Hold the front page... not. The National Government has vetoed the idea of six months of paid parental leave, saying $150 million a year is spent on PPL provisions already and more is unaffordable.
In my opinion, if you did not vote, or voted National in the last election, you have absolutely no right to be upset about that pronouncement.
The National Government is not big on extending any kind of benefit, obviously, and will be especially obstinate in that view in the face of a recession. They have been consistent on the kinds of issues that they say will cost business and the government coffers. You have to give them that.
As someone who believes passionately that the bulk of public money, time and effort should be spent on children in their preschool years, I find the Government's view extremely short-sighted. It's the New Zealand disease. Save a buck here and lose out down the line. For most children - and here we are not talking about that stubborn, relatively small number of children in truly abusive homes - home is the best place to be where possible in the first few years. Especially in the first six months. It definitely would help in terms of cementing breastfeeding - which the Government, through its health authorities, claims to support. It is also critical in terms of the child establishing the right neural pathways in the brain. We all know the calamities that await when that process goes haywire.
It's not so much that parents who both go back into the workforce early can't offset that with good parenting - the reams of research written about it suggest they often can. As we all know, there are women who find themselves depressed and miserable at home and feel the need to go out to work. That's their choice, and ultimately one they have to be able to make. But what is wrong with the Government promoting the idea that one parent at home is a great way to grow future citizens - and paying a (still reasonably) token sum to do so?