Ten murders so far in 2008—remember when we had three a year?

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[this is good]
This is very interesting.
well i think the total murders last year were actually down on previous years
and January with the heat, and coming off Christmas ( always a good time for domestic violence that one) is always a more violent month.

doesn't make it ok


and not everyone can work, it's silly to think so, both mental and physical problems prevent many people from working, or from working full time

and then some people who are working more than one job need food banks

I agree we need to support those who cannot work, but it wasn’t long ago when one salary per family in New Zealand supported four mouths. It doesn’t any more because the buying power of the Kiwi dollar doesn’t go as far as it used to. We need to find a way to allow taxes to pay for those who cannot work, while increasing the tax take and incomes of people who can. The only way to do that is to ensure that companies have a reason to keep profits in New Zealand and to be taxed fairly, and if they cannot, then we need new New Zealand-owned businesses that can bring profits back, or create more new businesses so that those people can themselves be affluent.
Whatever the rate of murder was in 2007 it should, if New Zealand’s standard of living was as comparatively high as it was in the 1950s, and our value system as strong, been around six. These days, the murder rate is around 1·1 or 1·2 per 100,000 citizens here, so I would guess that in 2007 the total was between 44 and 48.
In other words, the chances of getting killed in New Zealand is eight times higher today than it was 50 years ago.
far out 8 times higher makes a perspective.

I think your's isn't a unique view, Jack. From where I sit in Australia, your points could be applied almost word-for-word in many parts of the country over here.

We have had plenty of innovative ideas die a painful death because manufacturing costs couldn't make the idea cost-effective enough to bring to market. Solution? Go offshore, which is what a lot of Aussie companies and innovators do. Given a choice, I'd say almost all of them would have loved to remain at home, but business is business.

We also suffer from the small-market syndrome, which hurts us in two ways:

1) Our market just isn't big enough, so I can totally identify with the NZ situation. Consider why our car market is so damn cut-throat down here and dealerships seems to come and go;

2) Anyone who wants to raise serious capital HAS to go where the money still is eg. Europe or the US... or increasingly, China. Guess what happens when your major investors are not home-grown?

I could go on and yakkity yak about this issue because I'm living through it with the company I work for. We're going offshore purely because we don't have a choice.

But it is also interesting that you've raised Malaysia and Singapore as examples of a government-backed "fightback" against the tide of globalisation.

I've actually found that Malaysia is a actually a huge mess due to its stop-start way of trying to ride the wave of globalisation while trying to protect its home grown businesses eg. Proton, Malaysian Airlines etc. This is clearly a failure of government policies at various levels.

Singapore has been much more successful in striking a happier medium in attracting/keeping foreign investors happy, whilst not selling its entire soul to the devil as it were. But it is a smaller country with no natural resources apart from her rather more united people. Malaysia is quite a few ballparks down the road in this regard.

Hi Jack - You say

We need to consider tax policies that help the poor and penalize the sources for the inequity in New Zealand. The next government needs to play, essentially, Robin Hood. It needs to create policies for the middle class of New Zealand and what makes them happy wage-earners or self-employed business people, because that is where the majority of the tax will come from. ‘Teach a man to fish and he will eat for life.’ Time to stop handing the fish out and pretending it was a conjuror’s trick. (It was only cool when Jesus Christ did it with the 5,000, anyway.)

This is good point about the middle class. In America, taxes on the middle class are really de-motivators for many. I hope our tax policy changes soon. Because, when both parent are working in a household and being taxed heavily, life becomes a challenge.
Ellipse: yes, it does point to some decline in our societal values but I think it is driven in part by the economy as successive governments have sought to undermine Christianity—well, all religions, really—in New Zealand. So all we have left to consider from a policy point-of-view is how our pockets are affected.
Ninja: I agree that these concerns are not limited to New Zealand and I also agree with you about Malaysia. I took the Mahathir Mohamad example in isolation, mainly to say that these things can be overturned in some way by proper leadership. Unfortunately it is not PM Helen Clark’s forte here, and I cannot see John Key providing that leadership if he were elected.
It is, given the way the markets are structured, for the things you mention to continue.
Timothy, I fully agree. Spain’s renaissance mainly came because the government turned its back on some of the international monetary trends and focused its attentions on the middle class. Right now, most western countries are unfair on the middle class because incomes have been diminished, which means it feels the taxes a lot more than it ever did. This is an unfair situation and needs to change.
Ideally there should be no taxes at all, but I don’t think we can leap from where we are now to that utopian ideal in one step!
[this is good]

I lived in Los Angeles for 36 years and never heard gunfire except when I as at a firing range. Sure I read about murders and saw Lee Harvey Oswald shot by Jack Ruby on TV. I still feel safe- until income tax time anyway.

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Jack Yan

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Jack Yan
New Zealand
‘I think they’re wonderful. They have so much courage! Here they are, hurling through space on a molten rock at 67,000 miles an hour, and the only thing that keeps them in their shoes is their misplaced faith in gravity.’—John Lithgow as Prof Dick Solomon, in Third Rock from the Sun
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