Maori success
Lindsay Mitchell points out:
Against a backdrop of high-profile, negative statistics it is easy to overlook the positive.
For instance, the fact that 64 percent of Maori are employed is rarely reported. For context, the employment rate for all New Zealanders is 68.4%. The difference isn’t vast.
In excess of 400,000 Maori have jobs, provide products and services and pay tax.
Maori are over-represented in the manufacturing, and utilities and construction workforces. They are disproportionately service workers, labourers and machine operators. As such they perform crucial roles.
97 percent of Maori aged 15 or older are not in prison or serving a community sentence or order. Over 99 percent of Maori are not gang members.
Yet as an ethnic group Maori take a lot of heat.
Their pockets of failure (which occur across all ethnicities) overshadow their success because it suits certain political aspirants to promote the negative. The predominant individualist culture wants Maori to get their act together and exercise greater personal responsibility. While the collectivists want the community to take the blame for Maori failure and fix it via redress. The finger-pointing at colonists as the culprits, which has ramped up immeasurably over recent years, has resulted in a great deal of misdirected anger towards Maori, the bulk of whom just want to get on with their lives. (To boot, this simplistic description ignores that since the early 1800s Maori and non-Maori have become indelibly interlinked by blood and it has become impossible to identify which finger is pointing in which direction, such is the absurdity of modern-day racial politics.)
It feels safe to say that most people want to live peaceful, happy and productive lives. We share those basic desires regardless of race. It’s that commonality that makes race irrelevant.
This is a useful reminder. For example 29% of Maori are in the top two income quintiles. Overlky focusing just on areas where some Maori do badly, can conflate that with all Maori.
More importantly Mitchell makes the point that blaming everything on colonisation, just spurs resentment. To improve bad statistics, you need to work with individual families, not just put it all down to race.