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Social class in New Zealand

Social class in New Zealand is a product of both Māori and Western social structures. Researchers have traditionally discussed New Zealand, a first-world country, as a "classless society", but this claim is problematic in a number of ways. Since at least the 1980s it has become easier to distinguish between the wealthy and the underclass in New Zealand society.

Māori hierarchies edit

Māori society traditionally placed emphasis on rank, which derived from ancestry (whakapapa). Chiefs invariably descended from other chiefs, although chieftainship was not the exclusive right of the first-born son of the previous chief. If he did not show signs of rangatiratanga ability he would be passed over in favour of a brother or other relative. In some tribes women could take on leading roles, although this was not usual. Women, lowly-born men, and even people from other tribes were able to achieve positions of considerable influence. Such people have included Princess Te Puea Herangi (niece of King Mahuta) and "kingmaker" Wiremu Tamihana (a younger son of a chief).[1] Tohunga had special status. Commoners (tūtūā) did not. Until the advent of Christianity in the early 19th-century Māori customarily enslaved prisoners-of-war. Slaves had no rights and could be killed at the will of their master. However their children became free members of the tribe.

Present-day Māori society, though far less hierarchical than traditionally, remains stratified by European standards.[citation needed] A disproportionate number of Māori MPs have come from chiefly families, for example, and kaumātua have special status. However, a number of lowly-born Māori have achieved positions of considerable mana within their communities by virtue of their achievements or learning.[citation needed]

The myth of the 'classless society' edit

 
An egalitarian New Zealand was briefly realised in the decades after the 1936 Budget, when successive governments sponsored a massive state housing programme.

Until the 1980s, it was claimed that New Zealand was a 'classless society'. Historian Keith Sinclair wrote in 1969 that although New Zealand was not a classless society, "it must be more nearly classless... than any advanced society in the world".[2] From the nineteenth century, many visitors also made this claim, for example British socialists Sidney and Beatrice Webb, and politician Austin Mitchell.[3] The evidence for this was the relatively small range of wealth (that is, the wealthiest did not earn hugely more than the poorest earners), lack of deference to authority figures, high levels of class mobility, a high standard of living for working-class people compared to Britain, progressive labour laws which protected workers and encouraged trade union membership, and a welfare state which was developed in New Zealand before most other countries. Also, during the postwar years, New Zealand became an increasingly prosperous society, with the majority of New Zealanders coming to attain an affluent lifestyle. As noted by the historian William Ball Sutch in 1966,

Living standards rose in the post-war years through a combination of good prices for exports, borrowing abroad, and the much greater use of internal resources made possible by full production. And as the New Zealand wage structure, taxation system, social security benefits and family farmers combined to make the basic family income fairly high, a higher proportion of people in New Zealand shared the increased amount of goods and services than would have been the case in any other country. This is why most New Zealand families have good housing and extensive durable goods, including a motor-car.[4]

Critiques edit

Data from a 1973–74 household survey, however, suggested that as many as 20% of parents and 25% of children may have been in families with a material standard of living below that of a couple on the minimum pension.[5]

James Belich has argued that most of this is not evidence of an absence of class but rather of the relatively high status and standard of living of the working-class in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Unlike in Britain at this time, working-class New Zealanders could regularly eat meat, own their own homes, and own horses (and later cars), while still being categorised as working-class.[6] Until the advent of compulsory secondary education in the 1930s, class mobility was limited, although much less so than in Britain.

It has also been argued[7] that in New Zealand, race takes the place of class, with Māori and other Polynesians earning less, usually having lower living standards and levels of education, and usually working in lower earning jobs than New Zealanders of European descent. They also face prejudice akin to that facing working-class people in many European countries.

New Zealanders' egalitarianism has been criticised[by whom?] as discouraging and denigrating ambition and individual achievement and success – a phenomenon known colloquially as 'Tall Poppy Syndrome'. New Zealanders tend to value modesty and distrust those who talk about their own merits. They especially dislike anyone who seems to consider themselves better than others even if the person in question is demonstrably more talented or successful than others. It is partly for this reason that mountaineer Sir Edmund Hillary is so admired in New Zealand; despite being the first person to climb Mount Everest, he was always very modest[citation needed]. Extreme humility was arguably partly responsible for the early death of Prime Minister Norman Kirk, who might have survived his various health problems had he used his status to get preferential treatment from the public health system, or used private healthcare.[8]

 
Modern house at Marsden Cove, Northland, New Zealand.

