Politics 🗳️ NZ Politics

Sad that public threats to rape and murder your child are just part of the job now. I don't know if Lux and Seymour get the same treatment, haven't seen it if they do.
Jacinda personalised the covid response and it resulted in record positive rating for a PM and the first ever sole party MMP victory.

When the covid response faltered the personalisation of the response backfired on her personally.

If anyone can’t see the hatred of her from some was directly because of the covid decisions then explain the record positive polling in 2020?


Her leadership style was the most personalised ever - we still call her the informal Jacinda rather than the formal Luxon or Seymour.

It’s sort of ironic you have a revolutionary personalised leadership style and then complain when people take things personally against you. There’s a reason in business, management, leadership, etc that you don’t personalise decision… this is it.

And then claiming it’s misogynistic is a woke excuse for leading too personally.
 

NZWarriors.com

Ahead of the OCR announcement this afternoon TSB have dropped 6-, 12- & 18-month interest rates along with their two-year interest rate while BNZ have dropped their 6-month interest rate to 5.89% to match ASB. Economists are picking other banks to match them, or go further, depending on this afternoon's announcement.
 
Jacinda personalised the covid response and it resulted in record positive rating for a PM and the first ever sole party MMP victory.

When the covid response faltered the personalisation of the response backfired on her personally.

If anyone can’t see the hatred of her from some was directly because of the covid decisions then explain the record positive polling in 2020?


Her leadership style was the most personalised ever - we still call her the informal Jacinda rather than the formal Luxon or Seymour.

It’s sort of ironic you have a revolutionary personalised leadership style and then complain when people take things personally against you. There’s a reason in business, management, leadership, etc that you don’t personalise decision… this is it.

And then claiming it’s misogynistic is a woke excuse for leading too personally.
Ignorance is bliss in your case
 
Ahead of the OCR announcement this afternoon TSB have dropped 6-, 12- & 18-month interest rates along with their two-year interest rate while BNZ have dropped their 6-month interest rate to 5.89% to match ASB. Economists are picking other banks to match them, or go further, depending on this afternoon's announcement.
As expected by most economists, the RBNZ has dropped the OCR by 50 basis points to 3.75%. But, only expect a little reduction in short term mortgage rates as most banks have already factored the reduction in the OCR into their 6 month rates.... historically, the lowest of the short term rates is 2 percent above the OCR but the banks were already just below 6% so, if they do drop to match the RBNZ, they'll only go down 0.1-0.2%.
 
nothing to see here.... absolutely corrupt and an abuse of the democratic process. Can't wait to see the piece Mountain Tui does on this.....

Manurewa Marae inquiry: John Tamihere admits census forms were photocopied​

Andrea Vance

February 19, 2025 •09:40am


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Te Pāti Māori president John Tamihere has admitted census forms were photocopied by Manurewa Marae staff.

But he said data from the 2023 survey, collected by the marae on behalf of his Whānau Ora Commissioning Agency (WOCA) and Waipareira Trust was not misused to help the party’s election campaign.

Two damning inquiries into the alleged misuse of census and Covid-19 vaccination information were released on Tuesday.

The findings saw Chief Statistician Mark Sowden step down, and public service boss Sir Brian Roche bar agencies from entering into any new contracts with WOCA, the trust or the marae until safeguards are in place.

9Tzi8ywRz924XE3uHaD6DZ3Ef+IdbOiYlvIROR5vlqUeRrexTocZGobKRJ9od%2Fgnk3B%2FCeKTmTAsIjj6Q0YaYVql3hExWqjCclgg3fx%2Fn0SjExKQzJPrtkJAlY8oj77mCmys%2FLr2LIPte7deguEINrjT3IhEdu06z2QyE28ZkJnucl71bnjESwGEOyQpNSDp6c+6cdcLV5DFfU8gl72uNjeQcKAs40uftW17XXhQr1ORNNSZ6pLNovoa%2FlfjVC%2F1PL7RazPOrGF8laBzpZlVuS3ccqurbIImbP7sZWbOwCJxWF+mjnsUIQv0Fhe1Sk75j9f45+Z7r%2FSlAy7VYZZzgtElYqpoVS0CsCJhRIJjen8JMd+UqDhOfoOaw3HHhlhYFwkuag7XmRjbZQ9NTJaDVDdAy6CCRKbLJRGJnJrAiZaNRB9HaUK3M6UEP+IIkE7l
Te Pāti Māori president John Tamihere is defending his party.Abigail Dougherty / Stuff

Roche also called for a law change after the marae offered $100 supermarket vouchers and winter wellness packs to clients who agreed to switch from the general to Māori roll.


