Make road users pay for new roads

Auckland’s population is projected to be well over two million by 2041. This will place enormous pressure on road and transport infrastructure. Read more

Khyaati Acharya
Insights Newsletter
19 July, 2013

Cash no longer king?

A few weeks ago, I spoke at a breakfast event opened by Maurice Williamson, Minister for customs, Statistics, Land Information and Building and Construction. I wish I had taken the Minister’s remarks more seriously, as I would have been less surprised by the government’s announcement last week: the government is considering options to make credit card companies and online payment services like PayPal collect taxes on online shopping imports. Read more

Dr Oliver Hartwich
Insights Newletter
19 July, 2013

The new elitist temperance movement

The wowsers are back on a futile mission to enforce public morality through statute. In Australia, as in New Zealand, a new temperance movement is testing the boundaries of prohibition to encourage better manners. Read more

Nick Cater
Insights Newsletter
12 July, 2013

Solving housing supply without any more houses!

The New Zealand Herald ran two contributions on the housing affordability debate this week. The first was by the Bank of New Zealand’s Tony Alexander advocating the restriction of foreign investment in housing. Read more

Luke Malpass
Insights Newsletter
12 July, 2013

Get smart - use a computer

Last week I heard a 60-something-year-old talk about getting some files out of his ‘machine’. I imagined some kind of futuristic filing cabinet but it turns out he was talking about his computer. Read more

Rose Patterson
12 July, 2013

The rise of a new ruling class

Australia is often referred to as the “lucky country”. However, what most Kiwis (and many Australians) don’t know is that Donald Horne was being unkind when he coined the phrase in the 1960s, the full sentence being: “run by second-rate people who share its luck.” Former Finance Minister Michael Cullen once said of Australia: “It’s nothing to do with their intrinsic superiority or less regulation or whatever, it’s because they’ve got this vast mineral wealth. Read more

Luke Malpass
The National Business Review
12 July, 2013

Pouring money into education

Last week, the OECD published Education at a Glance 2013, comparing education indicators across 42 countries. Ministers Steven Joyce and Hekia Parata highlighted a few points of interest. Read more

Rose Patterson
Insights Newsletter
5 July, 2013

R.I.P. Kenneth Minogue

One of the great, yet little known Kiwi academic giants has passed away. Professor Kenneth Robert Minogue, a New Zealander by birth, Australian by upbringing, and Englishman in his working life, has died at 83. Read more

Luke Malpass
Insights Newsletter
5 July, 2013

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