Main reasons that businesses undertook climate change-related actions in New Zealand
By enterprise type, 2021, % of businesses
Enterprise type | Category | % of businesses |
---|---|---|
Māori enterprises (excluding Māori authorities) | Experienced the physical impacts of climate change | 29% |
Māori enterprises (excluding Māori authorities) | Participation in government programmes | 10% |
Māori enterprises (excluding Māori authorities) | Demand from management/board/employees | 24% |
Māori enterprises (excluding Māori authorities) | Pressure from competitors | 4% |
Māori enterprises (excluding Māori authorities) | Demand from investors or shareholders | 10% |
Māori enterprises (excluding Māori authorities) | Demand from customers | 16% |
Māori enterprises (excluding Māori authorities) | Public opinion | 22% |
Māori enterprises (excluding Māori authorities) | To minimise supply chain disruptions | 10% |
Māori enterprises (excluding Māori authorities) | To take advantage of opportunities presented by climate change | 16% |
Māori enterprises (excluding Māori authorities) | Did not make any changes | 16% |
All New Zealand businesses | Experienced the physical impacts of climate change | 17% |
All New Zealand businesses | Participation in government programmes | 6% |
All New Zealand businesses | Demand from management/board/employees | 26% |
All New Zealand businesses | Pressure from competitors | 6% |
All New Zealand businesses | Demand from investors or shareholders | 7% |
All New Zealand businesses | Demand from customers | 26% |
All New Zealand businesses | Public opinion | 23% |
All New Zealand businesses | To minimise supply chain disruptions | 12% |
All New Zealand businesses | To take advantage of opportunities presented by climate change | 10% |
All New Zealand businesses | Did not make any changes | 15% |
Notes
This information is sourced from the Business Operations Survey, which samples businesses with six or more employees.
Definitions
A Māori business is a business that is owned by a person or people who have Māori whakapapa, and a representative of that business identifies the business as Māori.
Māori authorities are economically significant businesses involved in the collective management of assets held by Māori.
‘Other Māori enterprises’ in this release refers to Māori businesses that are economically significant and are not Māori authorities.
Maori tourism business information presented in this dataset comes primary from member list of New Zealand Māori Tourism and was expanded on by adding any other Māori authority or business where those enterprises, or a business location belonging to those enterprises, was engaged in a selected range of ANZIC06 industry:
• all of division accommodation and food services
• interurban and rural bus transport
• rail passenger transport
• water passenger transport
• scenic and sightseeing transport
• motor vehicle and transport equipment rental and hiring
• travel agency services
• all of division arts and recreation services.
Limitations of the data
Not all units in the Māori business population can be matched to the data from the various sources used for Tatauranga Umanga Māori. Each dataset has a specific population scope, such as including only economically significant businesses. Different surveys may exclude specific industries, sectors, or size of business from their population. Therefore, the population of relevant Māori businesses may differ between data sources. Additionally, some units may not have been selected for a specific survey, may have missing data, or were not matched to the dataset.
Stats NZ acknowledges that the coverage of the business population for Tatauranga Umanga Māori needs further improvement. Stats NZ is continuing to work with stakeholders to obtain new and updated Māori business population lists. This will help to ensure that the statistics we produce are representative of the Māori business population.
Changes to data collection/processing
The population for Māori authorities used for this release differs from the population used in previous releases, due to corrections to the way some businesses have been classified. Therefore, the data here differs from data published in previous Tatauranga umanga Māori releases.
Previous releases included a category for Māori SMEs (small- to medium-sized enterprises). In this release, StatsNZ have modified the category to become ‘other Māori enterprises.’ This category now includes Māori SMEs and Māori-owned businesses, other than Māori authorities, with 100 employees or more.
Stats NZ have only released data for the 2020 and 2021 years. A longer time series of data will be released later on in the year 2022.
Data provided by
Dataset name
Tatauranga Umanga Māori 2021
Webpage:
How to find the data
At URL provided, select 'Tatauranga umanga Māori – Statistics on Māori businesses: 2021 – CSV (English)'
Import & extraction details
File as imported: Tatauranga Umanga Māori 2021
From the dataset Tatauranga Umanga Māori 2021, this data was extracted:
- Rows: 545-1,376
- Column: 7
- Provided: 736 data points
This data forms the table Māori Business - Innovation rates and transition to a low-emissions economy 2021.
Dataset originally released on:
September 07, 2022
About this dataset
Tatauranga umanga Māori Statistics on Māori businesses presents information on two subsets of Māori businesses that contribute to our country’s economy.
Method of collection/Data provider
Māori businesses can be identified via:
- self-identification through the Business Operations Survey
- self-identification through the New Zealand Business Number
- IR tax code
- third-party lists (Poutama Trust, New Zealand Māori Tourism)
- publicly available information on post-treaty settlement entities.
Māori authorities are mainly identified via Inland Revenue (IR) tax code information. Some may also be identified via publicly available information. Stats NZ also include data for businesses that are 50 percent or more owned by Māori authorities.
Other Māori enterprises may be identified via membership lists, through self-identification on the New Zealand Business Number (NZBN) register, or through self-identification questions in the annual Stats NZ Business Operations Survey (BOS).
Membership lists were received from Poutama Trust and New Zealand Māori Tourism in 2016, and have not been updated in recent years. Collection of self-identification in the BOS started in 2015 and is limited to businesses covered by and responding to the BOS. Self-identification questions in the NZBN register were added in April 2021.