Politics ๐Ÿ—ณ๏ธ NZ Politics

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Good point, despite all you hear is whinging about free lunches, education has been a real focus when you look into it:

- Invested $140m over 4 years in attendance services and support
- contracted 83 new attendance support services
- required daily attendance reporting with real time dashboards to assist schools
- STAR system to guide school interventions based on levels of absence.
- information sharing between agencies to better support at-risk students.
- public campaigns about why daily school attendance matters.
- new health guidance to help parents decide when sickness should keep a child home
- family holistic support measures around social workers, alcohol, drug assistance, etc.

If the lefties allowed it they should have tied benefits to kids school attendance!
Good to see that attendance is improving. Still a way to go to get it back to last decades levels but steps in the right direction. Everyone should be happy with this. I'm glad there is a focus on improving education and attendance. Its the best way forward IMO
 

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My understanding is Wiz is correct
Trying to use a horrible situation to play the blame game and take a swipe at Mฤori.

"During Cyclone Gabrielle, several trees fell over, pulling up their root plates and damaging the surrounding land.

A number of trees โ€“ which are visible from Te Ara Tลซtanga - are showing significant signs of deterioration and, if left unattended, could further damage the culturally and historically significant site they are sitting on"

These facts about the tree removal seem to be conveniently left out.

The trees removed were also the Pilot Bay side, not above the slip.
 
Trying to use a horrible situation to play the blame game and take a swipe at Mฤori.

"During Cyclone Gabrielle, several trees fell over, pulling up their root plates and damaging the surrounding land.

A number of trees โ€“ which are visible from Te Ara Tลซtanga - are showing significant signs of deterioration and, if left unattended, could further damage the culturally and historically significant site they are sitting on"

These facts about the tree removal seem to be conveniently left out.

The trees removed were also the Pilot Bay side, not above the slip.
Guess it will all come out in the review.

Itโ€™s been a significant local issue where healthy trees are removed for cultural reasons. โ€˜Damageโ€™ was a convenient excuse and most were healthy but exotic.

I actually donโ€™t have an issue with returning it to a natural state. Itโ€™s an Nz icon and should reflect NZ. But you would hope geo tech engineers were involved and decision were made based on science, not beatification.
 
I actually donโ€™t have an issue with returning it to a natural state. Itโ€™s an Nz icon and should reflect NZ. But you would hope geo tech engineers were involved and decision were made based on science, not beatification.
I agree, I hope the council used those engineers when going through with the removal but as you said I am sure the review will show that.
 

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This is a direct result of this government's swinging health cuts

Wellington ED in complete metldown.

Iโ€™m guessing Ayeshaโ€™s memory isnโ€™t that good since she announced an extension to Wellington Hospitalโ€™s ED before the 2023 Election and certainly before Nationals health cuts.

โ€œThe existing ED isnโ€™t able to meet the growing demand for emergency services across the region. This project will help future-proof Wellington-wide health facilities, so that communities can rely on accessible, quality health services.โ€

 
Iโ€™m guessing Ayeshaโ€™s memory isnโ€™t that good since she announced an extension to Wellington Hospitalโ€™s ED before the 2023 Election and certainly before Nationals health cuts.

โ€œThe existing ED isnโ€™t able to meet the growing demand for emergency services across the region. This project will help future-proof Wellington-wide health facilities, so that communities can rely on accessible, quality health services.โ€

How about the swingeing health cuts that have happened in the last two years Mike, as I mentioned.

And more coming.

Huge levels of unemployment as a result of the last round of cuts.



 

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How about the swingeing health cuts that have happened in the last two years Mike, as I mentioned.

And more coming.

Huge levels of unemployment as a result of the last round of cuts.



What cuts to health?

Asking for savings to spend and efficiencies is a good thing if the overall health budget is growing.

IMG_1543.webp
 
How about the swingeing health cuts that have happened in the last two years Mike, as I mentioned.

And more coming.

Huge levels of unemployment as a result of the last round of cuts.



But the health cuts haven't reduced the capacity of the Wellington ED... the person saying that is Ayesha who had already approved an extension to an under performing ED.

What cuts to health?

Asking for savings to spend and efficiencies is a good thing if the overall health budget is growing.

View attachment 15517
It all depends on how you want to measure it... WHO says that NZ spent 10% of it's GDP on public health in 2022 yet National budgeted on 7.3% of the GDP in 2024.... when the economy was shrinking.
 

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It all depends on how you want to measure it... WHO says that NZ spent 10% of it's GDP on public health in 2022 yet National budgeted on 7.3% of the GDP in 2024.... when the economy was shrinking.
The New Zealandโ€™s health financing and expenditure report reveals that for the past seven years (since 2019) the Ministry of Health has not submitted data to the OECD leaving the organisation to estimate our spending and the estimates are incorrect.

