| |  | Most Recent Conversations | From h2g2 What can we blame 2legs for?
(No Posting)
(Latest post: 1 Minute Ago)
From h2g2 creepy clown
(No Posting)
(Latest post: 3 Minutes Ago)
From h2g2 A59560383 - Tips For Cold Mornings
(No Posting)
(Latest post: 3 Minutes Ago)
From h2g2 "What news story has caught your attention today?" thread
(No Posting)
(Latest post: 21 Minutes Ago)
From h2g2 9CXth Conversation at Lil's
(No Posting)
(Latest post: 29 Minutes Ago)
From h2g2 Table Tag Troubles
(No Posting)
(Latest post: 42 Minutes Ago)
From h2g2 A58243674 - Zen and the Art of Compost Making
(No Posting)
(Latest post: 1 Hour Ago)
From h2g2 Japan
(No Posting)
(Latest post: 1 Hour Ago)
From h2g2 A59859418 - Goethe and Faust: Part 1
(No Posting)
(Latest post: 1 Hour Ago)
From h2g2 Time for a h2g2 story...
(No Posting)
(Latest post: 1 Hour Ago)
Click here to see more Conversations | | | Most Recent Guide Entries
| From h2g2 A4154285 New Zealand government introduces drastic austerity measures
(Jun 5, 2005)
From h2g2 A3914372 Driving Etiquette - The United Kingdom
(Apr 18, 2005)
From h2g2 A3914246 Driving Etiquette - Asia
(Apr 18, 2005)
From h2g2 A3914183 Driving Etiquette - The Middle East
(Apr 18, 2005)
From h2g2 A3914156 Driving Etiquette - The Far East
(Apr 18, 2005)
From h2g2 A3914138 Driving Etiquette - Europe
(Apr 18, 2005)
From h2g2 A3914066 Driving Etiquette - Australia and New Zealand
(Apr 18, 2005)
From h2g2 A3913986 Driving Etiquette - North America
(Apr 18, 2005)
Click here to see more Guide Entries
| | | | Most Recent Edited Entries | From h2g2 A773804 'The Trial of Henry Kissinger' - a Book Review
(Jul 18, 2002)
From h2g2 A703351 How to Type the Euro Sign Using an Old Keyboard
(Jun 27, 2002)
From h2g2 A728327 Chuck Jones - Animator and Director
(Jun 17, 2002)
From h2g2 A734915 Wine - the Last 1,000 Years
(May 21, 2002)
From h2g2 A715330 'Black Hawk Down' - An American Fable
(Apr 17, 2002)
From h2g2 A685127 Bob Log 111 - In Concert at the Kings Arms, Auckland, New Zealand
(Apr 8, 2002)
From h2g2 A710047 Spike Milligan - Comedian
(Apr 2, 2002)
From h2g2 A701560 Benny Goodman at the Carnegie Hall
(Mar 21, 2002)
From h2g2 A692813 The Sound of Mucus
(Mar 5, 2002)
From h2g2 A676433 Lotus Notes/Domino
(Feb 27, 2002)
Click here to see more Edited Entries
|
|  | New Zealand - Wish you were here? |  |
A brief biography...
The Green Green Grass Of (My) Home
More links to Australian and New Zealand Researchers can be found here. Check out the forums for news about Aus/NZ meet-ups. A few yarns bright people may find amusing My personal web site lives here and you can email me from here My ICQ number is 17498302Guidelines for h2g2 writers and sub editors Everything you need to know about New Zealand men In the column on the right of this page are links to some of my Edited Guide entries:- Posted below are links to the h2g2 Scouts and h2g2 Sub Editors, two h2g2 volunteer groups I belong to:-
I am a member of the h2g2 Musicians Guild,
which is a virtual club for musicians, singers, composers, and other
music aficionados at h2g2.
 | | People have been talking about this Guide Entry. Here are the most recent Conversations: |
Polishing The Plough
(Last Posting: Aug 11, 2004)
Your entry has been submitted to 'Alternative Writing Workshop'
(Last Posting: Mar 29, 2004)
Your entry has been submitted to 'Alternative Writing Workshop'
(Last Posting: Aug 22, 2003)
Dead links in my Mind the Gap Entry
(Last Posting: May 19, 2003)
Concern
(Last Posting: Dec 31, 2002)
| Spike Milligan
(Last Posting: Apr 19, 2004)
New graphic for Absinthe
(Last Posting: Feb 25, 2004)
Good news Bad news
(Last Posting: Jun 23, 2003)
As I live and breathe...
(Last Posting: Feb 25, 2003)
Pimm's
(Last Posting: Sep 8, 2002)
|
 |
Journal Entries
|
| Welcome to this Researcher's Journal. If you'd like to comment on anything they have written here, just click the relevant 'Discuss this Entry' button. Lest we forget Nov 19, 2004
New Zealand government introduces drastic austerity measures By a correspondent 3 November 1998 New Zealand's minority National Party government, led by Prime Minister Jenny Shipley, is facing growing opposition to a series of austerity measures introduced in response to the country's economic downturn. The country is officially in recession after two consecutive quarters of negative growth.
Polls have shown a dramatic slump in support for the National Party, which is now trailing the opposition Labour Party by up to ten percentage points. Angry pensioners have attended rallies around the country, organised by the "Grey Power" group, at which government spokesmen have been booed and denounced.
