Showing posts with label Business and Economy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Business and Economy. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

These shoes were made for walking - or were they?

The main hall (check-in areas) in Auckland Int...Image via WikipediaThese shoes were made for walking - or were they?






These shoes were made for walking - or were they?



A ten person tourist party from Malaysia, who turned out to be the largest number of drug couriers ever caught in a single incident at New Zealand's border, literally walked their way into Auckland airport with up to ten kilos of crystal methamphetaimine in their specially designed  shoes.



The street value of the drug, known as "P" in New Zealand, is approximately worth a $1 million per kilo here, customs officers said.

http://petesbloggingplace.blog.co.nz/

http://peteskiwiforum.blogspot.com/





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Wednesday, March 23, 2011

John Key the smiling assassin as he sacked hundreds of Merril Lynch employees

Merrill Lynch & Co.Image via Wikipedia

John Key the smiling assassin - as he sacked hundreds of Merril Lynch employees



John Key well remembered as the smiling assassin who sacked hundreds of Merrill Lynch staff, in the days before he entered New Zealand politics and became prime minister. Now he is responsible for sacking thousands of kiwi public servants. Just the type of person you would invite home to meet your mother? Yeah Right!



Key's first job was in 1982, as an auditor at McCulloch Menzies, and he then moved to be a project manager at Christchurch-based clothing manufacturer Lane Walker Rudkin for two years.[7] Key began working as a foreign exchange dealer at Elders Finance in Wellington, and rose to the position of head foreign exchange trader two years later, then moved to Auckland-based Bankers Trust in 1988.

In 1995, he joined Merrill Lynch as head of Asian foreign exchange in Singapore. That same year he was promoted to Merrill's global head of foreign exchange, based in London, where he may have earned around US$2.25 million a year including bonuses, which is about NZ$5 million at 2001 exchange rates. Some co-workers called him "the smiling assassin" for maintaining his usual cheerfulness while sacking dozens (some say hundreds) of staff after heavy losses from the 1998 Russian financial crisis. He was a member of the Foreign Exchange Committee of the New York Federal Reserve Bank from 1999 to 2001.

In 1998, on learning of his interest in pursuing a political career, the National Party president John Slater began working actively to recruit him. Former party leader Jenny Shipley describes him as one of the people she "deliberately sought out and put my head on the line–either privately or publicly–to get them in there".

He doesn't appear to have changed much - now he smiles as thousands of NZ public servants lose their jobs weekly because of his Governments policy to reduce the numbers in the public service, regardless of need.

http://kiwiriverman.blogspot.com

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Monday, June 28, 2010

Cadbury chocolate confectionary company's fall from grace affects its perceived public trust


Confectionary giant Cadbury has fallen from grace after six years as New Zealand's most trusted brand, making way for food producer Wattie's to claim the title.


Wattie's, makers of a wide range of pantry staples, beat 132 brands to win the award in the sixth annual most-trusted survey, Reader's Digest New Zealand reported.



Long-time title holder Cadbury fell to 36th equal place after widespread criticism over its use of palm oil.



The firm briefly replaced cocoa butter with palm oil last year as a cost-cutting measure.



Palm oil production has been blamed for the rapid destruction of rainforest habitats and remained the single greatest threat to the existence of orangutans, and many other Southeast Asian wildlife species.



Cadbury also came under fire last year after shifting production of Kiwi favourites, including Moro, overseas.



Automobile giant Toyota came in second place and won the automobile category, while Sony came in third and won both the electronics and computer categories.





Whittaker's, a New Zealand chocolate company, debuted on the list at number five.



The 2010 Reader's Digest Trust Survey was based on a representative sample of 500 people aged 18 years and over.



Acknowledgements: - NZPA, with NZ Herald writers


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Sunday, May 23, 2010

Beaver: A singing career that began boldly on a red Leyland bus has ended...

BEAVER:  Never quite comfortable with her status as a social and cultural figure, daughter Kate said.





A singing career that began boldly on a bright red Leyland bus has come to a quiet end.



Beaver, one of the founding members of travelling performance co-operative Blerta, died at Mercy Hospice in Auckland yesterday after a six-year battle with cancer. She was 59.



Born in Lower Hutt in 1950 as Beverly Joan Morrison, Beaver was just 20 when actor and musician Bruno Lawrence spotted her performing at a local club and convinced her to jump on board his new project, Blerta – the Bruno Lawrence Electric Revelation and Travelling Apparition.



Beaver was a childhood nickname she adopted as a stage moniker and which stuck for the rest of her life, even out of the limelight.



She toured the country with Blerta – which included Bill Stalker, the father of her two children – between 1971 and 1973, dropping out for the group's 1974 Australian tour and rejoining when they returned.



Blerta was a springboard for a long and successful singing career, which included being named jazz performer of the year at the 1988 New Zealand Music Awards for her album Live at Ronnie Scott's.



She acted in the Blerta television show and in films, but it was her singing that people remembered and paid tribute to yesterday.



"What always amazed me about Beaver was her remarkable voice," co-performer Hammond Gamble said. "She was kind of born to sing."



Former Supergroove frontman Karl Stevens, who met and performed with Beaver while he was still a teenager, said she was "a proper old-school musician who knew her craft and had honed it".