The OECD estimated the New Zealand government spent 9.15 percent of GDP on health in 2022 and 8.83 percent in 2023. However, our research shows when OECD over-estimates and the temporary impact of COVID-19 are adjusted for, spending was more likely around 7.5 percent of GDP in 2022 and 8.15 percent in 2023,โ€ Professor Tim Tenbensel from Waipapa Taumata Rau, University of Auckland, says. Tenbensel co-authored the report with Professor Paula Lorgelly, also from Waipapa Taumata Rau.

New Zealand is the only country not to have submitted its results to the OECD.

 
Also in the Auckland University report:

There was a sustained period from 2013 and leading up to the COVID-19 pandemic where New Zealandโ€™s health expenditure as a percentage of GDP declined considerably, falling behind that of comparable countries.

โ€ข To keep pace with the 16 comparator countries between 2013 and 2019, New Zealand would have needed to spend approximately $9 billion more on running the health system (or more than $1 billion a year more).

โ€ข This underfunding explains the immense pressure New Zealandโ€™s health workforce is under, with severe budget constraints leading to staffing shortages, hiring freezes, and stagnant wage growth.


Funding for health hasnโ€™t kept up with inflation for decades. We all know this visiting hospitals. We also know funding hasnโ€™t kept up in education, roading, social services, etc. labour stopped sending the data in 2019 and didnโ€™t invest any more until Covid hit.

Only solution is to grow the economy through substantially increasing GDP per person in my eyes. If not we continue the spiral of either declining services or increasingly tax ourselves poorer requiring more and more tax to keep up in a continual downwards cycleโ€ฆ
 
Also in the Auckland University report:

There was a sustained period from 2013 and leading up to the COVID-19 pandemic where New Zealandโ€™s health expenditure as a percentage of GDP declined considerably, falling behind that of comparable countries.

โ€ข To keep pace with the 16 comparator countries between 2013 and 2019, New Zealand would have needed to spend approximately $9 billion more on running the health system (or more than $1 billion a year more).

โ€ข This underfunding explains the immense pressure New Zealandโ€™s health workforce is under, with severe budget constraints leading to staffing shortages, hiring freezes, and stagnant wage growth.


Funding for health hasnโ€™t kept up with inflation for decades. We all know this visiting hospitals. We also know funding hasnโ€™t kept up in education, roading, social services, etc. labour stopped sending the data in 2019 and didnโ€™t invest any more until Covid hit.

Only solution is to grow the economy through substantially increasing GDP per person in my eyes. If not we continue the spiral of either declining services or increasingly tax ourselves poorer requiring more and more tax to keep up in a continual downwards cycleโ€ฆ
Not just funding, also wages and let's not talk about the NZ dollar going down the toilet! The whole country needs overhauling!
 

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NZ Health budget per GDP.webp
The following data and chart track New Zealandโ€™s Vote Health appropriations (the primary government health budget) from 2009 to 2028. The bars are color-coded by the governing party, and the dashed line tracks health spending as a percentage of the country's total GDP.
Please note that health spending significantly increased between 2020 and 2022 due to the COVID-19 pandemic response and the structural reforms that created Health New Zealand (Te Whatu Ora).


New Zealand Health Budget & GDP Percentage (2009โ€“2028)

YearHealth Budget (NZD Billions)% of GDPSitting Prime MinisterGoverning Party
2009โ€“2016$12.6B โ†’ $16.1B6.8% โ†’ 6.2%John KeyNational
2017$16.8B6.0%Bill EnglishNational
2018โ€“2022$18.2B โ†’ $27.2B6.2% โ†’ 7.5%Jacinda ArdernLabour
2023$28.5B7.3%Chris HipkinsLabour
2024โ€“2025$29.8B โ†’ $32.7B7.2%Christopher LuxonNational
2026โ€“2028*$34.1B โ†’ $36.9B7.1% โ†’ 6.9%Christopher LuxonNational
*Projections for 2026โ€“2028 are based on Budget 2025 allowances and Treasury's Half Year Economic and Fiscal Update (HYEFU) 2025.


Key Observations

  • The "Efficiency" Period (2009โ€“2017): Under the National government, the nominal health budget grew steadily, but health spending as a percentage of GDP saw a gradual decline, dropping from 6.8% to a low of 6.0% in 2017.
  • The Investment & COVID Surge (2018โ€“2022): The Labour government significantly increased health funding, with a major spike during the COVID-19 pandemic, peaking at 7.5% of GDP in 2022.
  • Consolidation (2024โ€“2028): Current projections under the National-led coalition show a record nominal budget of $32.7B for 2025. However, as GDP growth is expected to outpace health budget increases, the percentage of GDP spent on health is projected to taper back toward 6.9% by 2028.
 


What a tragedy. Accidents happen unfortunately but the whole picture painted in the article of construction workers making way whenever an ambulance arrives gives such a third world vibe to our health that was evident in recent world changing health events. If this was America, the family would be extremely wealthy out of this sad situation for the negligence
 
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