Tamihere has not responded to The Post’s requests for comment.

But he told Radio NZ on Wednesday: “In regards to Manurewa Marae, there were photocopies.

“We had a clear instruction that they be destroyed on the premises on the day ... was any census data used by Whānau o Waipareira or the Whanau Ora Commissioning Agency in regard to the 2023 general election? And the answer is no.”

Asked if it was unacceptable that census forms were duplicated, Tamihere said: “Well, we have operating guidelines and those weren’t met.
9Tzi8ywRz924XE3uHaD6DZ3Ef+IdbOiYlvIROR5vlqUeRrexTocZGobKRJ9od%2Fgnk3B%2FCeKTmTAsIjj6Q0YaYbjLaBOw7VwdV4Q6d1PYonQqQfyom6s4frTZ6T3aFaU%2FmPHtvJgIs31TeukrPJ26XdXbL2e04x4U1Vmn903hIXYl8lpIQ9XAYuqd+Cob5YgM%2FkE%2FMrvVWMYNzCiAbwozoERzbZxRM6k0uv3u6s+rHCOTPdHqsL5VFdLY5XRH9Ub2vkCmngzE2hmXTlKFM7myP3VHSwCsNqRIGIDeMS+hY3MN5ehl3EVy7In80s5suioJW3qlrS9gMvyGDF4ByzHRg1uted7xKtppszRnGQA5VNI9Qk3calnKEkITbduGgYVSDa79Sz2FayNMm8psdly3ynU933El3%2FVOGxn09G+fmroVkePtVxP2Jddl8WKU3Qz6
Manurewa Marae was formerly headed by MP Takutai Moana Natasha Kemp.ROBERT KITCHIN / THE POST

“But that’s not to say crooked dealings occurred on the marae. That’s something you would have to put to them.”

The marae was formerly headed by TPM MP Takutai Moana Natasha Kemp, who narrowly won the seat from Labour incumbent Peeni Henare by 42 votes.

The police, the Privacy Commissioner Mark Webster and the Serious Fraud Office are now investigating claims Te Pāti Māori misused personal data collected in 2023.



That wasn’t within the scope of the two inquires, commissioned by the Public Service and Stats NZ.

The latter, written by former state services deputy commissioner Doug Craig, did find “it was more likely than not” census forms were photocopied and left unsealed.

This breached legislation that protects information collected for the census.

Craig’s report also said: “We think it is more likely than not that, at least on some occasions, the information entered into WOCA’s database from Manurewa Marae ... was derived directly from census forms.”
9Tzi8ywRz924XE3uHaD6DZ3Ef+IdbOiYlvIROR5vlqUeRrexTocZGobKRJ9od%2Fgnk3B%2FCeKTmTAsIjj6Q0YaYQvIJVvqYskEoYleJqD+tS%2FVHEW7k1R8XGgxwvD6MVVQLEwEsSopayyrHyPC1UmPI9AL5mFQ3zjYs4vqJm6Kh54S4iwAeKqfvSzj1J4%2FBcYPJKd6JteJgGg7NmWoNcEl+UUkWAtjCi+8tzyfIk+TzwfQ3xqKydCym5bxMlHfhIpksR8pooUKRrkZlf9JEK0iYaMLF6AmdasZlhxaT0K%2F+KVkh3yYiOzKmqVSvozh2822Ek5totxw%2Fyq504Tayd+qX%2FAfWLnjSbTev4Q+pKXMU5ftMsYpUfeGwDoPbfBK5lcbeusoNLYCAYMexwwpDOGjoclzBjAjT%2F%2FqW3Ej1WKp2X8EdCPJr17QbrgK9GCpJG6y
Manurewa Marae was was at the forefront of Auckland's vaccine rollout, part of a Whānau Ora Commissioning Agency drive to promote the 2023 census, and a polling booth at the general election.DAVID WHITE/STUFF

The PSC inquiry, headed by Pania Gray and former solicitor general Michael Heron KC, found a number of flaws in how Stats NZ, the Ministry of Health and Health NZ protected personal information provided to the marae, WOCA and the Waipareira Trust.

