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  1. The story of Supie is a sad tale except the story that some individual has donated the money to cover unpaid wages of the staff.
    One moment of light in a world of darkness

  2. Hold a referendum. Option 1 do nothing. Option 2 nationalise 20-40 percent of all supermarkets at cost to Govt/new entrant. Option 3 nationalise 20-40 percent of all supermarkets to Govt for nothing. I think option 3 sounds pretty fair considering. Keep the staff and the suppliers with just the owners out of pocket. Bliss.

  3. The cost of living crisis is hurting the very voters Labour promised to be transformative for … The Left have done sweet fuck all for the material hardships of poverty, housing, inequality and climate change.

    Accordingly, Labour got what they deserved for ignoring the needs of their core constituents.

    NZ badly needs structural reform and the 2020 election that delivered the Labour led government with a true mandate to initiate this form of structural change through the introduction of CGT or FTT (and possibly even exploring UBI) – but this got undermined by Covid and the rest is history – as are the Labour government.

    The only bright spot is that the Nationa/ACT/Winston First coalition of incompetence, will fuck things up even worse, and possilby hand the reins back to Labour/Greens next election.

  4. Who are sitting on a an overwhelming top of pile in NZ?    Amongst the group are management consultants – for our size we are having our juice sucked up by an overwhelming bunch of hornets.

    What is the Big 4? The Big 4 are the four largest international accounting and professional services firms. They are Deloitte [since 1845],  EY, KPMG and PwC. Each provides audit, tax, consulting and financial advisory services to major corporations.
    What are the Big 4 ? – TechTarget Definition
    techtarget.com
    https://www.techtarget.com › definition › Big-4-Final-4

    (So big and well-embedded they often are referred to by their initials – by memory – Ernst Young, Price Waterhouse Cooper, have to check other.
    Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org › wiki › KPMG The name “KPMG” stands for “Klynveld Peat Marwick Goerdeler” (Netherlands)

    We are losing services at the citizen level with big business deciding that profit is all ie cheques have gone.   Could be actual cash money too if we aren’t aware – use money, get cash with eftpos where possible.
    American living in NZ stunned at everyday Kiwi things that don’t exist in the US :
    …But the biggest shock to Kiwis was that bank transfers are not popular in the US.
    “Kiwis really don’t appreciate how easy it is to transfer money to each other in New Zealand.
    “In America, you can’t do it for free.
    “You have to use an app like Venmo or Cash App. It links with your bank account so you can send someone money but then it takes a fee every time you transfer it out.
    “If you just want to bank-to-bank wire someone it’s like between $25 and $50 each time. So yeah, it’s f***ed.”   https://www.nzherald.co.nz/lifestyle/american-living-in-nz-stunned-at-everyday-kiwi-things-that-dont-exist-in-the-us/KCYAFMZ4YRDNZE7CUTFJGJMKMI/

  5. Regardless whether this was some millionaires tax write-off, or the generosity of a person/company who had money to spare, I am reminded of the generous nature of so many in NZ who contribute their time and effort to helping people in need. I find it a comforting part of the culture. It contributes to softening the blow of current capitalistic trends, and can be quite personally rewarding as well.

  6. I think the following excerpt from Gordon Campbell’s article describes well the unfortunate state of business in NZ …

    “A looming obstacle to this country ever putting effective competition law into practice is that we now have a Prime Minister elect in Christopher Luxon who has recently been touting his business expertise in “mergers and acquisitions” as being a key part of his credentials for higher office. Yet mergers and acquisitions are ways of increasing the market concentration among existing players, and those advocating mergers have always tended to regard Commerce Commission regulations (against anti-competitive takeovers) as being the enemy of commerce. Even worse, the leader of the Act Party seems to regard neo-monopolies and virtual cartels as a sign of market acumen and a just reward for sound business management. The incoming government looks like being the new BFF of entrenched market dominance.”

    http://werewolf.co.nz/2023/11/gordon-campbell-on-breaking-up-the-supermarket-duopoly/

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