Video anchor: Māori systems and collective value
- Pause and discuss: Where in this clip do you see value being circulated rather than extracted?
- Transfer task: Students add one evidence point from the clip to their written analysis before continuing.
Enrichment Suggestion (LF_Te_Ao_Māori): Frame this entire lesson around the concept of Mana. In the Pākehā economy, accumulation of wealth gives you status. In the traditional Māori economy, distribution of wealth (Generosity/Manaakitanga) gives you Mana.
Present two scenarios to the class:
Discussion: Which system builds a stronger community? This is the core difference between market economics and Māori economics.
"Utu" is often translated as "revenge", but it really means "reciprocity" or "balance".
"Tatau Pounamu" (The Greenstone Door) represents a peace agreement. Gifts (Taonga) were often exchanged to seal peace, transforming enemies into trading partners.
Students are divided into "Hapū" (Clans). Each Hapū has abundance of ONE resource but none of the others.
Has abundance of:
Kaimoana (Seafood)
Has abundance of:
Birds (Kererū/Tūī)
Has abundance of:
Kūmara
Has abundance of:
Obsidian (Tool stone)
Match the Māori value to its economic function:
| Value | Economic Function |
|---|---|
| Manaakitanga (Hospitality/Care) |
Distribution of wealth. Ensuring everyone is fed. Gaining status through generosity. |
| Kaitiakitanga (Guardianship) |
Resource management. Sustainability. Ensuring the "factory" (nature) isn't destroyed. |
| Whanaungatanga (Kinship) |
Social security. The safety net that ensures nobody falls through the cracks. |
We'll look at what happened when two economic worlds collided: Economic Colonization.
Use this clip to ground discussion on utu, reciprocity, and who benefits from economic systems.
Students will engage with this resource to critically examine economic systems — understanding how wealth, power, and resources are distributed in Aotearoa New Zealand, and exploring indigenous and alternative economic frameworks that prioritise collective wellbeing, mana, and tino rangatiratanga over individual accumulation.
Scaffold support: Provide structured comparison frameworks (e.g., two-column tables: "current system vs alternative") for entry-level access. Offer extension tasks asking students to research a specific Māori economic enterprise (e.g., Ngāi Tahu Holdings, Tainui Group Holdings) and evaluate how it balances commercial success with cultural values.
ELL / ESOL: Economic concepts (equity, redistribution, exploitation, surplus value, collective ownership) need concrete grounding — use local NZ examples and visual infographics. Allow oral discussion of economic justice issues before written analysis. Draw connections to students' home countries' economic systems as valid comparative frameworks.
Inclusion: Economic discussions can touch on students' lived experiences of poverty, precarity, or privilege — create a safe, non-judgmental space. Neurodiverse learners benefit from concrete case studies rather than abstract theory. Frame economic justice as a systems problem, not a personal failing — this reframe is both accurate and inclusive.
Mātauranga Māori lens: The Māori economy before colonisation was not "primitive" — it was a sophisticated system of reciprocal exchange (utu), collective resource management (rāhui, kaitiakitanga), redistribution through manaakitanga, and wealth measured in relationships and obligations rather than individual accumulation. Colonisation deliberately disrupted these systems through land confiscation and the introduction of individual title. Contemporary Māori economic development — through iwi corporations, Māori land trusts, and social enterprises — represents a reclamation of rangatiratanga in the economic sphere. The concept of ōhanga Māori (Māori economy) offers a genuinely alternative framework for thinking about justice, sufficiency, and collective flourishing.
Prior knowledge: Students benefit from basic familiarity with how markets and governments work. No specialist economics knowledge required — the unit builds this progressively through accessible case studies.
High-quality resources from official New Zealand education sites to extend and enrich this learning content.
Comprehensive history of the Māori economy from pre-European times to the present day.