Education Minister Erica Stanford says financial education will be embedded in the refreshed social sciences curriculum for Year 1-10 students from next year. The curriculum will cover key financial skills, such as identifying 'needs' versus 'wants', having a bank account, earning, spending and saving. Stanford said older students would cover more complex concepts such as budgeting, investment, interest, taxes and insurance. Financial maths has already been included in the new maths curriculum for this year. She said a variety of tools and resources – developed in collaboration with financial organisations, banks and charitable trusts – would be made available to schools to help deliver the new curriculum. The Retirement Commission would also work with the Ministry of Education to ensure the resources and tools were consistent with the curriculum.
Bremworth and Godfrey Hirst have settled court proceedings brought by Godfrey Hirst against Bremworth, which arose from Bremworth's 2020-2021 marketing campaign comparing nylon carpet on the floor of the average Kiwi home equating to about 22,000 plastic bags in weight. Bremworth at the time had ceased producing synthetic carpet and moved to manufacturing wool carpets only.
Godfrey Hirst alleged that aspects of that campaign mischaracterised the relative environmental and health impacts of synthetic and wool carpets and breached the Fair Trading Act. Godfrey Hirst dropped its damages claim against Bremworth in 2022.
Bremworth denied breaching the Act, but acknowledged that the marketing campaign may have misled some consumers. The campaign was removed and will not be used again.