Thursday, June 13, 2013

Greens, National in gun over web ads

The Green Party have said they will link to the source data, explain their calculations and use more specific scenarios to avoid confusion in their online ads

The Green Party says it will provide links to source data and calculations in their future online advertising following a complaint to the Advertising Standards Authority.
The National Party also had a complaint laid against it after a tweet posted from Prime Minister John Key's account.
The authority received a complaint from C. Shortland about an info-graphic posted on the 'Green Party of Aotearoa' Facebook page on April 2.
The info-graphic had information about how take-home pay would change following several government policy changes on April 1, including the introduction of the youth minimum wage.
According to the ad, an 18-year-old part-time student who had come off the unemployment benefit into her first full-time job would take home $357 per week from April 1– compared with $455 before the changes.
The ad has the Greens logo on the bottom right-hand side and was authorised by a member of the Green Party.
The complainant believed the figures had been miscalculated and misleading in the comparison of take-home pay.
The Complaints Board agreed it was possible to misinterpret the info-graphic as meaning any person's take-home pay would be reduced by the specified amount.
It said National's policy changes mentioned in the info-graphic would only affect those who were entering the workforce after April 1. People currently employed would not be affected as much as the ad implied.
In response to the complaint, the Greens said the info-graphic presented a hypothetical situation faced by a student in light of the policy changes.
"We felt it was important to comment on the changes that the Government made to show the disadvantage they would cause some people. We made sure that we checked our numbers and that the info-graphic was checked before being posted."
It did not accept the interpretation of the ad that a person employed the week before April 1 would earn less the next week.
"Our clear intention was to present information that contrasted the impact on a hypothetical person… The calculations we have used are accurate in our view."
However, following the complaint the Greens have said they will link to the source data, explain their calculations and use more specific scenarios to avoid confusion.
Another complaint was also made after a tweet from the Prime Minister's Twitter account which showed an info-graphic claiming crime had decreased.
The image claimed the recorded crime rate per 10,000 people was 1011 in 2008 compared to 848 in 2012. At the bottom of the image it stated "lowest crime rate in 30 years".
Complainant W. Hind said the statement was presented as facts "without actual proof".
However, the Complaints Board did not uphold the complaint because there were sufficient statistics to back up the claims.
3 News Thu, 30 May 2013 11:55a.m.

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