The Main Report Group's "Sacred Cows" Survey
The Main Report Group's "Sacred Cows" Survey
The
Main Report Group's "Sacred Cows" Survey Reveals The
Retirement Age Must Rise, No Support For MMP And Too Many
Parliamentary Seats
As the general
election looms, The Main Report Group has carried out a
survey of its readership to gauge support and reaction on a
set of issues it is calling "Sacred Cows" - issues about
which there is great concern, but not much debate.
The survey was completed by over 500 people, and
covered 10 key issues - • Raising the retirement age •
MMP • The level of representation in Parliament •
NZ becoming a Republic • Foreign purchase of rural land
and assets • Retaining the Maori seats • Immigration
• Partial asset sales • The capital gains tax •
Whether the Government should take a more interventionist
role in the economy.
Max Bowden, Editor In Chief of
The Main Report Group says the issues which gained the
strongest reaction were raising the retirement age, MMP and
Parliament having too many seats.
54.7% of
respondents were either strongly or moderately in favour of
boosting the retirement age, with 19% neutral. Among the
comments: "The quid pro quo for having a first world medical
system that enables us to enjoy good health is that we only
become eligible for super at 67 or 68. Enlightened employers
are looking to employ and retain older
workers."..."Successive Govt's continue to ignore this
politically untouchable issue. We need leadership, not
government's bowing to populist pressures."
57.1% of
respondents were not at all or somewhat unlikely to support
MMP, despite there being good support for retaining MMP
among the wider public. In the survey just 6.6% were
neutral. Among the comments: "It has produced more
diversity in Parliament, but equally concerned that it
delivers sub-optimal policy results - vanilla politics that
tries to please all of the people all of the time"..."Good
to have other voices in Parliament, but I despise the idea
of the tail wagging the dog, The Greens annoy me greatly -
they would do better to call themselves the NZ Socialist
Party"..."Think it would be better to go back to 1st past
the post and get rid of the fringe radicals."
Bowden
says themes which come from cross referencing the responses
showed interesting differences between supporters of MMP
and opponents of MMP. MMP supporters tend to favour a
Capital Gains Tax (68% in favour) while opponents are
opposed (67% against). Likewise 60% of MMP supporters are
against partial asset sales, while amongst MMP opponents
the same number (60%) are in favour. Some issues resonate
regardless of the views on MMP. Strong support for raising
the retirement age, supporting more immigration from MMP
supporters and opponents, plus strong opposition to selling
land and rural assets to foreigners.
Bowden notes
another question which generated strong feeling asked to
what extent respondents supported the claim Parliament has
too many seats. Most agreed. 54.7% either strongly or
moderately agreed with the statement, with 15.1% neutral.
Comments included: "There are two many free-loaders and
loonies who have made politics a career and add no value
whatsoever"... "The real problem is that we don’t have an
upper house. There needs to be some mechanism to stop
parliament ramming everything through under urgency."
Senior Trans Tasman writer Ian Templeton says "after
12 years on the front line in politics Simon Power
concluded Parliament is too often afraid to tackle the
"tough issues" for fear of losing votes. He's right. In his
valedictory Power said MPs waste their time attacking each
other, trying to out-maneuvre each other, "and just plain
loathing each other. It's an incredible waste of energy."
Now, at a critical point in NZ's history, it's vital for
our democracy politicians confront, and debate, the issues
they relegate to the "too hard" basket."
The full
headline results of the survey and some analysis are
included in the attached PDF.
The Main Report
Group's flagship publications - Trans Tasman Political
Week, NZ Energy & Environment Business Week, NZ Transport
Intelligence Business Week, The Main Report Business Week
and The Main Report's Agri-Business Week will be carrying
more extensive analysis of the results in the weeks leading
up to the election.
Ends