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State of the Nation 2025 shows serious challenges and falling living standards across Aotearoa New Zealand

WelCom February/March 2025

Aotearoa New Zealand is backsliding on many areas of social progress, making life harder for people and their whānau across the motu, according to The Salvation Army’s State of the Nation 2025 report. Titled Kai, Kāinga, Whānau, The Basics – Food, a Home, Family, the report was released on 11 February.

‘Our country needs to do better for people and our report seeks to understand what is happening,’ says Dr Bonnie Robinson, director of the Social Policy and Parliamentary Unit at The Salvation Army.

‘This year we can find few areas of improvement, and, in many cases, indicators have worsened, making it harder for people to have what they need in terms of kai, kāinga and whānau.’

The 18th edition of the report pulls together existing data to provide an annual snapshot of our social progress as a nation. Specific areas covered: Children and Youth, Work and Incomes, Housing, Crime and Punishment and Social Hazards. Another section titled Māori Wellbeing uses He Ara Waiora wellbeing framework to look at how each area specifically impacts tangata whenua.

Key findings in the report include rising unemployment, with more than 400,000 people needing welfare support in December 2024 – the highest number since the 1990s. Food insecurity among families with children has also risen sharply, with half of all Pacific children reported as going without food often or sometimes.

The State of the Nation 2025 report also highlights while there has been an increase in the number of social housing units available, the pace of new builds is decreasing, and there are rising numbers of people who are homeless. Rent for private rentals continues to be unaffordable for many on low incomes.

Aotearoa New Zealand’s prison population has also grown, remaining high compared with other developed nations.

Dr Robinson says of the report: ‘We can’t wish away the increasing levels of poverty and deprivation that this report is highlighting, but we can prioritise addressing the basic needs of people so that our whānau go beyond barely surviving to seeing them thrive. We need an economy that ensures all people have the basics and one that puts people first.’

The full report is available online: tinyurl.com/Salvation-Army-Report-2025

Source: Salvation Army


Key findings in the report include:

Māori wellbeing

Children and youth

Housing

Crime and punishment

Social hazards

Work and incomes

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