Niue

Women dancing. Pacific Islands

Niue, is a Polynesian nation in political association with New Zealand. Isolation, inadequate infrastructure, limited natural resources, depopulation and natural disasters all pose development challenges, meaning aid and remittances from New Zealand are crucial. Climate change is a serious threat to the existence of many communities across the island.

Nearly 95% of Niue’s population lives in New Zealand, and the rocky coral atoll has a population of around 1,200 people.

Niue is predominantly a lower-middle income nation but have far higher incomes than other Polynesian countries as a result of stronger private sectors, well-developed commercial agriculture, and extensively developed tourist industries. Niue also has one of the highest proportions of formal sector employees in the Pacific and compared with other Pacific Island Countries, it has a larger number of employees in manufacturing and a smaller number in public and community services. Agriculture accounts for a significant proportion of total exports along with fish and
copra.

Oxfam in Niue

Oxfam is reinforcing its relationships with regional civil society organizations and local Red Cross societies to help support the islands in the event of a natural disaster.