Miracles and mirages in the eurozone wonderland

In that faraway wonderland that it is the eurozone, nothing is quite what it seems. It is a strange place where half-bankrupt governments can plan a return to capital markets at moderate yields, and a central bank is able to impress analysts by talking about things it cannot do. Both instances are patently absurd, but just because something is absurd has never stopped it from happening in Europe. Read more

Dr Oliver Hartwich
Business Spectator
10 April, 2014

Grow brains to grow business

If we want to grow our businesses, whether by market share, profit, or offering customers better value, we need to grow our people - and growing people means growing big brains. Management guru Tom Peters, speaking at the New Zealand Initiative's annual retreat dinner recently, gave a resounding and impassioned speech on the importance to business of investing in people, first and foremost. Read more

Rose Patterson
Stuff.co.nz
8 April, 2014

MMP means much more puzzlement

If you are familiar with Harry Enfield’s legendary BBC television series, there was a character called Jürgen the German. A tourist to London, he started every conversation with an apology “for my country’s disgraceful behaviour during ze war” – only to then rant on about what’s wrong with Britain. Read more

Dr Oliver Hartwich
The National Business Review
4 April, 2014

Education is about people, not numbers

This week the New Zealand Herald reported that Selwyn College has completely turned their figures around, lifting their NCEA Level 1 pass rate from 39 per cent in 2007, to 93 per cent in 2013. But could this relentless focus on figures – be it NCEA, National Standards, or Pisa – be ignoring what is most important? Read more

Rose Patterson
Insights Newsletter
4 April, 2014

New Zealand, you are fat

For professional reasons, Rachel Smalley may have had to quickly retract her unfortunate on-air slip, where she labelled New Zealand women ‘heifers’ and ‘lardos’, but the facts speak for themselves. According to the Ministry of Health, one-in-three adults in New Zealand is obese, with a Body Mass Index reading of 30 or more. Read more

Insights Newsletter
4 April, 2014

‘F’ is for freedom

Trying to explain economic freedom to someone living in an economically free country is like trying to explain to a fish what water is. Like a fish in water, when we are free we rarely stop to consider what freedom is, why it is important to our livelihood, and what would happen if it was ever taken away. Read more

The ABC of Economic Literacy
Insights Newsletter
4 April, 2014
Open for Business cover border

Open for Business: Removing the barriers to foreign investment

This is the third and final report in The New Zealand Initiative’s series on New Zealand’s global financial links. The second report in the series, Capital Doldrums, found that New Zealand stands out in international comparisons for the restrictiveness of its regulatory regime and the slump it its ranking for investment attractiveness. Read more

Dr Bryce Wilkinson ONZM
Khyaati Acharya
1 April, 2014

Is Auckland at its tipping point?

One of the principal arguments put forward for the development of Auckland into an international-sized city is that urban economies of scale generate better outcomes. This is called an agglomeration benefit, or rather the economic advantage that firms and people get from being situated closer to markets, suppliers and places of work. Read more

Stuff.co.nz
1 April, 2014

Housing needs a flaming brand

In Greek mythology the Hydra was a deadly water serpent with multiple heads. For each head that was cut off, two others sprang out to replace it. Read more

The National Business Review
28 March, 2014

Hand-outs for the wealthy

According to recent research, the new poor are not actually poor at all. Well, at least not as we know it. Read more

Khyaati Acharya
Insights Newsletter
28 March, 2014

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