“While we don’t know if personal information was improperly used, the gate was left open,” Roche said at a press conference on Tuesday.

Marae staff-turned-whistleblowers came forward with the claims last year, reported by the Sunday Star-Times and The Post. Tamihere has repeatedly said the whistleblowers had an employment gripe, were members of Destiny Church and had no evidence to back their claims.


He told RNZ there was “no substance” to allegations that a text message from Te Pāti Maori had been sent to voters who had previously participated in a Covid-19 vaccination drive at the marae.

A Labour Party complaint to the Electoral Commission alleged the shortcode 2661 — text messages used to send reminders or marketing campaigns to mobile phones — belonged to Waipareira Trust and was previously used to send people government health information.

That matter was referred to the Privacy Commission by the PSC inquiry and is now being investigated.

“There is no substance to that at all,” Tamihere told RNZ.

The use of incentives to encourage clients to complete the census was included in contracts with Stats NZ, he said. Any concerns about those incentives “are not my concern”, he said.

“We were deployed to lift the numbers of Māori participating in the census, and we did that,” he said.

The former Labour MP also said Roche had “no legal rights” to suspend new or extended contracts with his organisations. “We’ve been found guilty of nothing.”

Tamihere claimed he was being targeted because of race.


“There's not one rule for all in this country by a long shot,” he told RNZ.

“We are a growing force politically in this country. That will continue whether people like it or not."

 

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Federated Farmers’ latest Farm Confidence Survey reveals highest level in over a decade​

The Country
19 Feb, 2025 01:45 PM6 mins to read

Federated Farmers' president Wayne Langford has noticed a “significant shift” in the mood of rural New Zealand.

Federated Farmers' president Wayne Langford has noticed a “significant shift” in the mood of rural New Zealand.

Farmer confidence has risen to its highest level in over a decade, rebounding from record lows in recent years, Federated Farmers says.

The advocacy group has released its latest farm confidence survey, which shows falling interest rates, rising incomes and more favourable farming rules have all played a major role in the improvement.

The online survey was conducted from January 22 to February 2, and received 784 responses from farmers nationally.

Federated Farmers president Wayne Langford said he had noticed a “significant shift” in the mood of rural New Zealand.

“Farmers are feeling a lot more positive.”

Langford said the past few years had been “bloody tough” for many farming families, with falling incomes, rising interest rates and unpaid bills piling up.

“At the same time, we’ve also been struggling with an incredibly challenging regulatory environment and farming rules that haven’t always been practical, affordable or fair.

“These survey results paint a clear picture of a sector finally able to breathe a sigh of relief as some of that weight is lifted.”

The January survey shows farmers’ confidence in the current general economic conditions has surged from a deeply negative -66% in July 2024 to a net positive score of 2%.

This marks the largest one-off improvement since the question was introduced in 2016.

Meanwhile, a net 23% of farmers now expect better economic conditions over the next year — the highest confidence level since January 2014.

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There has also been a sharp lift in profitability, with 54% of farmers now reporting making a profit — double the number in the last survey six months ago.

Langford said it was important to note that, despite confidence being at its highest point in more than a decade, it was still only just in the positive.

“It’s been a remarkable recovery in farmer confidence over a short period of time, but I’m very conscious that we were coming off an extremely low base.

“We’ve come a long way, but there’s a long way to go yet.”

The survey results show regulation and compliance costs remain the greatest concern for farmers, followed by interest rates and banks, and input costs.

“When it comes to farmer confidence, a lot of it comes down to what’s coming into our bank account, and what’s going out the other side,” Langford said.

“A lot of that is market-driven, and farmers are used to riding those highs and lows, but Government rules and regulations have a significant impact on farmers’ costs.”

Langford said compliance costs could “make or break your season” and affected farmers’ confidence to keep investing in their business.

“The Government has made a great start cutting through red tape for farmers and repealing a lot of the most unworkable rules, but there’s still a lot of work to be done.”

Interest rates and banking issues have consistently been a top concern for farmers.

Langford said this was why Federated Farmers fought so hard for a banking inquiry.

“Interest payments are a huge cost for most farming businesses and farmers have been under massive pressure from their banks in recent years.