Elder daughter Fritha Stalker said Beaver was "a very lovable person who inspired protective instincts in almost everyone she met with her innocence and good humour".



Younger daughter Kate Stalker said her mother never quite felt comfortable with her status as a social and cultural figure. "She was just a family girl. What mattered to her was her grandchildren and her great-nieces and nephews."



Everyone who met Beaver loved her, she said. "Even the nurses [at the hospice] this morning were having a cry because she was such a lovely lady".


Acknowledgements: Kate Newman


Monday, May 10, 2010

GST rise will benefit overseas firms - NZ retailers claim...

New Zealand dollarImage via Wikipedia


GST rise will give overseas web firms edge say NZ retailers.



New Zealand retailers say the looming rise in GST will give online merchants overseas an even bigger price advantage.



Private imports under $400 in value come into the country free of GST so the rise from 12.5 per cent to 15 per cent - likely to be announced in next week's Budget and imposed in October - makes overseas-sourced goods even more attractive.



The sharp appreciation of the New Zealand dollar against European currencies during the past six months has made online shopping even cheaper, although retailers who import from that region have also benefited.



Retail Association chief executive John Albertson said his members wanted GST on all goods bought privately overseas, excluding gifts. This would help New Zealand businesses and give the Government tax revenue worth as much as $500 million.



"It's not a fair cop. We don't mind competing but it's very hard competing with 15 per cent already tied behind your back," he said.


Especially galling for retailers was when customers used them to research products in their shops then bought them through overseas websites.



"You'll get people putting staff to tremendous trouble trying on sports shoes, say 'thanks very much' and go off an buy them online," Albertson said.



It is estimated between $1.2 billion and $3 billion is spent on goods by New Zealanders and, according to researchers The Nielsen Company, 17 per cent of this is spent overseas.



Most overseas online shopping is done in Australia and the United States.



Easy-to-ship goods such as DVDs, CDs, computer software and books are the most popular, accounting for more than 35 per cent of online buys abroad in each category.



More than 40 per cent of online spending on travel-related services is done through overseas websites, Nielsen says.



Albertson said the problem of tax on online purchases was an international one. In the US courier companies were charged with collecting state taxes in some cases. Albertson said it might be possible to collect tax through credit-card transactions.



Acknowledgements:  Grant Bradley

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Wednesday, May 5, 2010

A memorial to the late Sgt Nathan John Blackler...

Richard Pearse Airport, TimaruImage via Wikipedia
A memorial to the late Sgt Nathan John Blackler...






"I do not consider myself dying of cancer, but living despite it. I do not look upon each day as another day closer to death, but as another day of life, to be appreciated and enjoyed."



Sgt Nathan John Blackler



1974-2007



Funeral Service

Timaru SBS Stadium

Timaru, New Zealand


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Saturday, April 17, 2010

Concentrate on product quality in the US - not the clean green or carbon footprint...

District of ColumbiaImage via Wikipedia
Don't bother mentioning "sustainability" or "carbon footprint" to the average American consumer - they won't know what you're talking about.


Kiwi companies looking to sell their wares in the US are being told to tone down the clean green headlines and instead push issues of quality, local craftsmanship and community responsibility.



Research conducted by the Seattle-based Hartman Group for New Zealand Trade and Enterprise shows Americans have only an "entry level" understanding of sustainability, and are not familiar with terms such as "food miles" or "traceability".



Hartman asked four focus groups - two in Washington DC and two in Seattle - plus retailers such as supermarket chain Safeway and natural products seller Whole Foods Market about their attitudes towards sustainability and New Zealand.



Senior director Kirk Cornell said apart from a hard core of eco-aware consumers, most people did not equate sustainability with concern for the planet.



"If you talk to them at length they will arrive at the point where it has something to do with green.


But, top of mind, there's no immediate linkage with anything environmental."



This was the same across all income levels, he said. Instead, America was undergoing a "quality revolution", with consumers harking back to what they saw as simpler, pure times when Grandma did her own pickling. In the case of food, they equated quality with products that were fresh and produced by smaller, local companies using organic and animal-friendly processes.



Bad food was mass-produced and contained elements perceived as harmful, such as genetically modified ingredients and high-fructose corn syrup.



The good news for New Zealand was the characteristics of quality were almost the same as those of clean and green.



"Fresh is an uber-symbol of quality and sustainability," the research said.



The other good news was that Americans had a "quasi-mythological" view of New Zealand, Cornell said.



Their image was limited to what they had seen on the Discovery Channel or in movies such as the Lord of the Rings trilogy, but even these fragmentary glimpses were overwhelmingly positive, he said.



New Zealand was seen as a kind of pre-modern economy in which organic food was the norm, everyone recycled, there was no over-exploitation of resources and little foreign ownership. "You really couldn't ask for a better image."



While Americans did not spend time thinking about where their products came from they did care that they weren't made in China or other mass-producing Asian nations.



That a product came from New Zealand could be used as a positive. "The notion of locale, of a product being from somewhere that's uniquely suited for making such products, plays very powerfully for the US consumer," the Hartman Group report said.

This is something for us to think about - don't get full of our own importances or force our standards overseas -when in Rome do what the Romans do. Do our homework first!

Acknowledgements :MSN

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