Wealth and New Zealand, a new BWB Text by Max Rashbrooke
Wealth and New Zealand, a new BWB Text by Max
Rashbrooke
Role of wealth in New Zealand
society exposed in new book by award-winning
writer
In this age of conspicuous consumption, one in which acquisitive accumulation is often admired and aspired to, it is a startling oddity that so little is understood about wealth. Who has it, how do they get it, how do they grow it, what happens to it, how does it affect those who don’t have it, what does it say about our society – and why should we care? It is almost as if talking about wealth – really talking about it – is one of our last great taboos.
Author and researcher Max Rashbrooke tackles this taboo head on in Wealth and New Zealand, the latest Text from Bridget Williams Books. Here the editor of Inequality: A New Zealand Crisis and author of BWB Text The Inequality Debate: An Introduction uses previously unseen data to examine the often ignored flipside of poverty. So transfixed are we by the problems of the poor, he suspects, that we somehow manage to avert our eyes from the other side of the street, even though the signposts of inequality point directly towards it. But as he says, ‘we can only really understand poverty by understanding affluence’.
Rashbrooke is rightly concerned to stress the difference between income and wealth and the relationship between them. With more than a passing reference to Thomas Piketty’s Capital in the Twenty-First Century, he applies some of that book’s argument and theory to circumstances in New Zealand. In doing so, he draws on findings from the 2010 Survey of Family, Income and Employment, data which have until now been unanalysed and which provide some of the freshest and most comprehensive information on individual wealth and wealth inequality in this country. His analysis makes for sobering reading.
The book interrogates housing (particularly in Auckland) and its impact on wealth and inequality, as well as the geographical distribution of wealth, the uncertain relationship between philanthropy and social wellbeing, and how New Zealand compares in the wealth stakes with other developed nations.
Wealth and New Zealand provides arresting descriptions of the problems accompanying high wealth inequality and wide income gaps, and it floats some possible policy responses. But before any of those can become reality, as this crisply written, accessible BWB Text suggests, we need to seriously engage with the subject.
There is no better place to begin than here. Rashbrooke’s new book is essential reading for anyone with an interest in how we operate as a society, the mechanisms by which wealth functions within this society, wealth’s role in shaping the experience and potential of the individual, and the dangers of ignoring its growing disparities.
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