“We want to see the Government take a much closer look at our banking system and whether farmers are getting a fair deal from their lenders.”

The survey shows farmers’ highest priorities for the Government are the economy and business environment, fiscal policy, and reducing regulatory burdens.


“If the Government is serious about their ambitious growth agenda and doubling exports over the next decade, this is where they need to be focusing their energy,” Langford said.

“For farmers to have the confidence to invest in our businesses, employ more staff, and grow our economy, we need to have confidence in our direction of travel as a nation, too.

“As a country, we’re never going be able to regulate our way to prosperity, but with the right policy settings, we might just be able to farm our way there.”

Federated Farmers has been conducting biannual Farm Confidence surveys since July 2009.

See the full results here.

Farm Confidence survey: Key findings​

  • Farmer confidence has surged by 68 points since July 2024, rebounding from a deeply negative -66% to a net positive score of 2%. This marks the largest one-off improvement since the question was introduced in 2016.
  • Optimism is rising, with net expectations increasing by 29 points since January 2024. A net 23% of farmers now anticipate better conditions over the next year — the highest confidence level seen since January 2014.
  • The number of farmers making a profit has doubled since the last survey, with 54% of farmers now reporting a profit, up from 27%. The net profitability score has surged by 60 points, the strongest turnaround since July 2022.
  • Confidence in future profitability continues to climb, with a net 31% of farmers expecting improvement over the next 12 months — a 41-point increase since July 2024. This is the highest forward-looking profitability score since July 2017.
  • A net 16% of farmers expect production to increase in the next year, extending a positive trend. This marks the first time since 2016/17 that there have been three consecutive periods of predicted growth.
  • Spending intentions have strengthened, with a net 23% of farmers planning to increase spending over the next 12 months — up 26 points from July 2024. This is the strongest expected rise since January 2023.
  • 41% of farmers plan to reduce their debt in the next year, up from 23% in July 2024. Lower interest rates, improved confidence, and stronger production forecasts drive this shift.
  • Hiring challenges persist, with a net 16% of respondents reporting difficulty recruiting skilled staff in the past six months, largely unchanged from July 2024. However, this is the least difficult period for recruitment since July 2012.
  • The top concerns for farmers remain regulation and compliance costs, debt, interest and banks, and input costs.
  • Farmers want the Government to prioritise the economy and business environment, fiscal policy, and reduce regulatory burdens.
 
nothing to see here.... absolutely corrupt and an abuse of the democratic process. Can't wait to see the piece Mountain Tui does on this.....

Manurewa Marae inquiry: John Tamihere admits census forms were photocopied​

Andrea Vance

February 19, 2025 •09:40am


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Te Pāti Māori president John Tamihere has admitted census forms were photocopied by Manurewa Marae staff.

But he said data from the 2023 survey, collected by the marae on behalf of his Whānau Ora Commissioning Agency (WOCA) and Waipareira Trust was not misused to help the party’s election campaign.

Two damning inquiries into the alleged misuse of census and Covid-19 vaccination information were released on Tuesday.

The findings saw Chief Statistician Mark Sowden step down, and public service boss Sir Brian Roche bar agencies from entering into any new contracts with WOCA, the trust or the marae until safeguards are in place.

9Tzi8ywRz924XE3uHaD6DZ3Ef+IdbOiYlvIROR5vlqUeRrexTocZGobKRJ9od%2Fgnk3B%2FCeKTmTAsIjj6Q0YaYVql3hExWqjCclgg3fx%2Fn0SjExKQzJPrtkJAlY8oj77mCmys%2FLr2LIPte7deguEINrjT3IhEdu06z2QyE28ZkJnucl71bnjESwGEOyQpNSDp6c+6cdcLV5DFfU8gl72uNjeQcKAs40uftW17XXhQr1ORNNSZ6pLNovoa%2FlfjVC%2F1PL7RazPOrGF8laBzpZlVuS3ccqurbIImbP7sZWbOwCJxWF+mjnsUIQv0Fhe1Sk75j9f45+Z7r%2FSlAy7VYZZzgtElYqpoVS0CsCJhRIJjen8JMd+UqDhOfoOaw3HHhlhYFwkuag7XmRjbZQ9NTJaDVDdAy6CCRKbLJRGJnJrAiZaNRB9HaUK3M6UEP+IIkE7l
Te Pāti Māori president John Tamihere is defending his party.Abigail Dougherty / Stuff

Roche also called for a law change after the marae offered $100 supermarket vouchers and winter wellness packs to clients who agreed to switch from the general to Māori roll.