Following the breakup of its coalition with the NZ First party in August, the National Party has been a minority in the 120-seat parliament. It has ruled for the past two months by relying on an unstable series of political relationships with the right-wing Association of Consumers and Taxpayers (ACT), which has eight MPs, the United Party's single MP and nine so-called "independents", most of them defectors from NZ First.
Under the pressure of big business and ACT, the Shipley government has implemented "Policies for Progress" which will result in further cutbacks to public services, welfare and a lowering of living standards for broad layers of working and middle class people. These include:
* A reduction in state pensions from 65 percent of the average wage to 60 percent. Due to be brought in next year, this measure will reduce the average single pension by $25 per week, slashing $2.6 billion from the welfare budget. About 85 percent of retired people depend either totally or mainly on the aged pension for their income.
* The reversal of a promise to do away with asset testing for people requiring long-term hospital care. As a result, elderly people who require long-term medical treatment have to use up their savings before qualifying for financial assistance.
* A "back to basics" drive in primary schools to introduce national testing in reading and mathematics, combined with increased powers of enforcement by the Education Review Office. Such measures have already been used to stigmatise working class schools, leading to lower enrolments, less funding and eventual closure. The Minister of Education has confirmed that Petone College, a secondary school in a working class area of Wellington, will shut before the end of the year.
* A work-for-the dole scheme, planned by former NZ First Minister of Employment Peter McCardle. Under this "Community Wage" scheme, a number of Auckland schools, faced with a lack of government funding, are replacing their support staff, including teacher aides, with less expensive and untrained community workers.
* A fresh round of asset sales. Government Property Services, which owns and leases government buildings, including offices, has been put on the market.
* Tough new measures against young people, including curfews for juvenile offenders, a reduction in the age of prosecution for juveniles, and compulsory parenting courses for designated parents.
* New proposals, announced in the past week, to force welfare recipients to have their money managed for them by financial managers.
These measures are being brought forward as unemployment rises rapidly. The government has to budget an extra $143 million to cope with the expected rise in dole payments--an increase of 9.8 percent on the original allocation. The official unemployment rate has risen from 7 percent to 7.7 percent in the recent months and is expected to soon exceed 8.5 percent.
The Shipley government increasingly appears to be under siege. Facing popular outrage, it is also under pressure from conflicting sections of the ruling class. It has backed off previous plans to break up the primary industry producer boards after scathing criticism from the powerful Dairy Board and the farmers' lobby. Farmers have been a traditional backbone of electoral support for the National Party. A backbench revolt is also likely to scuttle the planned purchase of a third Anzac frigate for the navy.
ACT is turning up the heat on the government, calling for immediate tax cuts and threatening to force an early election. National Party ministers favour further tax cuts but claim it will be two years before they can be afforded. ACT leader Richard Prebble said his party was reviewing its support for the government, and could decide to vote against it in a confidence motion due to come before parliament in February.
Big business is increasingly preparing for a Labour government. The Labour Party has begun receiving favourable coverage in the media, notwithstanding a recent announcement that it is prepared to raise the top personal tax rate from 33 to 39 cents in the dollar. Most of the anticipated $300 million revenue will go into corporate handouts under a newly-announced industry assistance scheme.
 | |
(No replies)
|
Ten US Republicans who actively avoided going to war Mar 28, 2003
1/ Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert - draft dodger
2/ Dick Armey - draft dodger
3/ House majority leader Tom Delay - draft dodger
4/ Trent Lott - draft dodger
5/ President G W Bush - cushy National Guard post
6/ Vice President Dick Cheney - deferred service
7/ Attorney General John Ashcroft - deferred service to teach business
8/ Media puppeteer Karl Rove - draft dodger
9/ Newt Gingrich - draft dodger
10/ P J O'Rourke - draft dodger
Source: NZ Listener - Feb-22-28 issue.
 | |
(No replies)
|
Oh dear... he's back Aug 14, 2002
As I was saying before I was so rudely interrupted...
This Sporting Life May 14, 2002
"When it went off, I heard the moans and cries from the direction where the bomb had gone off, and the carnage you could see from the door I thought we'd copped it. My initial thoughts were that when we only had half the team in the car park we may have lost the other half . That's harrowing, that brings tears down your face. It was one of the scariest moments of my life." - New Zealand cricket captain Stephen Fleming as the tour of Pakistan is ended by terrorism.
"I was still in my bed when my room blew apart." - NZ cricketer Craig McMillan.
"The joke's already come out from the boys about trivia questions in the future: who was selected and never played? They're taking the mickey out of me a bit, but I can't do anything about it and I'm not bothered.' - Kiwi cricketer Scott Styris has his test debut stymied by the bomb in Karachi.
I know I have a duty to win the World Cup. We don't have a culture of coming second in this country. My own son said to me recently, "second place is the first among the last places" - Brazil soccer coach Luiz Felipe Scolari as the World Cup looms.
"I don't believe in heaven and hell. Everyone finds their own peace of mind and I've found mine without turning to religion." - Hard drinking soccer legend George Best contemplates a life-saving liver transplant.
"This will be the garden party of the summer." - Claudia Rosencrantz, controller of entertainment for ITV, on a pre-World Cup party hosted by David Beckham and Victoria "Posh" Spice.
 | |
(No replies)
|
Click here to see more Journal Entries
|
| Friends
|
| Lonnytunes - Winter Is Here hasn't added any friends to their list.
| |
|
|
| 
|