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  1. Let’s tax our farmers for carbon emissions so our 16 year old city living climate activists can fly to Fiji on holiday.
    That will fix it…

  2. Correct on all points Martyn. We face a year of discontent that the voters will, not unfairly, blame in part on the current government.

    Excellent!

  3. Council elections votes are now held in Countdown – government demanded that productive land for housing for more people who are on low wages in NZ working at places, like countdown. Yet another enquiry about supermarkets duopoly but still nothing done.

  4. Many in the middle class don’t want Orr using his 75 point bazooka because of the adverse effect it could well have on property prices. Housing prices have been far too high for far too long but a dramatic slump in the sector akin to what we had in the late eighties/early nineties would have a detrimental effect on the assets owned by those who are in their twenties to forties now, and these are the citizens who are likely to be the first lot of retirees who take retirement at 67 years of age instead of 65 years of age.

  5. Labours genius assault on farmers will help solve this problem. Looks like there’s nothing they can’t make worse

    1. There is no assault on farmers. The scheme has been prepared by the primary sector as an alternative to the ETS. It’s laughable that people are making out like the farmers are being down trodden and have had a scheme foisted on them. Those feral pricks at groundswell don’t even speak on behalf of the industry. They just act like it. Have you heard loads of pushback from National etc? No.

        1. I believe they think farming keeps NZ alive. Fuck knows why when the average kiwi can no longer afford to eat meat.

  6. Michael Wood demonstrated last week he lives in Lala land, seemingly oblivious to the fact that whacking a tax on fuel during a cost of living crisis, in an election year is pure kamikaze thinking. It was remarkable just how out of touch he was.

    Fact is that tax can never go back on. And no Michael, your government has not given a billion dollars in relief, you’ve just stopped fucking over your citizens, mugging us of what’s left of our pay packets!

    Somehow I think subsidising the well off to update their Tesla’s is not the way to go!

  7. Adam Smith outlined that inflation can occur where a government increases the supply of money. When that happens it is the government’s duty to reduce that supply of money via taxation. NZ printed 10s of billions for covid. That needs to be taxed out of circulation. Instead, interest rates increase which only benefits the private bank shareholders. A financial transaction tax of 1% on transactions over $5m that goes offshore will address inflation in short order. Problem is, we have a house of representatives who have been captured by false chicago school of economics thinking.

  8. National s answer is tax cuts, end of story. They have costed this out by taking their socks off to count their toes also. Yes masters of the economy.
    Fact is they are not only hopeless, they are useless, as seen by everything they say and do.

  9. Martyn I don’t see the link between inflated food prices ( with probably a touch of gouging along the way which basis point rises won’t fix) and the story outline for The Big Short. I think it’s pretty clear who owns the original debt, it’s the lender. Isn’t it? Problem is the issuer of the credit default swap may not have money to honour the swap when the original loan defaults.

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