Living Wage petition at Auckland Uni

As the Living Wage campaign gathers momentum, the latest development is a petition being circulated at Auckland University, calling on the Vice Chancellor, Stuart McCutcheon, to support a Living Wage for all university staff. It comes on the heels of Wellington city council agreeing to pay the Living Wage to all its staff (with contractors…

Hyman on the Living Wage

Prue Hyman has an excellent piece in the Dom Post today about why it makes sense economically to pay the Living Wage: Productivity gains, reduced absenteeism, and lower turnover costs are benefits found overseas when committed workers know they are valued. One key argument against the Living Wage has been that it is not well…

Making waves, and havens

The only thing worse than being attacked is being ignored, so it’s probably a good sign that people are now taking the time to criticise Inequality: A New Zealand Crisis. This is the latest such, from the Herald: http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=11150603 Of course, inequality is not a zero-sum game, as the article claims. The point is that…

Inequality in the news – again

More media coverage in recent weeks – in both the main centres and the regions – strengthens the case that inequality is one of the key issues today. Stuff has just run a major story on income gaps, quoting Inequality: A New Zealand Crisis and attracting over 170 comments. The story is here: http://www.stuff.co.nz/business/money/9330822/Do-Kiwis-care-about-wage-inequality Meanwhile,…

Inequality IS natural

In a debate organised last week by Victoria University students, the motion that ‘inequality is natural’ won out over the opposing view by a margin of 49 to 43. This might seem like a setback for those who care about inequality. But in fact it wasn’t. The affirmative team, led by Shamubeel Eaqub of the…