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COVID-19 recovery

Peri Drysdale, Founder and CEO of sustainable New Zealand fashion brand Untouched World, was quick to pivot her business to try and help mitigate the severe shortage of PPE gear when the Covid crisis hit. An ex-registered nurse, Peri combined her deep understanding of infection control with her team’s extensive knowledge of fabrics, pattern making and production, working with the help of Callaghan Innovation and a team of scientists to research the best options for comfortable and high performing re-usable protective wear.

After a short but intense period of product development, and with full barrier control in place, Untouched World commenced production of their Ecoprotect™ range of masks in New Zealand. Peri explains “Our masks are unique in that they’re washable and reusable to help address supply issues and minimize waste to landfill. We’ve always considered people and the planet in everything we make, so designing and making masks was no different. We make all the masks in our own workrooms in New Zealand using natural materials, and they’re autoclaved after packing so they are sterile and ready for immediate use”. She is quick to point out that they are not for medical use and cannot guarantee prevention of infection. The move to making masks saw Untouched World divert their entire manufacturing capacity from clothing to protective wear in just a few short weeks. “It was like starting up a whole new business again” says Peri.

Launching with a simple double-layer surgical style pleat mask, Untouched World then teamed up with Lanaco, another New Zealand based company who supply technical HELIX.iso™ wool filters. This meant Untouched World was able to offer a highly effective filter mask that captures up to 80% of particles larger than 3 microns, and over 95% with the use of two filters at one time.

As the country emerges from lockdown, both businesses and communities look to navigate the new normal. “There’s no doubt there’ll be a lot of people hurting”, Peri says, “but Kiwi’s are great at pulling together in times of need, and this is one of those times that we’ll need each other to get through. We’ve had a lot of people shopping with us and supporting us at this time and we’re certainly looking to pay it forward where we can”. Untouched World is already working on a number of initiatives, from giving away beanies to those feeling the cold this winter to gifting beautiful handcrafted woollen toys to children in need.

If there’s ever been a time when the saying “it takes a village” rings true, it surely has to be now.


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Filed Under: Businesses growing at home, COVID-19 recovery Tagged With: Coming Home, Managed Isolation, Simon Adlam

Clair Mills in Chad, 2007.

Can you explain a bit about the work of Médecins Sans Frontières?

MSF provides medical care to people in over 70 countries, primarily in contexts of conflict, epidemics and humanitarian crises. These vary from surgical and trauma projects in Yemen to HIV projects in Southern Africa, Ebola in Congo, maternity and child health in the Sahel (West Africa); health care in refugee camps from Bangladesh to Uganda, for people displaced in their own country, and migrants. And now with the COVID19 pandemic we are also supporting medical activities in Europe, with a focus on those who are most vulnerable or who miss out on health care. See www.msf.org for more info.

How did you come to work for MSF?

By chance really! After finishing my hospital and GP training in NZ, back in 1992 I answered an advert in a medical magazine and then visited the MSF office in Amsterdam – either they were impressed I’d come all the way from NZ, or I must have sounded very convincing! I spent 3 and a half years in the field with MSF, did a Masters in London and then worked for other organizations for a few years (WHO and Save the Children (UK), in DRCongo and Mozambique).

After coming back to NZ to complete my public health medicine specialist training, I was medical director for the Dutch MSF section for nearly 5 yrs. I’ve alternated working for MSF with public health medicine in Tai Tokerau since then – with a couple of short missions with MSF (cholera in Papua New Guinea, Ebola in 2014/15 in Sierra Leone) and now, since mid 2017, as medical director for MSF France.

During a pandemic where so many are at risk, how does MSF assess where the most vulnerable are and how to allocate resources?

It’s a major challenge. Firstly we need to protect our staff, in order to be able to respond effectively anywhere. Then in all the countries we work, we are adapting our projects to minimise transmission of infection, maintain critical services, supporting the public health authorities, and/ or setting up specific COVID19 treatment units.

We are particularly concerned about the impact of the pandemic on people living in areas of conflict such as Yemen, Gaza, Syria and Burkina Faso, where accessing populations to provide health care was already a major problem before the pandemic. There are also other specific groups we think are particularly at risk – people living with HIV, malnourished children, patients with TB and other diseases such as diabetes and cardiovascular disease.

