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Home / The Country

Removing GST from food and veges is not a solution for Māori or poorer communities

NZ Herald
13 Aug, 2023 10:39 PM2 mins to read

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GST is to be removed on fresh fruit and vegetables - if Labour is re-elected. Photo / Sylvie Whinray

GST is to be removed on fresh fruit and vegetables - if Labour is re-elected. Photo / Sylvie Whinray

Removing GST from fresh and frozen fruit and vegetables is not the most effective solution, the Health Coalition Aotearoa says, and it won’t make any difference to Māori and poorer communities.

The coalition said for low-income whānau, fresh fruit and vegetables have become prohibitively expensive, while those on middle to high incomes are more likely to continue buying these products.

“If Labour is willing to put half a billion dollars a year on the table, they should invest in policies that will result in less expensive, healthier diets among those families struggling,” HCA Professor Boyd Swinburn said.

Boyd Swinburn.
Boyd Swinburn.

HCA co-chair Dr Lisa Te Morenga said prices of fruit and vegetables are so high that removing GST will make a very small difference to our lowest income whānau.

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“Māori whānau are disproportionately represented amongst our poorest families and have the lowest ability to buy fruit and vegetables.

“Labour is arguing that because those on the lowest-incomes spend a greater proportion of their budget on fruit and vegetables - if they can buy them at all - removing GST will make a bigger difference to those families on average.

“But the limited benefit gained by this measure is set against a context of extreme disadvantage, in comparison to middle to high income-earners,” Te Morenga said.

HCA urges all political parties to increase the provision of evidence-based solutions such as the Ka Ora, Ka Ako - Healthy School Lunches programme - to help with the high cost of healthy food and children’s nutrition.

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The programme is delivered to 25 per cent of schools in the lowest socio-economic areas at a cost of $320 million per year and has many positive impacts on individual students and their whānau, schools, and the local community. HCA wants the programme delivered to at least 50 per cent of schools.

In addition to targeted support for access to healthy kai, the Government’s efforts to break the supermarket duopoly should be a priority to achieve fairer prices for healthy kai.

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