|
View printer friendly page |
| Home > News Archives > Sallies slam Govt policies |
|
|
Sallies slam Govt policies The report -- What does it profit us? -- found fault with a host of areas of Government policy in areas Labour prides itself on achievements. More children were in the care of Child, Youth and Family, and the incidence of child neglect and abuse was rising. Youth offending was on the increase, along with teen pregnancy, abortion, and accident rates. There was continuing educational inequality, rising serious and violent crime, and a burgeoning prison population. Kiwis were drinking more, and gambling more, losing $2 billion a year -- an average of $656 per person, the Salvation Army said. Against this, wage growth remained "very modest", 250,000 people remained on welfare benefits, household debt was up and houses were fast becoming unaffordable. The Salvation Army's social policy and parliamentary unit director, Major Campbell Roberts, said the Government was placing too much emphasis on economics and not enough on the way people were living their lives. "More children appear to be at risk of harm, more are engaged in petty crime, there is more violent crime and more people in jails," Roberts said. "While more New Zealanders are working than ever before and many have benefited from the recent housing market boom, incomes have risen only modestly, we are chronically indebted, and home ownership rates have dropped. If we are to make real social progress then we need as a country to reflect on the relative priority we give to economic issues versus social concerns.
|