Hide on how Governments hurt the poor

Rodney Hide in the HoS describes 10 ways Government policies hurt poor people:

  1. The funds the very best schools for rich kids' education. The price of entry is the cost of a house that's “in-zone”. Poor families can't afford it. They are locked out of decent schools and their kids are consigned to third-rate institutions.
  2. Rich girls are subsidised to attend university and become , accountants and . Poor girls are subsidised to drop out of school and have babies.
  3. The rich teach their kids to work hard and be smart to succeed. The Government teaches poor kids their land was stolen and that to prosper they must work on claims in hope of winning it back.
  4. Rich boys start work on graduate wages. Poor boys are shut out of the job market by the .
  5. Solo mums face the highest effective marginal tax rates in the country. The rich have tax planners and offshore accounts.
  6. Metropolitan Urban Limits restrict the supply of land and inflate the value of existing homes. That's great for families who already own a house or two. It's bad for the poor. The Urban Limits shut them out of ever owning a house. The poor are never able to accumulate capital and establish the sense of pride and belonging that home ownership brings. They are tenants for life.
  7. The Government subsidises the winnings of rich horse owners. The gambling of poor people is taxed through the TAB and pokie machines.
  8. The and the orchestra are subsidised. Smoking and drinking are taxed.
  9. Poor neighbourhoods are crime-ridden. The rich live behind locked gates and security patrols and say tougher sentencing and increased policing don't work. The poor struggle to protect their meagre possessions and to keep their children from the clutches of gangs and drug dealers.
  10. The Resource Management Act, occupational safety and health, and our labour laws protect established business from upstarts who can't afford lawyers, human resources consultants and three tiers of management devoted to compliance.

A fair bit of truth there.

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