Tamihere has not responded to The Post’s requests for comment.

But he told Radio NZ on Wednesday: “In regards to Manurewa Marae, there were photocopies.

“We had a clear instruction that they be destroyed on the premises on the day ... was any census data used by Whānau o Waipareira or the Whanau Ora Commissioning Agency in regard to the 2023 general election? And the answer is no.”

Asked if it was unacceptable that census forms were duplicated, Tamihere said: “Well, we have operating guidelines and those weren’t met.
9Tzi8ywRz924XE3uHaD6DZ3Ef+IdbOiYlvIROR5vlqUeRrexTocZGobKRJ9od%2Fgnk3B%2FCeKTmTAsIjj6Q0YaYbjLaBOw7VwdV4Q6d1PYonQqQfyom6s4frTZ6T3aFaU%2FmPHtvJgIs31TeukrPJ26XdXbL2e04x4U1Vmn903hIXYl8lpIQ9XAYuqd+Cob5YgM%2FkE%2FMrvVWMYNzCiAbwozoERzbZxRM6k0uv3u6s+rHCOTPdHqsL5VFdLY5XRH9Ub2vkCmngzE2hmXTlKFM7myP3VHSwCsNqRIGIDeMS+hY3MN5ehl3EVy7In80s5suioJW3qlrS9gMvyGDF4ByzHRg1uted7xKtppszRnGQA5VNI9Qk3calnKEkITbduGgYVSDa79Sz2FayNMm8psdly3ynU933El3%2FVOGxn09G+fmroVkePtVxP2Jddl8WKU3Qz6
Manurewa Marae was formerly headed by MP Takutai Moana Natasha Kemp.ROBERT KITCHIN / THE POST

“But that’s not to say crooked dealings occurred on the marae. That’s something you would have to put to them.”

The marae was formerly headed by TPM MP Takutai Moana Natasha Kemp, who narrowly won the seat from Labour incumbent Peeni Henare by 42 votes.

The police, the Privacy Commissioner Mark Webster and the Serious Fraud Office are now investigating claims Te Pāti Māori misused personal data collected in 2023.



That wasn’t within the scope of the two inquires, commissioned by the Public Service and Stats NZ.

The latter, written by former state services deputy commissioner Doug Craig, did find “it was more likely than not” census forms were photocopied and left unsealed.

This breached legislation that protects information collected for the census.

Craig’s report also said: “We think it is more likely than not that, at least on some occasions, the information entered into WOCA’s database from Manurewa Marae ... was derived directly from census forms.”
9Tzi8ywRz924XE3uHaD6DZ3Ef+IdbOiYlvIROR5vlqUeRrexTocZGobKRJ9od%2Fgnk3B%2FCeKTmTAsIjj6Q0YaYQvIJVvqYskEoYleJqD+tS%2FVHEW7k1R8XGgxwvD6MVVQLEwEsSopayyrHyPC1UmPI9AL5mFQ3zjYs4vqJm6Kh54S4iwAeKqfvSzj1J4%2FBcYPJKd6JteJgGg7NmWoNcEl+UUkWAtjCi+8tzyfIk+TzwfQ3xqKydCym5bxMlHfhIpksR8pooUKRrkZlf9JEK0iYaMLF6AmdasZlhxaT0K%2F+KVkh3yYiOzKmqVSvozh2822Ek5totxw%2Fyq504Tayd+qX%2FAfWLnjSbTev4Q+pKXMU5ftMsYpUfeGwDoPbfBK5lcbeusoNLYCAYMexwwpDOGjoclzBjAjT%2F%2FqW3Ej1WKp2X8EdCPJr17QbrgK9GCpJG6y
Manurewa Marae was was at the forefront of Auckland's vaccine rollout, part of a Whānau Ora Commissioning Agency drive to promote the 2023 census, and a polling booth at the general election.DAVID WHITE/STUFF

The PSC inquiry, headed by Pania Gray and former solicitor general Michael Heron KC, found a number of flaws in how Stats NZ, the Ministry of Health and Health NZ protected personal information provided to the marae, WOCA and the Waipareira Trust.

