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World class education? Why New Zealand must strengthen its teaching profession

Why is NZ shedding talented teachers? NZ has a high quality but unequal education system  It fails too many Māori and Pasifika students, with wide gaps in performance Policies to attract, retain and develop talent are needed to tackle the problem This report, written by John Morris and Rose Patterson, identifies the critical junctures where teaching quality can be influenced, and the organisations that have the power to strengthen the teaching profession. Read more

John Morris and Rose Patterson
7 October, 2013

Media release: Why is NZ shedding talented teachers?

Wellington (7 October 2013): While national standards, charter schools, and class sizes have dominated the education debate, research by The New Zealand Initiative shows teacher quality is the most important in-school factor influencing student achievement. But as the World Class Education? Read more

7 October, 2013

HR challenges not limited to business

One of the major issues facing businesses today in this globalised world is how to attract, develop and retain the right talent. And while money is of course important, professional development, career progression, job status, and the intrinsic value of work all play into this, making it all the more challenging for HR departments. Read more

Rose Patterson
Stuff.co.nz
7 October, 2013

New Zealand, Australia face long-term spending crisis

Simon Cowan, at last weekend’s Liberty & Society conference, addressed the pressing issue of Australia’s ballooning federal expenditure and the huge economic and social impact this will have if spending isn’t curbed soon. The elephant in the room that Cowan, a research fellow at the Centre for Independent Studies, is referring to is Australia’s dwindling economic growth, an ageing population and the rapidly rising healthcare and pension costs associated with the demographic shift. Read more

Khyaati Acharya
Insights Newsletter
4 October, 2013

NZ Power well-meaning but ‘mad’

The shifts in the political landscape with the anointment of David Cunliffe have sparked a flurry of ‘what if Labour and Greens get in?’ policy speculation recently, and unsurprisingly the electricity sector has been spotlight. Since it was first mooted earlier this year, the electricity industry and business sector have been at pains to call for a thorough economic analysis before policymakers dismantle the free market system currently used and move to a single buyer model. Read more

Insights Newsletter
4 October, 2013
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A Global Perspective on Localism

A joint publication from The New Zealand Initiative and Local Government New Zealand (LGNZ). A Global Perspective on Localism discusses the question of if the developed world is looking to put more power in the hands of people at a local government level, why is New Zealand headed in the other direction? Read more

Dr Oliver Hartwich
2 October, 2013

Media release: Local power to local people

Wellington (2 October 2013): If the developed world is looking to put more power in the hands of people at a local government level, why is New Zealand headed in the other direction? According to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), 30 per cent of member state public spending is controlled by local government on average, but in New Zealand that figure stands at 11 per cent. Read more

2 October, 2013

Otaki expressway strays from economic rigor

It was both unsurprising but interesting to open the paper this week and see the proposed Otaki Expressway in the headlines again. Unsurprising because the NZ Transport Agency (NZTA) is currently having its resource consent heard for the proposed road, but interesting because of the way the NZTA lawyers are pitching the project. Read more

Insights Newsletter
27 September, 2013

Powering local communities

It’s time we asked the fundamental question. Can we have strong local economies and vigorous communities when so much public decision-making is made by central government in Wellington? Read more

Malcolm Alexander
Insights Newsletter
27 September, 2013

Man of war without guns

It is a new thing for New Zealand to have a chief science advisor to the Prime Minister. Sir Peter Gluckman’s laudable brief is "to promote discourse that will lead New Zealand to better apply evidence-based knowledge and research across all domains of public endeavour". Read more

Dr Bryce Wilkinson ONZM
Insights Newsletter
27 September, 2013

Productivity is more than just labour

The Productivity Commission’s stinging slap to the face of working New Zealanders reveals we spend more time at the grindstone but achieve less. By the numbers, we work about 15% longer than the OECD average but produce 20% less when measured on an output per hour basis. Read more

The National Business Review
27 September, 2013

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