Rogernomics and inequality edit

New Zealand's claims[9] to be a classless society were seriously undermined in the 1980s and 1990s by the economic reforms of the fourth Labour government and its successor, the fourth National government. The reforms (sometimes called Rogernomics) made by these governments severely weakened the power of unions, removed a lot of protection from workers, cut social welfare benefits and made state housing less affordable. After these reforms, the gap between rich and poor New Zealanders was increased dramatically,[10][11][12][13] with the incomes of the richest 10% of New Zealanders advancing while the other 90% stayed largely static. In addition the number of New Zealanders living in poverty is much higher than in the 1970s.[14][15] In an article entitled "Countries with the Biggest Gaps Between Rich and Poor",[16] BusinessWeek ranked New Zealand at 6th in the world:

The U.N. Development Program recently came out with a report looking, among other things, at income inequality worldwide... According to the OECD, New Zealand had the biggest rise in inequality among member nations in the two decades starting in the mid-1980s.

Although wealth is much more unevenly distributed than previously, New Zealand still lacks most of the overt signals of class which mark countries such as the United States. Most people do not care what others' parents do for a living, who a person is descended from, or where they went to school, and New Zealanders almost invariably have more respect for those who have earned their money through hard work than those who have inherited it or made it through investment.[citation needed]

Consequences edit

The trend of greater social disparity has also seen a change in attitudes.[17] Younger New Zealanders increasingly accept inequality as an unavoidable social reality, and egalitarian concerns are less popular.

The 'Brain Drain' (emigration of skilled young workers) is a troubling phenomenon for the Government, and often cited by Opposition parties in election campaigns. Since 1999, university graduates have increasingly chosen to live and work abroad. Studies suggest that around 25% of kiwi graduates will emigrate upon graduation, usually selecting Australia, the UK or Canada as their new home.[citation needed]

Measuring social strata edit

Elley-Irving 1972 edit

In 1972 Elley and Irving[18] published Socioeconomic Status in New Zealand, which became one of the most cited papers in New Zealand social sciences.[18] They outlined a socioeconomic index, now known as 'Elley-Irving (E-I)', based on 1966 Census data. E-I proposed six social strata based upon education and income, and grouped by occupation.

The publication of the scale was welcomed by many researchers but regarded with suspicion by a number of lay critics who presumably clung to the belief that New Zealand was still a classless society. One newspaper headlined the production of a "snobbery scale". Such characterizations, and the numerous critics who misinterpreted its intentions, no doubt added to the frequency of its citing, but it is true that many researchers have made appropriate use of it for its original purpose. It is cited often because it is a useful tool.

— Warwick B. Elley, describing the impact of his paper[18]

NZSEI 1996 edit

In the 1990s, P. Davis et al. published New Zealand Socioeconomic Index of Occupational Status,[19] known as NZSEI. It was based on a 'returns to human capital' model of the stratification process and originally used data from the 1991 New Zealand census (n=1,051,926) to generate scores for 97 occupational groups. It was later updated using 2006 Census data.[20] NZSEI is a linear scale of ranked occupation, produced using an algorithm involving age, income and education, and aggregated to six discrete groupings (called Socio-economic Status, SES) to enable comparison with E-I and ISEI.[21]

NZSEI96:[22] Absolute and percentage sex differences in mean income and education
Class Population

distribution

Mean income

($000)

Income diff.

by sex (M-F)

Mean years of

Education

Education diff.

by sex (M-F)

SES % Males Females % diff[23] $000s Males Females % diff[23] Years
1 6.3 67 50 34 17 14.4 14.8 −3 −0.4
2 6.6 51 42 21 9 14.7 15.1 −3 −0.4
3 27.6 45 35 27 10 12.9 13.3 −3 −0.4
4 20.5 33 35 −6 −2 11.9 12.0 −1 −0.1
5 18.7 32 30 7 2 11.7 12.1 −3 −0.4
6 20.2 29 26 12 3 11.9 11.8 1 0.1

According to the above data, the average income reported by males is considerably higher than that of females for five of the socioeconomic groups. With the exception of SES group four where the female income is higher, males earn on average between 7 and 34% more than females.

