Union leadership key to education success

This month the primary school teachers' union, the New Zealand Educational Institute (NZEI), and the body representing principals, the New Zealand Principals' Federation (NZPF), gave a thumbs down to the $359m Investing in Educational Success (IES) policy announced by John Key in January. This represented a major system change and is designed to build collaboration among teachers. Read more

Rose Patterson
Stuff.co.nz
23 June, 2014

Trains won’t save Auckland’s traffic congestion woes

From their council offices, looking down on the choked roads of Auckland at rush hour, it is easy to see why planners see rail systems such as the City Rail Link as the most viable solution to congestion. Certainly, trains are an important public transport option. Read more

Khyaati Acharya
The National Business Review
20 June, 2014

Are compact cities better for your health?

Clearly, New Zealand needs a viable plan in order to deal with its urban problems, especially housing affordability and congestion. But whether intensified, compact development should be pursued, on the basis of greater health benefits in particular, is far from clear. Read more

Khyaati Acharya
Insights Newsletter
20 June, 2014

'Q' is for quantitative easing

Those who read the business pages may have come across the term quantitative easing (QE), an apparently magical potent for reviving debt-ridden economies; almost like a shot of adrenaline in the arm of a dying patient. Prior to QE, the orthodox medicine for monetary authorities to use to stimulate the economy was to lower interest rates on some form of official debt, such as the interest rate the central bank pays on overnight deposits, and/or increase liquidity in the banking system by buying back government term debt. Read more

The ABC of Economic Literacy
Insights Newsletter
20 June, 2014

Media release: Compact cities not cure for house prices

Wellington (17 June 2014): Local councils looking to tackle housing affordability and congestion by limiting land supply will only make the problem worse, according to the latest research report from The New Zealand Initiative. The report, Up or Out? Read more

17 June, 2014

Planners must include property prices in their planning

Last week Minister for the Environment Amy Adams piled into the Auckland Council over the Unitary Plan, saying the rule set was unlikely to come close to delivering the 300,000 plus houses the city needs over the next 30 years. The minister noted that the plan imposed even more red tape on the already regulation-choked sector, and if anything, was likely to worsen housing affordability in Auckland. Read more

Interest.co.nz
17 June, 2014

The privilege of being born a New Zealander

It may be an uncomfortable truth, but there are some of us who enjoy rights and privileges above others, simply by virtue of being born. Not by talent, hard work, or any other factor reflecting merit, these people enjoy a privileged status in New Zealand. Read more

Insights Newsletter
13 June, 2014

The Lego movie got think tanks wrong

Recently my partner and I sat down to watch the Lego movie; a thoroughly entertaining laugh-a-minute watch, typical of the style of today’s animated films that somehow manage to pitch the tone and humour at both adults and children alike. For my partner, who grew up with Lego and can make incredible creations with a thousand tiny colourful pieces (biased as I am) it was a journey of reminiscence. Read more

Rose Patterson
Insights Newsletter
13 June, 2014

‘P’ is for price

From an engineering perspective at least, a good case could be made to use silver for all electric wiring. Silver just makes more sense than, say, copper, steel or aluminium. Read more

The ABC of Economic Literacy
Insights Newsletter
13 June, 2014

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