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

Media release: Is Sweden a socialist economy?

Dr Christian Sandström will talk in Wellington on 24 October, on Sweden’s economic position and whether the country really has a socialist economy. With taxes and labour market regulation the only exceptions, Sweden is today in many regards a capitalist economy. Read more

19 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

Degrees and the job market

Education is valuable and having one should improve your life prospects. But does a generic bachelor’s degree guarantee its owner influence, riches and success? Read more

Rachael Thurston
Insights Newsletter
12 October, 2012

New Zealand's ultra-fast intranet

This week’s report by UNICEF highlighted slow internet speeds as the biggest first world problem for around 80% of New Zealanders. Current infrastructure is struggling to meet the daily demands of consumers, causing network congestion. Read more

Nick Phillips
Insights Newsletter
12 October, 2012

Mutual imputation recognition

The productivity commissions in New Zealand and Australia recently completed a joint study to mark the thirtieth anniversary of Closer Economic Relations (CER) and examine ways to further strengthen economic ties between the two countries. This was a welcome development, as there is a feeling that CER has stalled over the past couple of decades, particularly in capital flows and mutual recognition of franking and imputationcredits. Read more

Luke Malpass
Insights Newsletter
5 October, 2012

Crime rates fall but targets unmet

Police statistics released this week show crime rates dropping to their lowest since 1988–89. Recorded offences dropped to 394,522 in 2011–12, down by 21,802 or 5.2% from 2010–11. Read more

Catherine Harland
Insights Newsletter
5 October, 2012

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