Left behind: why boomtown New Zealand has a homelessness
crisis
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[May 21, 2018]
By Jonathan Barrett and Charlotte Greenfield
WELLINGTON (Reuters) - New Zealand's
dairy-fuelled economy has for several years been the envy of the rich
world, yet despite the rise in prosperity tens of thousands of residents
are sleeping in cars, shop entrances and alleyways.
The emerging crisis has created a milestone that New Zealanders won't be
proud of: the highest homelessness rate among the 35 high-income OECD
countries.
It's a curious problem afflicting boom towns where some residents get
pushed onto the streets as they can no longer afford the rocketing rents
in a flourishing economy - let alone purchase a house as the price of
property has soared.
"I have no assets at the moment," said 64-year-old Victor Young, who
spoke to Reuters at a soup kitchen in New Zealand's capital, Wellington.
"It's not a kind country, it's not an easy country. I slept in my car 20
days last year. I worked 30 hours a week."

That sentiment is something the country's popular Prime Minister Jacinda
Ardern would like to reverse. Last Thursday, across town from the
Sisters of Compassion Soup Kitchen, her Labour-led government unveiled
its first budget with an ambitious plan to build social infrastructure.
The government has allocated NZ$3.8 billion ($2.62 billion)of new
capital spending over a five-year period. This includes an extra NZ$634
million for housing, on top of the NZ$2.1 billion previously announced
to fund Kiwibuild, a government building program to increase affordable
housing supply.
'LONG WAY DOWN THE HOLE'
Much is expected of the charismatic 37-year-old prime minister, after
her party put fixing the housing crisis at the heart of its successful
election campaign in September. Arden's challenge is to not allow her
spending plan blow a hole in the strong finances her government
inherited.
"We are proud of her," said Sister Josefa, who is on staff at the soup
kitchen. "There is a lot of hope, maybe a lot of expectation too."
But experts say the government's first budget underwhelms on the radical
reforms the wider public wanted.
"They're a long way down a hole that was created by somebody else and
they haven't really got a great or easy solution," said John Tookey,
professor of construction management at Auckland University of
Technology.
He said the government's much-vaunted Kiwibuild could come unstuck
because there weren't enough skilled workers to deliver on its ambitious
target to build 100,000 homes in the next decade.
Even the budget's extra social housing spend was unlikely to alleviate
the signs of families living in cars, caravans and garages that
Salvation Army policy analyst Alan Johnson sees around his South
Auckland neighborhood.
"The Minister of Finance suggested it was transformational and I think
it's a long way short of that," Johnson said.
[to top of second column] |

Social worker Matt Petrie inspects a garden that is cared for by
guests of the Compassion Soup Kitchen in Wellington, New Zealand,
May 15, 2018. REUTERS/Jonathan Barrett/File Photo

FALLING THROUGH THE CRACKS
New Zealand is on a six-year economic winning streak, underpinned by a strong
dairy sector, booming tourism and migration.
That golden run is expected to continue, with Treasury expecting economic growth
to hit a peak of 3.8 percent in 2019 - well above the 2 percent growth the
International Monetary Fund forecasts developed economies to achieve.
But infrastructure in New Zealand has not kept pace.
A housing crunch, traffic jams, and hospital staff shortages led to an abrupt
shift in public sentiment away from the seemingly unbeatable center-right
National Party at the 2017 election.
Some, of course, enjoyed the fruits of the boom, particularly in the past
decade. Others were squeezed.
Maoris, the indigenous people of New Zealand, account for a third of the
homeless though they make up only 15 percent of the population.
A Yale study of OECD data found that New Zealand had the highest rate of
homelessness among member nations, with almost 1 percent of its population
living without a permanent shelter in 2015.
The situation has likely deteriorated since the study, analysts said, with the
number of people eligible for government housing support doubling since 2015.
And wage growth has significantly lagged house price growth of over 60 percent
in the past decade, highlighting how even those with a roof over their heads are
getting squeezed.
SHELTERS ARE FULL
Homelessness is at its worst in New Zealand’s most populated city, Auckland,
which has also experienced the most severe housing crunch, with prices jumping
90 percent in the past decade, according to property researcher Quotable Value.

Several people living on the streets interviewed by Reuters said they had left
Auckland for Wellington.
But the pressure has spread far and wide. Even in Wellington, a city known for
pricey craft beer bars and artisan coffee shops where workers enjoy the biggest
pay packets in the country, many are falling into the boom town cracks.
Kirsty Buggins, director at the Wellington Night Shelter, said the center was
almost always full.
"Sometimes all we can do is give them blankets and bedding."
(Reporting by Jonathan Barrett and Charlotte Greenfield in WELLINGTON; Editing
by Shri Navaratnam)
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