In addition, the impact of COVID19 on health services in many places means that for some time, many children may not get vaccinated, nor receive treatment for malaria; that more women die in childbirth, that more people do not have access to critical health care…

As so many countries have shut their borders, how has this affected the operations of MSF?

We have international staff in all our projects – and obviously this has really affected the ability to send people places- or to get them home. We do have very experienced and competent national staff, so we can largely maintain the activities so far. But we have had to reduce some specialist activities, especially surgical. There are also other important constraints now, imposed by the EU, on exporting medicines and personal protective equipment (masks, gloves etc) from Europe to other regions. As we depend on international supply chains, this is very concerning – and we are advocating to have exceptions made for humanitarian organizations.

Health workers around the world are increasingly becoming stretched thin by the sheer scale of the pandemic, and many medical professionals are coming out of retirement to help. Is MSF struggling to keep up with the demand for assistance?

Many of my colleagues, and specialists in my department here in Paris, are working in their home countries in the pandemic response. We still have international staff available but we have certainly noticed a drop in the numbers available.

For those of us sitting at home, how are we able to help MSF?

‘Be kind’ and ‘stay at home’, seem like very good advice right now! But of course MSF needs the ongoing financial support of our supporters and donors – mostly people like you and me, who give a few dollars a month. 90% of MSF’s income is from individual donors, and this gives us an exceptional independence and a flexibility which most other organisations don’t have. I hope that despite the difficult times, people do consider those worse off than themselves, and continue to support organizations like MSF.

CONTRIBUTOR

Clair Mills

Medical Director, Paris

Médecins Sans Frontières

Kea member

Filed Under: COVID-19 recovery, Global Kiwi, World changing Kiwi Tagged With: Clair Mills, Médecins Sans Frontières, Medicine

Mary Fenwick is an executive teams and leadership coach, who also writes the main advice column for Psychologies magazine. Since qualifying as a coach in 2009, she focuses on women in leadership, speaking up, and wellbeing.

Originally from Alexandra, Central Otago, Mary is a former chair of Kea UK, a TedX speaker, and regularly presents Facebook Lives to the 1.3million followers of the Psychologies magazine Facebook page. Last week, she did two Facebook Lives on the subject of resilience, where her interest comes from both personal and professional experience.

“In 2008, my husband died and, on the day of his funeral, I found out that the magazine I’d been editing had collapsed. So I entered the last global recession in the madness of bereavement, as a single parent (to four children) with no job. I don’t believe there is any one answer that will fit everybody when it comes to resilience, so I’m interested in sharing the widest possible range of resources, based on validated, peer-reviewed research”.

Get Mary Fenwick’s free guide to a more resilient you here.

Filed Under: COVID-19 recovery, Global Kiwi Tagged With: Mary Fenwick, Mindfulness, Resilience

Different times, different crises

When making decisions, it is relatively straightforward to look back in history to see how previous similar crises played out. Then respond accordingly to the current crisis, with that so-called ‘hindsight’. The reality unfortunately is that every new crisis brings nuances that prove ‘hindsight’ to be less relevant.

From the perspective of financial markets and economies it is useful to take note that this crisis is quite different in nature to the global financial crisis (GFC) of the late 2000’s. But, it does share some similarities in terms of its impact.

The GFC

The GFC originated from, and was mostly contained within, financial markets (with some spillover into the real economy). It was triggered by a downturn in the US housing market. Subsequently, across the globe, share and bond investors faced significant losses (some up to nearly 50% of their value), banks went bankrupt and some large institutions had to be ‘bailed out’ by Governments.

From an ‘economic’ perspective, that crisis mostly impacted the ‘demand’ side of economies. Or to put it in another way, with consumers feeling less wealthy as a result of falling share markets and house prices, they were less willing to spend. This in turn negatively impacted sales for businesses that produce goods and services in the real economy.

In response, central banks stepped into lower interest rates; meaning money became cheaper to borrow both for businesses as well as consumers. This not only boosted investor confidence, but also incentivized consumers to spend. As a result, in the 12 or so years after the crisis, investment markets grew at unprecedented levels, with investors enjoying stellar increases in wealth. As an example, an index that tracks the shares of companies across 23 countries had gained over 200% by end of 2019. In simpler terms, for every $1,000 you invested before the crisis, you would have had $2,039 by Dec 2019.

