
Cost-Of-Living Crisis Deepens Longstanding Struggle For Intellectually Disabled New Zealanders
As charities sound the alarm on families huddling in single rooms to stay warm, skipping meals, and borrowing to pay power bills, IHC Senior Advocate Shara Turner points out this level of struggle is nothing new for those living with intellectual disability, it's long been the norm.
She says the IHC-funded Cost of Exclusion report, released last month, used older data and shows people with intellectual disabilities were living with significant financial stress five years ago.
'We are calling on the government and policy makers to adjust income support to reflect the true cost of disability and to recognise the long-term, cross-sector disadvantage disabled people experience.'
The Cost of Exclusion report paints a bleak picture:
People with an intellectual disability are twice as likely to live in hardship up to age 39 and almost three times as likely at ages 40 to 64, compared to the rest of the population.
Rates of severe hardship are double in young adulthood and triple in middle age.
Nearly half of intellectually disabled people cannot pay an unavoidable bill within a month without borrowing.
They are over four times more likely to go without a meal containing meat or a vegetarian equivalent.
They are more than twice as likely to feel cold due to heating costs.
Advertisement - scroll to continue reading
'The current cost-of-living spike will have just added to the struggle. Stats NZ figures show electricity prices have increased by almost 9 percent and petrol by 15.5 percent in the last year. Social services have seen dramatic funding cuts and one provider told RNZ they are now supporting 800 fewer families than last year due to a $1.5 million drop in government funding.'
'It's not a blip. We are looking at entrenched, generational poverty and targeted action is needed to change the outcomes for some of New Zealand's most vulnerable people.'
IHC's research, which includes powerful interviews with caregivers, offers insight into the systemic barriers that push families into poverty and keep them there. One mother described the toll:
'I ended up working full-time for three years, which just about killed me... 50 hours a week plus 15 to 20 hours advocating for Simon. It was like running a small business just for his care.'
Another described how her child's multiple diagnoses made returning to work impossible for years, significantly eroding their family's financial stability.
About IHC New Zealand
IHC New Zealand advocates for the rights, inclusion and welfare of all people with intellectual disabilities and supports them to live satisfying lives in the community. IHC provides advocacy, volunteering, events, membership associations and fundraising. It is part of the IHC Group, which also includes IDEA Services, Choices NZ and Accessible Properties.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

RNZ News
4 hours ago
- RNZ News
Firefighters extinguish fire at Auckland's Westgate Mitre 10, search for hot spots
Smoke could be seen from one of the roller doors at Westgate Mitre 10. Photo: Calvin Samuel / RNZ A fire at a Mitre 10 hardware store in West Auckland is now out. The fire at Mitre 10 Mega Westgate near Whenuapai was reported at 6.40pm on Saturday to Fire and Emergency. A spokesperson said eight fire trucks were still at the scene shortly before 9pm, ventilating the building and monitoring for hot spots. Firefighters outside Mitre 10. Photo: Calvin Samuel / RNZ In total 17 fire trucks were sent, including three ladder units, a spokesperson said earlier. The building, which was 200 metres long and 80m wide was described as heavily smoke logged. Fire crews were sent from West Harbour, Kumeū, Te Atatū, Auckland City, Henderson, Parnell, Avondale, Greenhithe, Ellerslie. Firefighters inspecting where the smoke came from. Photo: Calvin Samuel / RNZ An on-duty pharmacist close by said he heard the sirens and fire trucks after 7pm but couldn't see any flames. The pharmacist said he could see an aerial appliance had its ladder in the air but he couldn't see any water going onto the building. An RNZ video journalist at the scene said the fire looked well contained after 8pm with no major visible smoke or flames. It was extinguished before 9pm. Photo: Calvin Samuel / RNZ They said a lot of trucks and personnel were coming and going out of an entry to the timber yard. "A small amount of smoke is visible coming out of one of the roller doors near a loading dock." Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

RNZ News
4 hours ago
- RNZ News
Firefighters at scene of blaze at Auckland's Westgate Mitre 10
Photo: Googlemaps Firefighters are responding to a fire at a Mitre 10 hardware store in the Auckland suburb of Westgate. Emergency services were alerted to the blaze at 6.40pm Saturday, and 17 fire trucks were sent, including three ladder units, a Fire and Emergency spokesperson said. The building, which is 200 metres long and 80m wide was described as heavily smoke logged. Do you know more? Email iwitness@ Fire crews were sent from West Harbour, Kumeū, Te Atatū, Auckland City, Henderson, Parnell, Avondale, Greenhithe, Ellerslie. An on-duty pharmacist close by said he heard the sirens and fire trucks after 7pm but couldn't see any flames. The pharmacist said he could see an aerial appliance had its ladder in the air but he couldn't see any water going onto the building. He counted at least five fire trucks at the scene and said the Mitre 10 Mega was currently closed. An RNZ video journalist at the scene said the fire looked well contained after 8pm with no major visible smoke or flames. They said a lot of trucks and personnel were coming and going out of an entry to the timber yard. "A small amount of smoke is visible coming out of one of the roller doors near a loading dock." Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.


Otago Daily Times
20 hours ago
- Otago Daily Times
Concern 1080 will lower deer numbers
The use of 1080 poison where white tailed deer live could severely reduce the numbers of the "iconic" game animal, a hunting advocate says. New Zealand Game Animal Council chief executive Corina Jordan has recently returned from a trip to Stewart Island/Rakiura, where she talked to community members about the recent Department of Conservation aerial 1080 operation. The operation is part of a plan to save the endangered southern dotterel (pukunui) that is being preyed upon by wild cats. In phase one of the operation, 1080 bait with and without deer repellant was dropped on about 6500ha, earlier this month. Phase two of the operation will cover about 40,000ha and is scheduled to start next month. About five days after the drop, three dead white tailed deer were found with 1080 pellets in their stomachs in a hunting block where deer repellant had been used. Miss Jordan said if plans to remove predators from the whole island went ahead in 2026, the deer would not be wiped out, but their numbers would be significantly reduced. "That would put a stop to hunting on the island for quite a substantial period. "Hunters aren't going to want to visit an island that's been impacted by intrusive predator control." This would also affect the economy of the island, she said. While the council supported predator control and conservation, the use of the poison in areas where deer lived was concerning. The poison was not "authorised to be used to control deer". "It's inhumane. "There's animal health or well-being issues using 1080 on deer." The island's white tailed deer were special in that it was only one of two small wild populations. "It provides an outstanding hunting opportunity." Many people made an annual trip to the island to shoot the deer, which were not easy to hunt. "They're really intelligent and they're quite secretive." White tailed venison was also prized. "The meat in relation to quality, taste and texture is arguably some of the best." New Zealanders needed to have a "courageous conversation" about the use of 1080 to kill predators in areas where deer live and whether deer repellant should be used in the bait, she said. There was little research done on how white tailed deer responded to bait with deer repellant added. However, Sika deer research showed 10% died when deer repellant was used and 70-80% died where no repellant was used. The council was in favour of managing the resource, which had happened with Fiordland's wapiti deer population. "You can have quite substantial conservation outcomes while maintaining the hunting resource." After the discovery of the three dead deer on the island last week, ZIP operations director Duncan Kay said the operation was an opportunity to measure the effectiveness of deer repellant in reducing the impact of 1080 on white tailed deer. "It is acknowledged that deer repellent is unlikely to prevent all deer deaths."