The NZSEI is derived from Census data of employed people, but it can be extended to most of the population using previous occupation (if retired or currently unemployed), or the occupation of the household's main income earner.[24]

Other indices edit

  • The NZDep2006 Index of Deprivation[25] is an index of geographic deprivation based upon 9 variables—telephone, benefit, unemployment, household income, car access, single parent family, no qualifications, home ownership, overcrowding.
  • Caldwell & Brown[26] published a popular book, which identified eight "hidden tribes" in New Zealand, labelling them after various towns or suburbs: North Shore, Grey Lynn, Balclutha, Remuera, Otara, Raglan, Cuba Street, Papatoetoe.
  • In 2013, Statistics New Zealand published "New Zealand socio-economic index 2006" (NZSEI06) using data from the 2006 census and updated statistical techniques.[27] A newer version of the above table is on page 54 of the report.
  • In the New Zealand education system, "decile" is a key measure of socioeconomic status used to target funding and support schools.[28][29]

References edit

  1. ^ Wiremu Tamihana in the Dictionary of New Zealand Biography
  2. ^ Sinclair, Keith (1969), A History of New Zealand, 2nd edn, p. 285.
  3. ^ Mitchell, Austin Vernon (1972). The Half Gallon Quarter Acre Pavlova Paradise. Christchurch NZ: Whitcombe and Tombs. ISBN 978-0-7233-0349-7.
  4. ^ Sutch, William Ball (1966). The Quest for Security in New Zealand, 1840 to 1966. Oxford University Press. OCLC 1056114268.
  5. ^ Easton, Brian (1981). Pragmatism and Progress: Social Security in the Seventies. Christchurch NZ: University of Canterbury. ISBN 9780900392283.
  6. ^ Belich, James (1996). Making Peoples: A History of the New Zealanders from Polynesian Settlement to the end of the Nineteenth Century. London: Allen Lane. pp. 328–332. ISBN 9780713991710.
  7. ^ Macpherson, Cluny (1977). "Polynesians in New Zealand: An Emerging Eth-Class?". In Pitt, David (ed.). Social Class in New Zealand. Auckland: Longman Paul. pp. 99–112. ISBN 978-0582717527.
  8. ^ Hayward, Margaret (1981). Diary of the Kirk years. Wellington: Reed. ISBN 978-0589013509.
  9. ^ , article by Joanne Black in the New Zealand Listener
  10. ^ In February 1999 Statistics New Zealand published Incomes 26 January 2010 at the Wayback Machine, a report tracing changes in the distribution of New Zealanders' incomes from 1982 to 1996, one of the most eventful periods in our economic history. It found that the gap between high and low income households had grown significantly and that this increase in income inequality occurred at both personal and household levels.
  11. ^ Statistics New Zealand (1999), New Zealand Now: Incomes 7 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine, ISBN 0-478-20705-0. Retrieved from stats.govt.nz 27 November 2007 at the Wayback Machine, 26 February 2009.
  12. ^ O'Dea (2000): The Changes in New Zealand's Income Distribution, NZ Treasury
  13. ^ Tim Hazledine, Greedy warriors of privilege threaten our Decent Society, NZ Herald, 30 December 2011
  14. ^ Te Ara, The Encyclopedia of New Zealand: Distribution of disposable income, 1982 and 1996, retrieved 27 October 2009.
  15. ^ Hazledine, Tim (1998). Taking New Zealand Seriously: The Economics of Decency. Auckland: HarperCollins. ISBN 1-86950-283-3.
  16. ^ Yahoo! Finance, Countries with the Biggest Gaps Between Rich and Poor 8 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine, Bruce Einhorn, 16 October 2009.
  17. ^ Ruth Laugesen & Joanne Black, , New Zealand Listener, 1–7 May 2010
  18. ^ a b c Elley, W B & Irving I C: A socio-economic index for New Zealand based on levels of education and income from the 1966 census, NZ J. Educ. Stud. 7:153–67, 1972
  19. ^ Davis, McLeod, Ransom, Ongley: New Zealand Socioeconomic Index of Occupational Status[permanent dead link], pub. October 1997 by Statistics New Zealand
  20. '^ New Zealand Socio-Economic index, 'A Users Guide, Otago University. Accessed 20 December 2019.
  21. ^ ISEI: International Socioeconomic Index of Occupational Status
  22. ^ Data drawn from the 1991 New Zealand census (n=1,051,926) is used in the construction of the NZSEI, and the model is applied to all full-time workers aged between 21 and 69.
  23. ^ a b Percentage difference between males and females: 100*(M-F)/F
  24. ^ Crampton, P. and Davis, P. (1998) Measuring deprivation and socioeconomic status: why and how?, New Zealand Public Health Report, 5 (11/12), 81–84. ISSN 1173-0250.
  25. ^ Salmond, Crampton, Atkinson: NZDep2006 Index of Deprivation, Aug/Sep 2007
  26. ^ Caldwell & Brown (c2007), 8 tribes : the hidden classes of New Zealand, ISBN 978-0-473-11693-4
  27. ^ Milne, BJ, Byun, U, & Lee, A (2013). New Zealand socio-economic index 2006, ISBN 978-0-478-40833-1. Wellington: Statistics New Zealand.
  28. ^ . education.govt.nz. Archived from the original on 19 September 2017. Retrieved 2 August 2017.
  29. ^ . PPTA.org.nz. PPTA. Archived from the original on 2 August 2017. Retrieved 2 August 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)

