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Table of contents:
Executive Summary
The Recession: Background
Maori Asset Base5
Background
Risks
Maori Business
Background
Risks
Maori Employment
Background
Risks
Maori Education, Skills and Qualifications
Background
Risks
Maori Housing22
Background
Risks
Maori Income24
Background
Risks
Key Drivers of Future Change28
Moving to the innovation economy
Redistribution of world economic power
Climate change and resource pressures
Strengths of Maori Business29
Appendices
Treasury �Downside� Forecasts
Maori Employment
Figure 1: Maori School Leavers, by qualification, and Maori Tertiary Enrolments
In Print
The Implications of a Recession for the Māori Economy
Climate change and resource pressures
Environmental pressures are clear drivers of future change both on a global and domestic scale. Key global environmental drivers of economic change with a particular impact on Māori include climate change and fossil fuel depletion. Key domestic drivers with a particular impact on Māori include potential fisheries depletion, and water use and quality.
Climate change impacts will be a challenge for Māori given the economic concentration of Māori businesses in the agriculture and fishing sectors. Adapting to climate change will require the uptake of new technologies to mitigate and withstand potential climate-related shocks. Additionally, Māori producers will increasingly need to position their products as genuinely “clean and green”, in order to keep and grow the share of the export market in these sectors. Conversely, opportunities will arise for Māori in developing and promoting new technologies or moving traditional agricultural sectors into alternative production systems (for example, cropping for bio fuels).