Tax churn money-go-round puts high cost on society

It is often said that tax is the price we pay for a civilised society. Indeed, taxes are necessary to fund key public services, including defence, law and order, the courts, border controls, civil defence, foreign affairs, public administration generally, and a contestably lengthy list of other potentially worthy activities of a collective nature. Read more

Dr Bryce Wilkinson ONZM
The National Business Review
21 February, 2014

Do qualifications equate to ability?

The government proudly announced this week that the percentage of students leaving school with minimum qualifications needed for a good life (NCEA Level 2) rose from two-thirds (67 per cent) in 2008, to over three-quarters (77 per cent) last year. Even more positively, the percentage of Māori students leaving school with NCEA Level 2 has increased from 44 to 59 per cent. Read more

Rose Patterson
Insights Newsletter
21 February, 2014

A bitter-sweet policy

Individuals should – and in most countries including New Zealand they do – ­have the right to make their own decisions about their lifestyle, such as which career path to follow, what to wear, and what to eat and drink. A number of lifestyle choices, particularly those regarding diet and exercise, have direct effects on an individual’s physical health. Read more

Mark Hennessy
Insights Newsletter
21 February, 2014

A Swiss crevasse for EU relations

No, it was not a good start to the year for the European Union by any account. The French President had to spend more time sorting out his own private affairs than his country’s ailing economy, Italy managed to kick out the third Prime Minister in as many years, and the German Constitutional Court effectively killed the European Central Bank’s main policy to save the Euro. Read more

Dr Oliver Hartwich
Business Spectator
20 February, 2014

Where did our foreign investment go?

Foreign direct investment (FDI) is a contentious subject and there is no limit to the number of debates questioning the efficacy of inwards FDI to the economy. However, the link between investment, FDI and economic growth is well-established. Read more

Khyaati Acharya
Stuff.co.nz
17 February, 2014

Time for urgency not complacency

This year is bound to be an exciting and tumultuous one, as the first tangible effects of the long-awaited economic recovery (in growth terms) coincide with the electoral cycle. Voters can expect the nature of the election promises on both sides of the line to change substantially, with politicians emboldened by the overall uptick in economic activity. Read more

The National Business Review
14 February, 2014

Why is New Zealand the road congestion king?

Let us play a game of spot the odd one out. Which of the following has the highest level of traffic congestion: New Zealand, Australia, Canada, Western Europe or the United States? Read more

Insights Newsletter
14 February, 2014

Madam Ong and the haircut hullabaloo

In 2012, Madam Ong laid a police complaint against her son’s teacher who had cut his hair prior to an exam and threatened to deduct marks for his scruffy haircut. Singapore’s Minister of Education, Mr Heng Swee Keat, contacted the school for their story and publicly agreed with one media commentator, that Madam Ong had caused a hullabaloo. Read more

Rose Patterson
Insights Newsletter
14 February, 2014

Land supply key to the economy

As a homeowner, buy-to-rent investor, or property speculator, it is hard to see New Zealand's booming property market as anything but a positive development when looking through the prism of common sense. The latest round of data from QV show housing prices rose 10 per cent last year, not a bad return by any measure, but made even juicier once you factor in the tax free nature of the capital gains. Read more

Stuff.co.nz
11 February, 2014

NZ falls further on FDI rankings

The New Zealand Initiative’s latest report, Capital Doldrums: How globalisation is bypassing New Zealand, was released late last week. The report shows that while our domestic economy rapidly integrated with the rest of the world between the mid-1980s and 1990s, inwards foreign direct investment (FDI) stocks have since stagnated relative to GDP (albeit at quite a high point). Read more

Khyaati Acharya
Insights Newsletter
7 February, 2014

NZPC report on services

Last week the New Zealand Productivity Commission (NZPC) published its second interim report on productivity in the private sector component of the services industry. This website provides easy access to this report and related documents. Read more

Dr Bryce Wilkinson ONZM
Insights Newsletter
7 February, 2014

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