social, class, zealand, product, both, māori, western, social, structures, researchers, have, traditionally, discussed, zealand, first, world, country, classless, society, this, claim, problematic, number, ways, since, least, 1980s, become, easier, distinguish. Social class in New Zealand is a product of both Maori and Western social structures Researchers have traditionally discussed New Zealand a first world country as a classless society but this claim is problematic in a number of ways Since at least the 1980s it has become easier to distinguish between the wealthy and the underclass in New Zealand society Contents 1 Maori hierarchies 2 The myth of the classless society 2 1 Critiques 3 Rogernomics and inequality 3 1 Consequences 4 Measuring social strata 4 1 Elley Irving 1972 4 2 NZSEI 1996 4 3 Other indices 5 ReferencesMaori hierarchies editMaori society traditionally placed emphasis on rank which derived from ancestry whakapapa Chiefs invariably descended from other chiefs although chieftainship was not the exclusive right of the first born son of the previous chief If he did not show signs of rangatiratanga ability he would be passed over in favour of a brother or other relative In some tribes women could take on leading roles although this was not usual Women lowly born men and even people from other tribes were able to achieve positions of considerable influence Such people have included Princess Te Puea Herangi niece of King Mahuta and kingmaker Wiremu Tamihana a younger son of a chief 1 Tohunga had special status Commoners tutua did not Until the advent of Christianity in the early 19th century Maori customarily enslaved prisoners of war Slaves had no rights and could be killed at the will of their master However their children became free members of the tribe Present day update Maori society though far less hierarchical than traditionally remains stratified by European standards citation needed A disproportionate number of Maori MPs have come from chiefly families for example and kaumatua have special status However a number of lowly born Maori have achieved positions of considerable mana within their communities by virtue of their achievements or learning citation needed The myth of the classless society edit nbsp An egalitarian New Zealand was briefly realised in the decades after the 1936 Budget when successive governments sponsored a massive state housing programme Until the 1980s it was claimed that New Zealand was a classless society Historian Keith Sinclair wrote in 1969 that although New Zealand was not a classless society it must be more nearly classless than any advanced society in the world 2 From the nineteenth century many visitors also made this claim for example British socialists Sidney and Beatrice Webb and politician Austin Mitchell 3 The evidence for this was the relatively small range of wealth that is the wealthiest did not earn hugely more than the poorest earners lack of deference to authority figures high levels of class mobility a high standard of living for working class people compared to Britain progressive labour laws which protected workers and encouraged trade union membership and a welfare state which was developed in New Zealand before most other countries Also during the postwar years New Zealand became an increasingly prosperous society with the majority of New Zealanders coming to attain an affluent lifestyle As noted by the historian William Ball Sutch in 1966 Living standards rose in the post war years through a combination of good prices for exports borrowing abroad and the much greater use of internal resources made possible by full production And as the New Zealand wage structure taxation system social security benefits and family farmers combined to make the basic family income fairly high a higher proportion of people in New Zealand shared the increased amount of goods and services than would have been the case in any other country This is why most New Zealand families have good housing and extensive durable goods including a motor car 4 Critiques edit Data from a 1973 74 household survey however suggested that as many as 20 of parents and 25 of children may have been in families with a material standard of living below that of a couple on the minimum pension 5 James Belich has argued that most of this is not evidence of an absence of class but rather of the relatively high status and standard of living of the working class in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries Unlike in Britain at this time working class New Zealanders could regularly eat meat own their own homes and own horses and later cars while still being categorised as working class 6 Until the advent of compulsory secondary education in the 1930s class mobility was limited although much less so than in Britain It has also been argued 7 that in New Zealand race takes the place of class with Maori and other Polynesians earning less usually having lower living standards and levels of education and usually working in lower earning jobs than New Zealanders of European descent They also face prejudice akin to that facing working class people in many European countries New