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    1. Martyn you are correct here.

      Winsrton warned that this correction would happen in his election speak as he announced that he will join NZ First coalition with Labour.

      https://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=11934973

      QUOTE;

      “In his explanation of why New Zealand First went with Labour over National, Winston Peters said the agreement reached in talks was a summation of policies that survived negotiations.

      He went on: “As the song says, You can’t always get what you want.”

      “Our negotiations have taken place against a backdrop of changing international and internal economic circumstances which we cannot ignore.”

      Those in New Zealand First believed that an economic correction, or a slowdown, was looming, and that the first signs were already apparent, he said.

      “There’s no denying that a enormous correction is looming and pretending low business confidence is just all spite misses the much more dangerous signals”.

  1. 1: The reality of National’s fake growth model

    We learned yesterday that the firm that owns Burger King in New Zealand has been banned from using migrant labour (ie people on work visas, not resident non-citizens) for a year.

    In light of the shortage of affordable houses, and the routing of employers to get migrants for questionable low paid occupations – and reports of employee’s paying for their questionable job, and the fact that all the new people on these low wages probably will qualify for Kiwibuild and also be competing on low cost rentals, and the amount of Maori in jail who could probably get a job flipping burgers instead of the migrants, perhaps time to rethink these bizarre immigration “skilled” skills?

    30 years ago it cost around $10,000 to sponsor in a worker and therefore was only used for real high value skills. Time to put that amount with inflation (around $20,000 as least) back on the table to get rid of all the routs.

    Main occupations for Skilled Migrant Category principal applicants, 2016/17
    Occupation 2016/17
    Number %
    Chef 684 5.7%
    Registered Nurse (Aged Care) 559 4.6%
    Retail Manager (General) 503 4.2%
    Cafe or Restaurant Manager 452 3.7%

    Number of people granted Essential Skills work visas by main occupations, 2016/17
    Occupation Number %
    Chef 2,178 6.6%
    Dairy Cattle Farm Worker 1,617 4.9%
    Carpenter 1,478 4.5%
    Retail Supervisor 961 2.9%
    Cafe or Restaurant Manager 942 2.9%
    Retail Manager (General) 767 2.3%
    Aged or Disabled Carer 748 2.3%

    https://croakingcassandra.com/2018/08/30/work-visas-for-shop-managers/

  2. It’s in businesses bests interests to pretend to be unhappy – the more they moan, the more Labour feel they have to bend over backwards to help out. But it’s both distracting for business and for Labour – and there are huge opportunity costs for both.

    The more business feels they can lobby goverment to get deals the less time and money they devote to their own businesses. Labour should just tell them to stop whining and put their effort into their business.

  3. Of those 4 points, overwhelmingly points 1 and 2 underscore current business confidence.
    I’m starting a new metric: “ Business Perception”. It’s a measure of how citizens rate their country’s businesses and especially business “leaders”
    After a quick ask around I’m starting it at -10 “ Whiney entitled gouging shitlords “ how will future polls rank? Gripping stuff.

  4. Just compare this to the last Labour government back in 1999.

    After the winter of discontent in 2000, the truce terms were the government would not go beyond their mainfesto mandate.

    Something that would never be asked, or required, of a National government.

    This time there has been a more ambitious approach – based on denying this government ever won a mandate, so as to make the case that it does not even have a mandate to deliver on its manifesto/coalition agreement.

    The very idea, that it might do so, has led to such a loss of business confidence that the government has to reassure “business” (the older white men in private sector boss jobs) that they have not lost power over how the economy is run, just because their preferred vehicle, the National Party, is no longer in government.

    If this is true then Labour has betrayed its union membership, and many of its voters. It would mean there is an estate of power beyond democratic constraint – those who rule regardless of how the people vote have the real power (those who you are not allowed to criticise have less power, if they really did have secure rule over you they would not fear what the people had to say and the democratic outcome that resulted).

    Of course one hopes that Labour is just reassuring business that it understands their insecurity. Some in the government would be quite capable of noting that only a generation back, men like these were insecure about their wives having independent careers. And their wives had nuture their vulnerable masculinity, even if that meant being submissive when they would rather ride on top.

  5. This new winter of artificial discontent is a missed opportunity for labour.
    Self appointed business leaders think the labour led government is anti business? Bring in compulsory unionism, cap CEO salary, no more cheap migrant labour. What’s to lose, they are spitting the dummy anyway.
    Fix the country, Fuck them.

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