We've been building a house for the past years.
Our move in date was November 2024. Just found out it will be in 2025, due to... drumroll ... Covid.
Turns out that 3 different companies - electricians, glaziers and window fitters - are all out with Covid (95% of all staff) now which ...
..affects the timeline majorly when so many people are ill. One of the companies lost the job entirely.
The majority of businesses in NZ are small to medium enterprises. 93% of businesses have less than 10 employees. If 7 of 9 staff is out, it's detrimental to the business.
So why does our new government, who is all about the economy and the 'hardworking' small Kiwi businesses, not drawing this correlation?
Why aren't the businesses? One said to me "I didn't know Covid was back". I know it's almost absent from the news, but as a business owner ...
... he can do what I do, monitor the situation. I knew it was coming, I saw it was making rounds in Europe, then creating havoc in Australia which is a sure tell sign it will hit NZ.
But how leaders are not correlating health to the economy is the most shocking part.
Instead the new government is rehashing the same mistakes that UK/Sweden did with spending money on campaigns to tell workers and kids to go to work/school sick even though that proved to be a mistake.
Making their citizens more sick. And costing more.
The previous government halted Covid for New Zealand for 2 years.
The new government wants us to get sicker. Now spending a million dollar on a campaign to get sick kids back in schools.
And this is good for the NZ health and economy - how exactly? ��
Winter illness puts dent in school attendance as officials mull social media campaign (RNZ.co.nz, June 10, 2024)
Adding in what is happening already and will happen more when sending kids back to school.
Same happens at workplaces but less reporting on it as kids and attendance rates are such a hot topic with the new government who thought they could change it.
WicMar (X, June 10, 2024)