Maxim Institute - real issues - 30 November 2006
Maxim Institute - real issues - 30 November 2006
Maxim Institute - real issues - No 233 30 November 2006 www.maxim.org.nz
HOW TO MEASURE A
SOCIETY?
NEW REPORT STRENGTHENS THE CASE FOR WELFARE
REFORM IN UK ALTERNATIVE EXAMINATION SYSTEMS CONSIDERED
IN THE NEWS FAMILIES NO BETTER OFF QUEBEC GIVEN 'NATION'
STATUS
HOW TO MEASURE A SOCIETY?
In his first speech as leader of the National Party, John Key has highlighted long-term welfare dependency as a problem, and has acknowledged that the intangible elements of life, like happiness and strong communities are important. The speech is part of Key's efforts to articulate who he is and what he stands for, something vital for a new leader.
Having experienced a time where his family needed help, Mr Key says that he adheres to the adage "you can measure a society by how it looks after its most vulnerable". He also points out though that "you can measure a society by how many vulnerable people it creates". It is perhaps because of what his family went through that he also realises that the health of the community is related to the health of the family.
In many ways this is the challenge that New Zealand faces in the twenty-first century. New Zealand has a well established safety net for those who hit hard times, but how we help people matters, not just that we do help them. People are holistic beings; they need security and strong social networks, not simply enough money to pay the bills.
The question now is how this picture of concern for the vulnerable, this picture of social justice, will be translated into policy. The kind of leader John Key becomes will only be partially determined by his vision. In politics, a compelling personal story and a strong vision on the first day are only the beginning and New Zealand has far to go if we are to be the kind of country that really does look after its most vulnerable.
Read John Key's speech
NEW
REPORT STRENGTHENS THE CASE FOR WELFARE REFORM IN UK The
already compelling case for welfare reform in the United
Kingdom grew stronger recently, with the ballooning of
government dependency continuing, and the release of a new
report by the think tank Reform. Reforming Welfare
examines the current state of the British welfare system,
showing that while spending on welfare is "colossal", the
state of beneficiaries is getting worse, and the poverty
trap only deeper. The British government spent £79 billion
on welfare during 2005, supporting an estimated 14 percent
of the working age population. At the same time, the number
of government benefits has ballooned from seven in 1948 to
51 today. The Times reported recently that under the
British equivalent of New Zealand's "Working for Families"
scheme, even those in the richest fifth of households are in
receipt of government benefits. The paper reported that a
third of the scheme's expenditure goes to the richest 50
percent of homes. It appears that more and more people are
lining up for help they may not even need. But although
the welfare budget sucks more and more cash from the public
purse, it delivers little in return. Reforming Welfare
states that outcomes such as inequality and poverty are only
getting worse, with many poorer regions worse off than 20
years ago. The report argues that the moral, social and
economic consequences of welfare dependency are crippling,
tracing the gradual historical shift from local structures
aimed at preserving independence to the modern welfare state
with its central bureaucracy and endless paperwork.
Setting the debate in much-needed context, the report
lays down a tough and important challenge New Zealand cannot
ignore. A welfare state which breeds a culture of
entitlement is neither sustainable nor wise. As a country,
we must do better when it comes to those left behind. Read
the report, Reforming Welfare
ALTERNATIVE
EXAMINATION SYSTEMS CONSIDERED Throughout New Zealand,
secondary students are in the middle of their NCEA
end-of-year examinations. While significant effort has been
expended this year to ensure that the variance in the
results seen in past years does not occur this time, moves
are afoot both in New Zealand and overseas to offer
alternative examination systems to the state qualification
system. Two proven alternatives to the NCEA are the
Cambridge International Examinations (CIE), and the
International Baccalaureate (IB) Diploma Programme. Pupils
in 44 schools around New Zealand sat one of these
alternative examinations in 2005. The numbers look set to
grow with Diocesan School in Auckland recently announcing it
will offer IB as an alternative in 2008 and other schools,
both public and private, investigating the option.
Whilst many schools are offering these alternatives to
the NCEA, they have to overcome significant hurdles to do
so. One such hurdle is the cost of offering an alternative,
which is a barrier especially for poorer schools. The
government in the United Kingdom has recently made it easier
for public schools to offer alternatives to the state exam
system by announcing that it will provide funding for
schools to offer the IB as an alternative to the state
examination system. The New Zealand government would do
well to heed this example and work to ensure that all
schools, not just wealthy ones, can afford to offer an
alternative to the NCEA, if the school considers this will
best suit their pupils. Read Maxim Institute's Issue
Snapshot on alternatives to NCEA
Read
The Parent Factor 1 - Freedom for Schools
IN
THE NEWS FAMILIES NO BETTER OFF The New Zealand Herald
has this week reported details of a new study measuring
family wellbeing. The study, headed by Professor Peter
Davis, has found that the median family income, adjusting
for inflation and family size, has remained around $37,000
in the 20 years since 1981. The shift of women into the
workforce (from 47 percent in 1981 to 61 percent in 2001)
has been cancelled out by men moving into self-employment,
part-time employment and onto benefits, the paper said.
QUEBEC GIVEN 'NATION' STATUS The Canadian House of
Commons has voted to recognise the province of Quebec as a
"nation" within "a united Canada". The motion passed 266-16,
part of a plan by Conservative Prime Minister Stephen Harper
to head off Quebec separatists. Quebec has held two hotly
contested and close referenda on remaining within Canada.
While many supporters of the motion said it would change
nothing, critics claim that the motion is one more step
towards the break-up of Canada. Conservative Cabinet
Minister, Michael Chong, resigned over the motion, saying:
"They [the separatists] will argue that if the Quebecois are
a nation within Canada, then they certainly are a nation
without Canada." TALKING POINT "Freedom may be the most
important prerequisite for the exercise of conscience..."
Michael Joseph Gross A registered charitable trust,
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