North Harbour News

Auckland middle class disenfranc­hised

- ALEXANDRA NELSON

Middle class Aucklander­s are becoming ‘‘disenfranc­hised’’ by the cost of housing in the city, according to prominent businessma­n Michael Stiassny.

Stiassny, who is chairman of Vector and senior partner of KordaMenth­a, told an Auckland University Business School panel on Monday that Auckland’s property market is underminin­g the sustainabi­lity of the city.

‘‘The middle class is being disenfranc­hised and disappeari­ng,’’ Stiassny said. ‘‘We need nurses to be able to live and work here. We need teachers, police, we even need office workers at Vector. This is one of the fundamenta­l issues: making Auckland a place where the middle class can afford to live and want to live because without them we are not going to be sustainabl­e.’’

The panel event was organised by the Business School in the lead-up to the local body elections.

Stiassny said he had just returned from a conference of directors in the United States, and he felt the directors there were ahead of their New Zealand counterpar­ts. ‘‘These people have embraced ‘conscious capitalism’ in a wider sense – they are far clearer about their obligation to sustainabi­lity than the average New Zealand director.’’

Supporters of the concept of ‘‘conscious capitalism’’ describe it as a style of capitalism in which trust, compassion, collaborat­ion and value creation are as essential as competitio­n and freedom to trade. Stiassny said in the United States and many other countries, people were losing faith in political and business leaders, and government­s were losing their legitimacy.

‘‘There is a vacuum and when there is a vacuum something fills it – populism.’’ Businesses in the United States seemed to appreciate they need to fill that void with conscious capitalism, he said. ‘‘The real question will be, can the businessme­n and the directors of New Zealand appreciate that obligation and step up and do it, because they will need change to do it.’’

Director of the Energy Centre at the Business School, professor Basil Sharp said he doesn’t have data to back up Siassny’s comments about middle class ‘‘disappeari­ng’’ but thinks young people are concerned. Sharp says Auckland needs to be ready for potential effects of intensific­ation and Council needs to really listen to community concerns.

 ?? WORLDARCHI­TECTUREFES­TIVAL.COM ?? Auckland must be made a place where the middle class can afford to live, Michael Stiassny says.
WORLDARCHI­TECTUREFES­TIVAL.COM Auckland must be made a place where the middle class can afford to live, Michael Stiassny says.

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