NZ has nothing to fear from Chinese farms

My two-day visit to Auckland and Wellington revealed that New Zealanders are conflicted as much, if not more than Australians, about the threats and opportunities of Chinese foreign direct investment (FDI). There are reasons to be wary, but the vast majority of Chinese FDI applications in New Zealand should be welcomed rather than shunned. Read more

Dr John Lee
Insights Newsletter
29 June, 2012

Leave the RBNZ structure alone

Graeme Wheeler was recently appointed Governor of the Reserve Bank of New Zealand starting September 2012 for a five-year term. In the lead up to the appointment, the usual debates over the role of the central bank have resurfaced. Read more

Luke Malpass
Insights Newsletter
29 June, 2012

League tables and the power of information

Opponents of the concept of publishing school league tables advised this week that parents would be confused and misled by such information. Instead, they expect parents to study ERO reports, search school websites, browse through newsletters, interview teachers, and generally undertake their own due diligence to find out whether schools are turning out “kids who have taken control of their own learning” rather than just focusing on “readin’, writin’ and ‘rithmetic”, as one school principal put it. Read more

Roger Partridge
Insights Newsletter
22 June, 2012

NZ brain drain in decline

When Australian growth figures were released a fortnight ago, many in New Zealand sighed and carried on: the cross-Tasman brain drain – now 1000 people a week – was clearly set to continue apace. But will it? Read more

Luke Malpass
Australian Financial Review
19 June, 2012

Fix the super roof while the sun is still shining

Far, far from the troubles at the home front, Prime Minister John Key was visibly enjoying the military honours and his joint press conference with German Chancellor Angela Merkel on his visit to Berlin last week. A better use of his time would have been studying the effects of delaying superannuation reforms. Although last month’s Budget once again confirmed the rising costs of superannuation, the prime minister ruled out reneging on his 2008 campaign promise not to increase the age of eligibility. Read more

Dr Oliver Hartwich
The National Business Review
18 June, 2012

Fix the super roof while the sun is still shining

Far, far from the troubles at the home front, Prime Minister John Key was visibly enjoying the military honours and his joint press conference with Chancellor Angela Merkel on his visit to Berlin last week. A better use of his time would have been studying the effects of delaying superannuation reforms. Although last month’s budget once again confirmed the rising costs of superannuation, the Prime Minister ruled out reneging on his 2008 campaign promise not to increase the age of eligibility. Read more

Dr Oliver Hartwich
Insights Newsletter
15 June, 2012

Should anti-dumping legislation be scrapped?

Since the 1980s, New Zealand has had a relatively free and open economy. Abolishing most forms of protectionism has benefited consumers and made the economy more resilient. Read more

Lukas Schroeter
Insights Newsletter
15 June, 2012

Time for New Zealand to look East

‘Charles pushes past Wills as preferred successor’, read a headline in the Herald last Sunday. Following a wave of enthusiasm after the Queen’s diamond jubilee and last year’s royal wedding, the question of who will succeed to the British throne continues to capture New Zealanders’ interest. Read more

Joseph Judd
Insights Newsletter
15 June, 2012

Aristotle in Dunedin

“A great city is not to be confounded with a populous one.” That’s not a new research finding but a quote by Aristotle (384-322 BC). It opened an event on Dunedin’s Economic Development Strategy on Tuesday, which I attended as a guest speaker. Read more

Dr Oliver Hartwich
Insights Newsletter
8 June, 2012

Budget 2012 - National's discouraging war of attrition

Budget 2012 continued National’s battle to control government spending by attrition rather than by ground-breaking reforms. This battle will be lost eventually because mere attrition increasingly mobilises thwarted spending interests, while preserving both their privileged positions and the mechanisms they can use to increase spending when attrition fatigue has set in. The Yes, Minister TV series made the point best: entrenched interests and bureaucracies outlast politicians. Read more

Dr Bryce Wilkinson ONZM
Insights Newsletter
8 June, 2012

Migrating kiwis in for a rude surprise

Much is being made of the current exodus of New Zealanders to Australia – about a thousand a week at last count. As an indicator of confidence in New Zealand’s economic environment, it is damning. Read more

Luke Malpass
Insights Newsletter
8 June, 2012

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