Zealanders egalitarianism has been criticised by whom as discouraging and denigrating ambition and individual achievement and success a phenomenon known colloquially as Tall Poppy Syndrome New Zealanders tend to value modesty and distrust those who talk about their own merits They especially dislike anyone who seems to consider themselves better than others even if the person in question is demonstrably more talented or successful than others It is partly for this reason that mountaineer Sir Edmund Hillary is so admired in New Zealand despite being the first person to climb Mount Everest he was always very modest citation needed Extreme humility was arguably partly responsible for the early death of Prime Minister Norman Kirk who might have survived his various health problems had he used his status to get preferential treatment from the public health system or used private healthcare 8 nbsp Modern house at Marsden Cove Northland New Zealand Rogernomics and inequality editNew Zealand s claims 9 to be a classless society were seriously undermined in the 1980s and 1990s by the economic reforms of the fourth Labour government and its successor the fourth National government The reforms sometimes called Rogernomics made by these governments severely weakened the power of unions removed a lot of protection from workers cut social welfare benefits and made state housing less affordable After these reforms the gap between rich and poor New Zealanders was increased dramatically 10 11 12 13 with the incomes of the richest 10 of New Zealanders advancing while the other 90 stayed largely static In addition the number of New Zealanders living in poverty is much higher than in the 1970s 14 15 In an article entitled Countries with the Biggest Gaps Between Rich and Poor 16 BusinessWeek ranked New Zealand at 6th in the world The U N Development Program recently came out with a report looking among other things at income inequality worldwide According to the OECD New Zealand had the biggest rise in inequality among member nations in the two decades starting in the mid 1980s Although wealth is much more unevenly distributed than previously New Zealand still lacks most of the overt signals of class which mark countries such as the United States Most people do not care what others parents do for a living who a person is descended from or where they went to school and New Zealanders almost invariably have more respect for those who have earned their money through hard work than those who have inherited it or made it through investment citation needed Consequences edit The trend of greater social disparity has also seen a change in attitudes 17 Younger New Zealanders increasingly accept inequality as an unavoidable social reality and egalitarian concerns are less popular The Brain Drain emigration of skilled young workers is a troubling phenomenon for the Government and often cited by Opposition parties in election campaigns Since 1999 university graduates have increasingly chosen to live and work abroad Studies suggest that around 25 of kiwi graduates will emigrate upon graduation usually selecting Australia the UK or Canada as their new home citation needed Measuring social strata editElley Irving 1972 edit In 1972 Elley and Irving 18 published Socioeconomic Status in New Zealand which became one of the most cited papers in New Zealand social sciences 18 They outlined a socioeconomic index now known as Elley Irving E I based on 1966 Census data E I proposed six social strata based upon education and income and grouped by occupation The publication of the scale was welcomed by many researchers but regarded with suspicion by a number of lay critics who presumably clung to the belief that New Zealand was still a classless society One newspaper headlined the production of a snobbery scale Such characterizations and the numerous critics who misinterpreted its intentions no doubt added to the frequency of its citing but it is true that many researchers have made appropriate use of it for its original purpose It is cited often because it is a useful tool Warwick B Elley describing the impact of his paper 18 NZSEI 1996 edit In the 1990s P Davis et al published New Zealand Socioeconomic Index of Occupational Status 19 known as NZSEI It was based on a returns to human capital model of the stratification process and originally used data from the 1991 New Zealand census n 1 051 926 to generate scores for 97 occupational groups It was later updated using 2006 Census data 20 NZSEI is a linear scale of ranked occupation produced using an algorithm involving age income and education and aggregated to six discrete groupings called Socio economic Status SES to enable comparison with E I and ISEI 21 NZSEI96 22 Absolute and percentage sex differences in mean income and education Class Population distribution Mean income 000 Income diff by sex M F Mean years of Education Education diff by sex M F SES Males Females diff 23 000s Males Females diff 23 Years1 6 3 67 50 34 17 14 4 14 8 3 0 42 6 6 51 42 21 9 14 7 15 1 3 0 43 27 6 45 35 27 10 12 9 13 3 3 0 44 20 5 33 35 6 2 11 9 12 0 1 0 15 18 7 32 30 7 2 11 7 12 1 3 0 46 20 2 29 26 12 3 11 9 11 8 1 