Let's get politics out of power

If a week is a long time in politics, it is an age in business, especially for those sectors of the economy exposed to political volatility. Just ask the listed electricity companies, whose share prices are still wearing the effects of the single buyer policy the Labour and Green parties launched one year ago. Read more

Insights Newsletter
23 May, 2014

'M' is for Money

Money is the modern economy's essential lubricant. But for money, there is only barter trade—and poverty. Read more

The ABC of economic literacy
Insights Newsletter
23 May, 2014

Media release: RMA backtrack hurts housing affordability

Wellington (20 May 2014): The New Zealand Initiative has expressed disappointment that proposed reforms of Resource Management Act (RMA) have been abandoned, calling it a missed opportunity to address skyrocketing housing costs. The National Party’s bid to overhaul the legislation was stymied after coalition partners United Future and the Maori Party withdrew support for the reforms citing environmental concerns. Read more

20 May, 2014

Where greenies meet economists

Every corner you turn, there is another nature-loving, compost-making, bike-riding, community-befriending greenie - you know the type - they knit their own yoghurts. Perhaps this is because I live in New Zealand's oldest hippie suburb, Aro Valley in Wellington, but it seems the resurgence of green-thinking is not limited to this one neighbourhood. Read more

Rose Patterson
Stuff.co.nz
20 May, 2014

A cure for local government

Competition is a transformative force and is responsible for shaping everything from biology to the economy. Governments have set up institutional bodies to foster and encourage it. Read more

The National Business Review
16 May, 2014

The lunacy of bureaucracy

20th century German-language novelist, Franz Kafka, said that “every revolution evaporates and leaves behind only the slime of a new bureaucracy.” Clearly, the man was not a fan of bureaucracies. In fact, “Kafkaesque” is how we now describe the worst aspects of bureaucracy. Read more

Khyaati Acharya
Insights Newsletter
16 May, 2014

'L' is for labour market

‘The labour market’ refers to all the places where firms look for people to hire, and where workers look for job opportunities. It exists because firms need workers and workers need jobs. Read more

The ABC of Economic Literacy
Insights Newsletter
16 May, 2014

The pitfalls of survey design

This week the primary teachers’ union NZEI released results from a poll intended to reveal people’s preferences for how public money is spent on education. According to the NZEI, “less than 6 per cent of people think the government’s plan to establish new leadership roles for some principals and teachers is a good use of increased education funding”. Read more

Rose Patterson
Insights Newsletter
9 May, 2014

3000 reasons to move to Christchurch?

Earlier this week, the Ministry of Social Development announced a new policy to support the Canterbury rebuild and reduce unemployment. The policy, dubbed ‘3k to Christchurch’ is a one-off incentive of $3,000 to beneficiaries outside of Christchurch to relocate and work in the city. Read more

Insights Newsletter
9 May, 2014

'K' for Keynesian Economics

Keynesian Economics owes its name to a problematic economic theory, put forward in the late 1930s by a brilliant but mercurial English economist with a genius for advocacy and rhetoric, Lord John Maynard Keynes. Keynes took so many positions on so many issues during his career that it became accepted wisdom, as Winston Churchill once observed, that if you asked two economists for a view you would get three opinions, two of them from Mr Keynes. Read more

The ABC of Economic Literacy
Insights Newsletter
9 May, 2014

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