“While we don’t know if personal information was improperly used, the gate was left open,” Roche said at a press conference on Tuesday.

Marae staff-turned-whistleblowers came forward with the claims last year, reported by the Sunday Star-Times and The Post. Tamihere has repeatedly said the whistleblowers had an employment gripe, were members of Destiny Church and had no evidence to back their claims.


He told RNZ there was “no substance” to allegations that a text message from Te Pāti Maori had been sent to voters who had previously participated in a Covid-19 vaccination drive at the marae.

A Labour Party complaint to the Electoral Commission alleged the shortcode 2661 — text messages used to send reminders or marketing campaigns to mobile phones — belonged to Waipareira Trust and was previously used to send people government health information.

That matter was referred to the Privacy Commission by the PSC inquiry and is now being investigated.

“There is no substance to that at all,” Tamihere told RNZ.

The use of incentives to encourage clients to complete the census was included in contracts with Stats NZ, he said. Any concerns about those incentives “are not my concern”, he said.

“We were deployed to lift the numbers of Māori participating in the census, and we did that,” he said.

The former Labour MP also said Roche had “no legal rights” to suspend new or extended contracts with his organisations. “We’ve been found guilty of nothing.”

Tamihere claimed he was being targeted because of race.


“There's not one rule for all in this country by a long shot,” he told RNZ.

“We are a growing force politically in this country. That will continue whether people like it or not."


It's amazing what you lot focus on. That's really not the gotcha you think it is. Now back to this corrupt and utterly morally bereft government who want to sell us all out and steal our democracy eh?
 
It's amazing what you lot focus on. That's really not the gotcha you think it is. Now back to this corrupt and utterly morally bereft government who want to sell us all out and steal our democracy eh?
Like I said nothing to see here...... right @MaybeTop8 ? oops I mean left

As the defender of democracy I thought you would be all over this
 

Federated Farmers’ latest Farm Confidence Survey reveals highest level in over a decade​

The Country
19 Feb, 2025 01:45 PM6 mins to read

Federated Farmers' president Wayne Langford has noticed a “significant shift” in the mood of rural New Zealand.' president Wayne Langford has noticed a “significant shift” in the mood of rural New Zealand.

Federated Farmers' president Wayne Langford has noticed a “significant shift” in the mood of rural New Zealand.

Farmer confidence has risen to its highest level in over a decade, rebounding from record lows in recent years, Federated Farmers says.

The advocacy group has released its latest farm confidence survey, which shows falling interest rates, rising incomes and more favourable farming rules have all played a major role in the improvement.

The online survey was conducted from January 22 to February 2, and received 784 responses from farmers nationally.

Federated Farmers president Wayne Langford said he had noticed a “significant shift” in the mood of rural New Zealand.

“Farmers are feeling a lot more positive.”

Langford said the past few years had been “bloody tough” for many farming families, with falling incomes, rising interest rates and unpaid bills piling up.

“At the same time, we’ve also been struggling with an incredibly challenging regulatory environment and farming rules that haven’t always been practical, affordable or fair.

“These survey results paint a clear picture of a sector finally able to breathe a sigh of relief as some of that weight is lifted.”

The January survey shows farmers’ confidence in the current general economic conditions has surged from a deeply negative -66% in July 2024 to a net positive score of 2%.

This marks the largest one-off improvement since the question was introduced in 2016.

Meanwhile, a net 23% of farmers now expect better economic conditions over the next year — the highest confidence level since January 2014.

Subscribe to The Country edm
There has also been a sharp lift in profitability, with 54% of farmers now reporting making a profit — double the number in the last survey six months ago.

Langford said it was important to note that, despite confidence being at its highest point in more than a decade, it was still only just in the positive.

“It’s been a remarkable recovery in farmer confidence over a short period of time, but I’m very conscious that we were coming off an extremely low base.

“We’ve come a long way, but there’s a long way to go yet.”

The survey results show regulation and compliance costs remain the greatest concern for farmers, followed by interest rates and banks, and input costs.

“When it comes to farmer confidence, a lot of it comes down to what’s coming into our bank account, and what’s going out the other side,” Langford said.

“A lot of that is market-driven, and farmers are used to riding those highs and lows, but Government rules and regulations have a significant impact on farmers’ costs.”