0 1According to the above data the average income reported by males is considerably higher than that of females for five of the socioeconomic groups With the exception of SES group four where the female income is higher males earn on average between 7 and 34 more than females The NZSEI is derived from Census data of employed people but it can be extended to most of the population using previous occupation if retired or currently unemployed or the occupation of the household s main income earner 24 Other indices edit The NZDep2006 Index of Deprivation 25 is an index of geographic deprivation based upon 9 variables telephone benefit unemployment household income car access single parent family no qualifications home ownership overcrowding Caldwell amp Brown 26 published a popular book which identified eight hidden tribes in New Zealand labelling them after various towns or suburbs North Shore Grey Lynn Balclutha Remuera Otara Raglan Cuba Street Papatoetoe In 2013 Statistics New Zealand published New Zealand socio economic index 2006 NZSEI06 using data from the 2006 census and updated statistical techniques 27 A newer version of the above table is on page 54 of the report In the New Zealand education system decile is a key measure of socioeconomic status used to target funding and support schools 28 29 References edit Wiremu Tamihana in the Dictionary of New Zealand Biography Sinclair Keith 1969 A History of New Zealand 2nd edn p 285 Mitchell Austin Vernon 1972 The Half Gallon Quarter Acre Pavlova Paradise Christchurch NZ Whitcombe and Tombs ISBN 978 0 7233 0349 7 Sutch William Ball 1966 The Quest for Security in New Zealand 1840 to 1966 Oxford University Press OCLC 1056114268 Easton Brian 1981 Pragmatism and Progress Social Security in the Seventies Christchurch NZ University of Canterbury ISBN 9780900392283 Belich James 1996 Making Peoples A History of the New Zealanders from Polynesian Settlement to the end of the Nineteenth Century London Allen Lane pp 328 332 ISBN 9780713991710 Macpherson Cluny 1977 Polynesians in New Zealand An Emerging Eth Class In Pitt David ed Social Class in New Zealand Auckland Longman Paul pp 99 112 ISBN 978 0582717527 Hayward Margaret 1981 Diary of the Kirk years Wellington Reed ISBN 978 0589013509 Show a bit of Class article by Joanne Black in the New Zealand Listener In February 1999 Statistics New Zealand published Incomes Archived 26 January 2010 at the Wayback Machine a report tracing changes in the distribution of New Zealanders incomes from 1982 to 1996 one of the most eventful periods in our economic history It found that the gap between high and low income households had grown significantly and that this increase in income inequality occurred at both personal and household levels Statistics New Zealand 1999 New Zealand Now Incomes Archived 7 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine ISBN 0 478 20705 0 Retrieved from stats govt nz Archived 27 November 2007 at the Wayback Machine 26 February 2009 O Dea 2000 The Changes in New Zealand s Income Distribution NZ Treasury Tim Hazledine Greedy warriors of privilege threaten our Decent Society NZ Herald 30 December 2011 Te Ara The Encyclopedia of New Zealand Distribution of disposable income 1982 and 1996 retrieved 27 October 2009 Hazledine Tim 1998 Taking New Zealand Seriously The Economics of Decency Auckland HarperCollins ISBN 1 86950 283 3 Yahoo Finance Countries with the Biggest Gaps Between Rich and Poor Archived 8 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine Bruce Einhorn 16 October 2009 Ruth Laugesen amp Joanne Black All Things Being Equal New Zealand Listener 1 7 May 2010 a b c Elley W B amp Irving I C A socio economic index for New Zealand based on levels of education and income from the 1966 census NZ J Educ Stud 7 153 67 1972 Davis McLeod Ransom Ongley New Zealand Socioeconomic Index of Occupational Status permanent dead link pub October 1997 by Statistics New Zealand New Zealand Socio Economic index A Users Guide Otago University Accessed 20 December 2019 ISEI International Socioeconomic Index of Occupational Status Data drawn from the 1991 New Zealand census n 1 051 926 is used in the construction of the NZSEI and the model is applied to all full time workers aged between 21 and 69 a b Percentage difference between males and females 100 M F F Crampton P and Davis P 1998 Measuring deprivation and socioeconomic status why and how New Zealand Public Health Report 5 11 12 81 84 ISSN 1173 0250 Salmond Crampton Atkinson NZDep2006 Index of Deprivation Aug Sep 2007 Caldwell amp Brown c2007 8 tribes the hidden classes of New Zealand ISBN 978 0 473 11693 4 Milne BJ Byun U amp Lee A 2013 New Zealand socio economic index 2006 ISBN 978 0 478 40833 1 Wellington Statistics New Zealand School deciles education govt nz Archived from the original on 19 September 2017 Retrieved 2 August 2017 NZ Schools The decile system PPTA org nz PPTA Archived from the original on 2 August 2017 Retrieved 2 August 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Social class in New Zealand amp oldid 1183706177, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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