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submitted 1 week ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

I had low expectations, but damn. Lowering the Govt's KiwiSaver contribution, pay equity changes, income testing for Best Start child payments and 18-19 year olds on the benefit tested against their parent's income, tax breaks for businesses, increased rebate threshold for SuperGold?

Will we ever get a Government brave enough to means test Superannuation. Boomers and businesses profit again and the younger generations have to pay for it with their futures.

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[-] [email protected] 2 points 4 days ago

Idk I'm in two minds about that. When I was at university I knew plenty of people who were living rent-free in their parents' houses. One guy was even having his mum cook meals and do laundry.

Whereas I was just out there by myself, so without an allowance my loans would have had even more of a chilling effect. In practice most suggestions for a UBI seem to involve lowering the amount poor people get. I guess the devil's in the details.

If I were in charge I'd make tertiary free instead.

[-] [email protected] 2 points 3 days ago

In my opinion, any kind of social safety net or financial support system will always have cases of abuse or edge cases taking advantage of it. It would be almost impossible to make it completely foolproof against abuse without having many who do need it falling through the cracks as well. Kind of like removing the benefit because some people abuse it. The vast majority that need it would ultimately suffer.

I agree on making tertiary free though.

[-] [email protected] 2 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

Oh, yeah I agree with the gist of this. I think you are right. In our legal system we have the principle that jailing innocent people is worse than accidentally letting a guilty one go unpunished, and I really wish we could apply that same logic to social programmes.

The kind of witch hunting that goes on mostly affects and hurts those in need.

I think my problem is I have a mindset of scarcity and should probably study macroeconomics or something.

[-] [email protected] 1 points 1 day ago

Sadly we can see an example of it in action with the rubbish Family Boost scheme National came up with. They've spent more money administering it than actually providing rebates. Poor people can't afford to pay for ECE first and then apply and wait weeks or months for a rebate. Was the original free ECE hours perfect? No and absolutely a lot of private ECE centers were abusing it. But Labour's plan to extend free ECE hours to two year olds would have benefited far more people.

I think my problem is I have a mindset of scarcity

I don't think this is uncommon, particularly in western culture as a lot of western society places importance on individual wealth building rather than society as a whole.

I always think of this proverb:

A society grows great when old men plant trees whose shade they know they shall never sit in.

We need to try to build a future society for those that come after us. Not just to reap the benefits in our own lifetimes.

[-] [email protected] 2 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

One of my parents was very fond of that proverb. <3 Literally as well as metaphorically.

I meant more I have a mindset in terms of society's scarcity.

The messaging drilled into me is always that the government can't afford to give us all the things we need. So when people say the government should give everyone, say, a UBI, part of me panics thinking at that rate the day when the government decides it can, say, finally afford to help people like me to get a wheelchair, or help the homeless people up the road get shelter, or cut hospital wait times to under 12 months, will never come because all the money will go to UBIs.

But that's a false dichotomy.

They’ve spent more money administering it than actually providing

I get the impression this happens a fair bit with change to social programmes that is designed to send project an ideology. Sometimes it almost feels like there are two NZs, one that wants to help everyone become a prosperous society and one that wants to not have social support at all.

[-] [email protected] 1 points 13 hours ago* (last edited 13 hours ago)

I don't know if we'll ever get a UBI, but we don't have one now and is the Govt helping you right now?

I get the impression this happens a fair bit with change to social programmes that is designed to send project an ideology. Sometimes it almost feels like there are two NZs, one that wants to help everyone become a prosperous society and one that wants to not have social support at all.

I think social media, algorithms and the huge influence American media and culture has is what has driven a lot of this. It's definitely gotten worse over time. I really do wonder what the future holds for the next few generations.

this post was submitted on 22 May 2025
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