Te Oranga o te Iwi Maori Working Paper 5: Maori and Welfare

Lindsay Mitchell
New Zealand Business Roundtable
20 July, 2009

Writing in the Dominion Post in 2006, New Zealand Business Roundtable chairman Rob McLeod (Ngati Porou) reminded us that when the general unemployment rate had been over 8 percent there was widespread anxiety, yet Maori unemployment was still that high and was attracting little comment.

1 At that time, 88,500 or 29 percent of working-age Maori (18-64 years) were receiving a benefit.

2 More positively, 71 percent of Maori were not receiving a benefit.

Unfortunately, however, Maori statistics paint a regrettable picture, not only because of current over-representation in most negative social indicators, but also because the disproportion was less pronounced in the past. Maori were not always over-represented in dole queues, prisons, and the courts, in high rates of gambling and alcohol addiction, youth suicide, substance abuse and smoking.

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