Young Labour: Budget Has Failed
Press Release: For Immediate Release
Young Labour: Budget Has Failed
Tuesday, 2 June 2009
“We needed a budget for jobs, a budget for skills – a budget for the future,” said Patrick Leyland, Young Labour President, this morning.
“Instead, English stood up on Thursday and shamelessly sold New Zealand’s future for cheap to credit rating companies.”
Young Labour’s two core budget concerns are education and employment. “The Budget is always a calculation of priorities and necessities. But the National Party have got their figures badly wrong.” Mr Leyland explained.
“We must take full advantage of these economic conditions to upskill and upgrade our workforce. But big business, not ordinary kiwis, have always been the focus of the National Party.”
• Schools Plus has been
scrapped and Youth Guarantee has been suspended
• An
almost identical amount has been allocated to propping up
private schools as has been put aside for improving literacy
standards
• StepUp scholarships – a tertiary award
specifically targeted at students from lower income families
– have been scrapped
• Bonded scholarships, that keep
talented kiwis in NZ have been abandoned despite the Nat’s
dog whistle lines about “brain drain”
• Industry
experts have calculated a probable education sector cut of
$300 million by 2013
• Industry training and
apprenticeships are experiencing real term funding
cuts
• An education sector spokesperson labeled the
budget a “body blow” to tertiary education
“John Key used his leader’s speech to herald the ‘hundreds and hundreds of jobs’ that will be created on the back of this budget. With almost 1400 extra NZers signing up for the dole each week and unemployment increasing by over 7% for 20-24 year olds in the March quarter alone, it is painfully apparent how “ambitious for NZ” and out of touch Key really is.”
• Almost $15 million has been cut from
the Employment Assistance programme
• Pathways to
Partnership increases have been cut by $12.2 million in the
coming year, $57.4 million in 2010-11 and $24.5 million in
2011-12
• Enterprising Communities Fund, which supports
community initiatives to create jobs, is being
cancelled
• There are no initiatives to tackle the
appalling rates of youth joblessness but ‘boot camps’
are still fully funded
“These facts need to be highlighted. This government has been spinning so fast to hide their true intentions that they have dug New Zealand an ever deeper hole from which to climb. This cannot continue.” Leyland concluded.
ENDS