Langford said compliance costs could “make or break your season” and affected farmers’ confidence to keep investing in their business.

“The Government has made a great start cutting through red tape for farmers and repealing a lot of the most unworkable rules, but there’s still a lot of work to be done.”

Interest rates and banking issues have consistently been a top concern for farmers.

Langford said this was why Federated Farmers fought so hard for a banking inquiry.

“Interest payments are a huge cost for most farming businesses and farmers have been under massive pressure from their banks in recent years.

“We want to see the Government take a much closer look at our banking system and whether farmers are getting a fair deal from their lenders.”

The survey shows farmers’ highest priorities for the Government are the economy and business environment, fiscal policy, and reducing regulatory burdens.


“If the Government is serious about their ambitious growth agenda and doubling exports over the next decade, this is where they need to be focusing their energy,” Langford said.

“For farmers to have the confidence to invest in our businesses, employ more staff, and grow our economy, we need to have confidence in our direction of travel as a nation, too.

“As a country, we’re never going be able to regulate our way to prosperity, but with the right policy settings, we might just be able to farm our way there.”

Federated Farmers has been conducting biannual Farm Confidence surveys since July 2009.

See the full results here.

Farm Confidence survey: Key findings​

  • Farmer confidence has surged by 68 points since July 2024, rebounding from a deeply negative -66% to a net positive score of 2%. This marks the largest one-off improvement since the question was introduced in 2016.
  • Optimism is rising, with net expectations increasing by 29 points since January 2024. A net 23% of farmers now anticipate better conditions over the next year — the highest confidence level seen since January 2014.
  • The number of farmers making a profit has doubled since the last survey, with 54% of farmers now reporting a profit, up from 27%. The net profitability score has surged by 60 points, the strongest turnaround since July 2022.
  • Confidence in future profitability continues to climb, with a net 31% of farmers expecting improvement over the next 12 months — a 41-point increase since July 2024. This is the highest forward-looking profitability score since July 2017.
  • A net 16% of farmers expect production to increase in the next year, extending a positive trend. This marks the first time since 2016/17 that there have been three consecutive periods of predicted growth.
  • Spending intentions have strengthened, with a net 23% of farmers planning to increase spending over the next 12 months — up 26 points from July 2024. This is the strongest expected rise since January 2023.
  • 41% of farmers plan to reduce their debt in the next year, up from 23% in July 2024. Lower interest rates, improved confidence, and stronger production forecasts drive this shift.
  • Hiring challenges persist, with a net 16% of respondents reporting difficulty recruiting skilled staff in the past six months, largely unchanged from July 2024. However, this is the least difficult period for recruitment since July 2012.
  • The top concerns for farmers remain regulation and compliance costs, debt, interest and banks, and input costs.
  • Farmers want the Government to prioritise the economy and business environment, fiscal policy, and reduce regulatory burdens.
Good to see an industry happy, though must admit met plenty of farmers in recent times displeased but sheep and wool is particularly struggling. Tourism numbers up since December too so hopefully continues. Not at all onboard with the resumption of live exporting, but how it is unfortunately
 
It's worth saying again - there's no room for any tax cut, let alone borrowing 14 billion to pay for one to enrich the already wealthy.

Stop the steal! Drain the swamp!
What tax was cut again?

And good to have you onboard at last.
 

Federated Farmers’ latest Farm Confidence Survey reveals highest level in over a decade​

The Country
19 Feb, 2025 01:45 PM6 mins to read

Federated Farmers' president Wayne Langford has noticed a “significant shift” in the mood of rural New Zealand.' president Wayne Langford has noticed a “significant shift” in the mood of rural New Zealand.

Federated Farmers' president Wayne Langford has noticed a “significant shift” in the mood of rural New Zealand.

Farmer confidence has risen to its highest level in over a decade, rebounding from record lows in recent years, Federated Farmers says.

The advocacy group has released its latest farm confidence survey, which shows falling interest rates, rising incomes and more favourable farming rules have all played a major role in the improvement.

The online survey was conducted from January 22 to February 2, and received 784 responses from farmers nationally.

Federated Farmers president Wayne Langford said he had noticed a “significant shift” in the mood of rural New Zealand.

“Farmers are feeling a lot more positive.”

