance between what is actually happening in an age of consequences vs deliberate ignorance.
Human pollution since the steam age has spiralled global temperatures beyond points that the biosphere can come back from.
We are seeing the reality of that in real time.
In 1980, the time between billion dollar climate destruction events was three months.
It’s now 18 days.
In NZ we are hit by a storm every eight days!
There is a point where the next destructive weather event strikes before you can rebuild from the last one.
We are meeting an Age of Consequences with a culture of wilful blindness.
These heatwaves are going to become the normal background of an ever warming planet, Climate Change is here and now, the ramifications of our denial only exacerbates the damage.
The realities of that changes everything and will become impossible to gloss over.
Change is coming to us whether we want it or not.
The failed neoliberal experiment of the last 40 years has ill prepared us for the realities of today.
The political spectrum will shatter once the sleepy hobbits of muddle NuZilind realise what is happening.
We need a revolution at the ballot box.








Location: Indian immigration agents office somewhere in India.
Migrant: NZ please.
Agent: Touch your toes.
Migrant touches toes.
Agent ticks yoga teacher box.
Why are we letting 500 Indian nurses come here when our owned trains nurses can’t get roles.
I see they are also allowing teachers in the Indian trade deal I bet the Indian teachers won’t be working in private schools. Is this going to add to the dumbing down of public schools level of education. Yoga instructors is there a demand for this we are so desperate for trade we have to compromise now who does this immigration impact on the most, not the rich.
We need more freedom and less statist ruling classes pointing guns at others.
The latest Helen Clark Fdn ASC report has warned that NZ’s social fabric is ‘fraying’ on almost every measure, amid growing isolation, financial stress, and institutional distrust. Martyn’s ‘We Need’ list shows the way. All this while this arrogant, shallow, corrupt and callous CoC run amok, only there for their RW enablers.
‘Christian’ Luxon couldn’t give a FF for those in need. It’s all about continuing to give to the greedy ‘top feeders’ who have more than enough, but appear to want even more! How many times do we have to point out the gap between the ‘haves’ and ‘have-nots’ is so large it’s obscene so needs rectifying without those above still scrounging more. So sick of this imbalance and unfairness. The excessive greed and self-entitlement is horrible to witness.
Re New Ideas – Gareth Morgans thoughts on an Asset Tax might be worth reviewing.
You seem to have inspired Damien Grant to sharpen his ballpoint pen. The blinkers he borrowed from his pet horse keep him focussed on what really matters – short term profits. Readers can marvel at how the written words of a contract play out in real life, with absolute certainty and as described. No unwanted downsides, no developments. Utopia awaits us all. You’ll see. It’s a miracle of modern contract management. At least he indirectly admits the future is only for the few. He’s also on the fence about learning Yoga.