Tuesday, December 10, 2024

CTU survey finds Kiwi workers ‘financially vulnerable’

The New Zealand Council of Trade Unions’ (NZCTU) annual Mood of the Workforce Survey shows the vast majority of kiwi workers do not have the financial resources to survive a period of unemployment.

“The latest research shows that New Zealand’s relatively low wage economy means our workforce is incredibly vulnerable to external economic shocks,” says CTU President, Richard Wagstaff. 

The Mood of the Workforce Survey, an annual survey of over 1500 union and non-union workers, shows 65% of New Zealanders said they had “poor or very poor” financial capability to manage a three month period of unemployment. 

“With the cost of living rising, and petrol and housing costs rising at record levels, too many New Zealanders are still living paycheck to paycheck, unable to put enough money aside to see them through a rainy day,” said Mr Wagstaff.

“Going through the responses from workers, it’s clear that even workers on good salaries are finding it all but impossible to build up any sense of financial security – leaving them at real risk when a crisis strikes.”

Survey responses included:

  • “There’s just such a lot of uncertainty, even in a ‘secure job.”
  • “Living paycheck to paycheck is just so stressful with both food and rent prices soaring.”
  • “Uncertainty has become endemic.”

“This isn’t just a dangerous situation for workers and their families – it puts our whole economy at risk. When recessions or economic shocks hit, if skilled our workers aren’t able to survive a period of unemployment while they find a new job, what happens is they move into less skilled positions, and our economy loses the benefit of the skills they’ve built up,” the CTU President said.

“Economists call this economic scarring and it deepens recessions, makes it harder for businesses to find skilled workers in the future and lowers our productivity in the long term. It means we’re stuck on the hamster wheel – forever unable to get ahead of the next economic shock, be it a recession, a financial crisis, a natural disaster or a pandemic. 

“This is why its so important the Government progresses it’s plans for a Social Unemployment Insurance programme – an ACC-like scheme to support workers who lose their job. It would mean people would be paid 80% of their wage for a period if they are out of work – giving them time to find a job in their industry where the skills they’ve developed can be used. 

“If the last few years have taught us anything, it’s that major economic shocks are never too far away and we need to build an economy where it’s easier for workers to bounce back,” Mr Wagstaff said.

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