Langford said the past few years had been “bloody tough” for many farming families, with falling incomes, rising interest rates and unpaid bills piling up.

“At the same time, we’ve also been struggling with an incredibly challenging regulatory environment and farming rules that haven’t always been practical, affordable or fair.

“These survey results paint a clear picture of a sector finally able to breathe a sigh of relief as some of that weight is lifted.”

The January survey shows farmers’ confidence in the current general economic conditions has surged from a deeply negative -66% in July 2024 to a net positive score of 2%.

This marks the largest one-off improvement since the question was introduced in 2016.

Meanwhile, a net 23% of farmers now expect better economic conditions over the next year — the highest confidence level since January 2014.

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There has also been a sharp lift in profitability, with 54% of farmers now reporting making a profit — double the number in the last survey six months ago.

Langford said it was important to note that, despite confidence being at its highest point in more than a decade, it was still only just in the positive.

“It’s been a remarkable recovery in farmer confidence over a short period of time, but I’m very conscious that we were coming off an extremely low base.

“We’ve come a long way, but there’s a long way to go yet.”

The survey results show regulation and compliance costs remain the greatest concern for farmers, followed by interest rates and banks, and input costs.

“When it comes to farmer confidence, a lot of it comes down to what’s coming into our bank account, and what’s going out the other side,” Langford said.

“A lot of that is market-driven, and farmers are used to riding those highs and lows, but Government rules and regulations have a significant impact on farmers’ costs.”

Langford said compliance costs could “make or break your season” and affected farmers’ confidence to keep investing in their business.

“The Government has made a great start cutting through red tape for farmers and repealing a lot of the most unworkable rules, but there’s still a lot of work to be done.”

Interest rates and banking issues have consistently been a top concern for farmers.

Langford said this was why Federated Farmers fought so hard for a banking inquiry.

“Interest payments are a huge cost for most farming businesses and farmers have been under massive pressure from their banks in recent years.

“We want to see the Government take a much closer look at our banking system and whether farmers are getting a fair deal from their lenders.”

The survey shows farmers’ highest priorities for the Government are the economy and business environment, fiscal policy, and reducing regulatory burdens.


“If the Government is serious about their ambitious growth agenda and doubling exports over the next decade, this is where they need to be focusing their energy,” Langford said.

“For farmers to have the confidence to invest in our businesses, employ more staff, and grow our economy, we need to have confidence in our direction of travel as a nation, too.

“As a country, we’re never going be able to regulate our way to prosperity, but with the right policy settings, we might just be able to farm our way there.”

Federated Farmers has been conducting biannual Farm Confidence surveys since July 2009.

See the full results here.

Farm Confidence survey: Key findings​

  • Farmer confidence has surged by 68 points since July 2024, rebounding from a deeply negative -66% to a net positive score of 2%. This marks the largest one-off improvement since the question was introduced in 2016.
  • Optimism is rising, with net expectations increasing by 29 points since January 2024. A net 23% of farmers now anticipate better conditions over the next year — the highest confidence level seen since January 2014.
  • The number of farmers making a profit has doubled since the last survey, with 54% of farmers now reporting a profit, up from 27%. The net profitability score has surged by 60 points, the strongest turnaround since July 2022.
  • Confidence in future profitability continues to climb, with a net 31% of farmers expecting improvement over the next 12 months — a 41-point increase since July 2024. This is the highest forward-looking profitability score since July 2017.
  • A net 16% of farmers expect production to increase in the next year, extending a positive trend. This marks the first time since 2016/17 that there have been three consecutive periods of predicted growth.
  • Spending intentions have strengthened, with a net 23% of farmers planning to increase spending over the next 12 months — up 26 points from July 2024. This is the strongest expected rise since January 2023.
  • 41% of farmers plan to reduce their debt in the next year, up from 23% in July 2024. Lower interest rates, improved confidence, and stronger production forecasts drive this shift.
  • Hiring challenges persist, with a net 16% of respondents reporting difficulty recruiting skilled staff in the past six months, largely unchanged from July 2024. However, this is the least difficult period for recruitment since July 2012.
  • The top concerns for farmers remain regulation and compliance costs, debt, interest and banks, and input costs.
  • Farmers want the Government to prioritise the economy and business environment, fiscal policy, and reduce regulatory burdens.
Hard right confidence jumps to a record high
 
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