The Current Crisis

While the GFC originated in financial markets and spread into the real economy, the current crisis has traversed in the other direction.

In this instance, not only has the demand side been impacted but also the ‘supply’ side of the economy. The supply side refers to the production of goods and services. With social distancing measures being applied across countries and resource (e.g., talent) mobility being significantly restricted, the Covid pandemic is directly impacting on our ability to ‘produce’ goods and services.

This means a period of turmoil for businesses, with some facing an existential crisis, as well as the prospect of job losses for individuals, at almost unprecedented levels. It is still early stages in the crisis and no one has a crystal ball to divine the future or determine how long this may last.

The only thing certain is ‘uncertainty’. Unfortunately, financial markets and ‘uncertainty’ don’t get along well. As a result, at the time of writing in late March, share markets around the globe, have already sold off over 20% since the start of this year. In summary, the world is staring at a global recession in its face. Given interest rates are already low, the responses that were effective for the GFC may not be practical for the current crisis.

Lessons learnt

As much as ‘hindsight’ doesn’t make us all that much more wiser, there are a handful of universal truths that stand the test of time. This is as good a time as any to review how resilient and savvy you are financially.

  • If you are relying on interest earning assets such as bank term deposits for income, you may want to figure out what else you can supplement your income with. It is very likely that returns from such assets will remain low for much longer.
  • If you don’t need access to money right away consider leaving your money in what you are already invested in. Remember that any loss that your investment is facing now is simply on paper. It becomes a real loss only when you sell it. The question is how long you can afford to leave it as is, without withdrawing.
  • The above is on the assumption that you were invested in it for a good reason to begin with. Get professional advice if you are unsure of why you are invested in something and how it fits into your financial portfolio. Good advice is worth the fees.
  • Trying to time when to buy and when to sell is fraught with risks. As logical as ‘buy low, sell high’ sounds, it is not for the faint hearted and nearly impossible to get consistently right.
  • The same goes for currency. If you have assets denominated in a foreign currency, know that your investment returns will depend not only the asset but also on the exchange rate between your home currency and the foreign currency.
  • While it is always safe to remain ‘diversified’ across assets and jurisdictions, during times of extreme dislocations in financial and economic markets know that most assets get caught up, and there aren’t too many places to hide. But consider remaining appropriately diversified through the crisis.
  • Various governments are taking different approaches to tackling the crisis – some are using monetary policy tools (e.g., reducing interest rates), some fiscal (e.g., using taxation related tools) and other regulatory (e.g., extending disclosure and accounting reporting deadlines). Not all of them will be successful equally. At the core of it, this is a health crisis – it is logical to focus efforts on containing that crisis as a priority. How the share markets and the investment assets in each country perform will depend on how the leaders in those countries respond. Depending on what exposure you have to each of the countries, your investment portfolios will be impacted differently.
  • If you are struggling to meet your loan repayments, consider restructuring options with your bank early on. It is in their interest too to ensure that their loan to you doesn’t end up being a ‘non-performing’ one for them.
  • Be wary of an increase in fraud and investment scams. Such operatives work best in times of emotional distress, playing into the ‘fear’ and ‘greed’ theory. If something sounds too good to be true, be wary. If you don’t how an investment makes money, stay away. That ‘hot tip’ will likely burn you.
  • On a happier note, every crisis comes with an opportunity. Markets are driven by fear and greed. There will always be some assets that are over sold by some investors out of panic. You get to buy them cheaper now. Keep an eye out for the opportunity. But do your research first.

As indicated, we are still in the very early stages of this crisis, with things likely going to get worse before it gets better. Part of the uncertainty is because much of the recovery (and recover we will) is going to depend on the size and scope of the responses from Governments across the globe.

As a first response (which has since beefed up), New Zealand responded with a $12billion plan, the US with close to a trillion dollars and the Eurozone with a Eur750 billion package of stimulus. In reality, these amounts may still not be enough, as we don’t know how effectively each stimulus package is implemented. Only time will tell.

At times of such uncertainty, when I have to make a decision I’m reminded of a philosophical quote “it is better to be vaguely right than precisely wrong”.

Stay safe!

