What is world-class education?

Lesley Longstone, the secretary and chief executive of the Ministry of Education, says New Zealand cannot claim to possess a world-class education system. Strangely, Hekia Parata, Minister of Education said the very opposite just last week. Read more

Rachael Thurston
Insights Newsletter
2 November, 2012

Feeling fiscally stimulated?

Even so, New Zealand has its share of proponents of fiscal stimulus in the form of $900 cheques that former Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd posted to 75% of working-age Australians in 2009. Australian Treasury Secretary Ken Henry said the stimulus of A$10 billion was all about ‘go hard, go early, go households’. Read more

Luke Malpass
Insights Newsletter
2 November, 2012

New Zealand and Canada: Economic fellow travellers

If New Zealand were anywhere other than right next to Australia, our current rates of economic growth, unemployment and proximity to developing global markets would be the envy of the world. As it is, comparisons with Australia are not always useful. Read more

Luke Malpass
Insights Newsletter
26 October, 2012

Are the Finns worth following on education?

Around 50 years ago, the newly independent Finland identified education as a key nation-building exercise. Ever since, Finland’s public school system has been of interest to other countries. Read more

Rachael Thurston
Insights Newsletter
26 October, 2012

Measuring intrusive regulation

George Mason University’s Mercatus Center is a top public policy think tank based in Virginia near Washington, DC. Some of its 2012 publications might be of interest to readers of Insights: a 28-page blueprint for regulatory reform in the United States (the blueprint could be easily applied to New Zealand). Read more

Dr Bryce Wilkinson ONZM
Insights Newsletter
26 October, 2012

True colours

It's hard for supporters when salaries trump team loyalties. As I was watching Wellington Phoenix beat Sydney FC 2-0, I wasn’t sure which was stranger: seeing legendary Italian striker Alessandro Del Piero play football in New Zealand, or supporting a team dressed in black and yellow? Read more

Dr Oliver Hartwich
The Listener
20 October, 2012

End the Dotcom sideshow

The story has been going on for so long that it is hard to imagine daily news without Kim Dotcom. Ever since the controversial internet entrepreneur’s arrest on his Auckland estate, which is as oversized as his personality, the Dotcom saga has fluctuated between spy story, political scandal, and soap opera. Read more

Dr Oliver Hartwich
Insights Newsletter
19 October, 2012

The revival of the Swedish capitalism

Around the world, leftist intellectuals have used Sweden as a poster child for the idea that socialism can simultaneously lead to prosperity and equality. Proponents of free enterprise usually don’t know how to respond to such statements. Read more

Christian Sandström
Insights Newsletter
19 October, 2012

The jobs crisis summit and the exchange rate

The Engineering, Printing and Manufacturing Union’s ‘jobs crisis’ summit in Auckland will be over in an hour or so after you receive this edition of Insights. The secretary of the EPMU, Bill Newson, claimed before the summit that the decline of manufacturing reflects 30 years of ‘hands-off’ economic management. Read more

Dr Bryce Wilkinson ONZM
Insights Newsletter
12 October, 2012

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