CONTRIBUTOR

Binu Paul

Founder

Savvy Kiwi

Kea member

Filed Under: COVID-19 recovery Tagged With: Covid-19, Economics, Savvy Kiwi

Re-establishing New Zealand residence

For individuals who only intend to be in New Zealand for a short time, to sit out the global rolling lockdowns with the benefit of close family and New Zealand’s great outdoors nearby, the potential of inadvertently triggering tax residence needs to be considered. Residence in New Zealand is broadly based on two tests, one of which applies a threshold for the number of days spent in New Zealand in any 12-month period, (183 days).

For individuals who are returning permanently to New Zealand, if their last visit was less than six months ago (e.g. over Christmas), there is a risk that they may have inadvertently triggered residency at that earlier time. New Zealanders who intended to return temporarily but who are grounded here indefinitely due to extended lockdown and closed borders, are also at high risk of exceeding the days count threshold in New Zealand and becoming a tax resident.

Key tax considerations

Some of the tax issues which can arise when you are treated as a New Zealand tax resident are set out below:

  1. Tax on foreign employment income:
    We are aware of several Kiwis who returned to New Zealand just before the borders officially shut, and who are still working for their foreign employers, but in an extra remote working from home arrangement.
    Exceeding the 183 days count threshold can mean that these individuals are taxable in New Zealand on their employment income. The obligations for income tax in New Zealand could apply in these situations regardless of the location of the foreign employer.
  2. Unexpected tax and administration obligations for foreign employers:
    Having an employee who is a tax resident in New Zealand can also have implications for the foreign employer. The obligation to pay New Zealand pay as you earn income tax (PAYE) is based on where an employee is tax resident and physically present.
    Other corporate tax risks can also arise as a result of an employee’s extended presence here. As such, it is important the offshore employer is made aware of individual’s presence in New Zealand so that the risks can be appropriately assessed by the business.
  3. Triggering transitional residence early:
    Kiwis returning to New Zealand often do so with careful forethought to manage the timing of when New Zealand tax residency starts. This is because tax residents are taxed on their worldwide income; while non-residents are taxed only on their New Zealand-sourced income.
    Some lucky individuals may be able to take advantage of a special tax concession known as transitional residence. This is available to first time New Zealand residents and those who have been out of New Zealand for more than 10 years, and who have not had the benefit of transitional residence status previously.
    For individuals who are treated as transitionally resident, all their offshore investments and assets will be exempt from the New Zealand tax base for a limited period. This gives people time to think about how to structure affairs and manage the impact of New Zealand taxation.
    If an individual is returning to New Zealand temporarily before a permanent return in a few years’ time, they may end up using up their transitional residence status before they get the benefit of it.
    The status is available for up to four years but ceases to be available once an individual becomes non-resident again.
  4. Offshore investments:
    For returning Kiwis who don’t have the benefit of transitional residence, it will be important to consider the tax treatment in New Zealand of offshore investments including foreign shares and bank accounts.
    Foreign investments including foreign superannuation are subject to distinct tax regimes in New Zealand, which can result in actual tax payable on unrealised gains.
    Many foreign shares are taxed based on a fixed percentage of the market value of those shares at the beginning of each tax year (1 April). Foreign exchange gains and losses can equally have a significant impact.
    Take the example of Bridget, an expat Kiwi who purchased a house with a mortgage while she was living in London. Having returned to live in New Zealand, she rented the property out, but after a few years, decided to sell the property. Because the New Zealand dollar had strengthened against the pound over the time since she became resident in New Zealand, she made a taxable gain on the mortgage even though in New Zealand dollar terms she made a capital loss on the disposal of the property.
    Finally, if you have an existing offshore business that you intend to keep operating after you return to New Zealand, you will need specific advice on the complex tax implications involved.

Next steps:

KPMG has prepared two helpful Tax Guides – Beyond Borders for Individuals, and Beyond Borders for Business Owners, which you can download for free.

If you would like to seek advice or to arrange your KPMG Kea Global Repatriation Package, our People Services team would love to hear from you. Please call Rebecca Armour on +64 9 363 5926 or email her at [email protected]

CONTRIBUTOR

Rebecca Armour

Partner, Global Mobility Services (tax)

KPMG New Zealand

Kea member


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Filed Under: COVID-19 recovery, Kiwi coming home Tagged With: Coming Home, Covid-19, KPMG, Tax

Victoria Macdonald reporting from an ICU

Tell us about yourself, and your role as Health and Social Care Correspondent for Channel 4 in the UK.

I have been the health and social care correspondent for Channel 4 News in the UK for 21 years, reporting on the national health service, Government health and social care policies, as well as more global issues like HIV and TB. It is so varied – every day is different but the constant is always being ready to scramble to wherever you are needed and making sure your hair and clothes are tidy enough not to distract while on air!

You have been covering the developments of the Covid-19 pandemic in the UK. What has it been like, and how does this compare to any other global health crisis you have covered?

For years I have reported on HIV and spent a lot of time in places like South Africa reporting on the terrible loss of life as well as the sometimes excellent, sometimes woeful, political responses worldwide. Several times during my career, ebola has broken out and we have prepared for it to spread globally. Each time it has been contained which is not to take away form the dreadful loss of lives in places like Sierra Leone and DRC. But nothing could prepare you for this pandemic.

We watched as it unfolded in China with increasing trepidation. Every day I would dial into the World Health Organisation press conferences as they gave updates on the figures and the strategies China was using to try and contain it. Once it spread across the world, my stories started to take in South Korea, the outbreaks on cruise ships, then Italy, and eventually, though inevitably to the UK. We have had to adapt rapidly to reporting at arms length (2m long poles to hold the microphones), zoom and Skype interviews are the norm, we rarely travel now. On the upside, there is more transparency from Government scientists in telling us what they do and don’t know, and we have far more ability to ask questions via the Downing Street briefing. I hasten to add, not all questions are answered or currently answerable but it is an important step forward.

Emotionally, it is distressing as you see the death toll climb and as more people are put in hospital. I said early on in this pandemic that as a reporter you are usually an observer but in this case we are all affected. My friends and family are as much at risk as everyone else’s. This isn’t something happening to other people, which is often the case when you are reporting. It is happening to all of us and I have to constantly remind myself, too, that I am not immune, and that I have to be careful, too. Seeing not just ‘elderly people with underlying conditions’ but young people. On a recent visit to an ICU Department I saw people who had been put into a coma and ventilated. It was distressing but I spoke to a nurse who had come back on to the ward after 10 years and I watched as she brushed the hair of a young woman and wiped her face. It brought me to tears.

Do you get overwhelmed, and if so how do you manage your own mental and physical health?

Do I get overwhelmed? Virtually every day. The amount of information coming in is incredible and you have to sift through it, work out what is true, what is important for that day, and what can hold or needs further investigation or interrogation. I don’t do it alone, I hasten to add. I have amazing colleagues, especially the producers I work with, so by the time the piece makes it to air a whole team has had input.

Every day I am working I also do a live in the studio to pick up on some of the areas that I haven’t had time to put into the piece, or that need more explaining. On my day off during the week I then have to turn my attention to home schooling which is infinitely more difficult than explaining coronavirus to the nation!!

In a world of social media and mis-information, what should our members be doing to ensure they have access to responsible and reliable reporting?

We are constantly bombarded with mis-information via social media and it is depressing how unquestioning some people can be but this pandemic has, on the plus side, brought out the scientist in many of us and I am impressed by how carefully the public is looking at the information available and taking on board the need for such things as shielding and social isolation. We are incredibly indebted to the Science Media Centre (there is a centre in NZ) who get expert comments to help you assess scientific papers being published or claims made.

While the world is focused on Covid-19, are there other global health and social care issues you are investigating and reporting on?

The very short answer to this is no. My job is only covid19 which is, of course, worrying because other health and social care issues haven’t gone away. Look at the measles epidemic, for instance, and all the children who still have not been vaccinated.

You have lived away from Aotearoa, New Zealand for some time, how do you think networks like Kea New Zealand help in the expat journey?

I am missing New Zealand very much at the moment, partly because of the fear it may be awhile before my daughter and I can visit, and because my parents and sister and brother are there and I worry about them. Keeping in touch with New Zealand and the expat community provides support at a time when you feel turned upside down by something so huge and so scary.

CONTRIBUTOR

Victoria Macdonald

Health and Social Care Correspondent

Channel 4 News, UK

World Class New Zealander

Filed Under: COVID-19 recovery, Global Kiwi, World changing Kiwi Tagged With: Covid-19, Health, journalism, media, Victoria Macdonald

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