New Zealand's minimum wage

Governments use the minimum wage to keep workers with the least skills or work experience out of work, albeit as an undesired consequence rather than a direct intent. School-leavers have the least work experience – in addition, the lack of basic standards of literacy and numeracy is an enormous handicap for 10% to 20% of school-leavers. Read more

Dr Bryce Wilkinson ONZM
Insights Newsletter
1 March, 2013

An Italian hell

Lasciate ogni speranza voi ch’entrate (“Abandon all hope, ye who enter here”) is written above the gates of hell in Dante Alighieri’s Divine Comedy. Following last weekend’s elections, this gloomy admonishment might fit Italy as well. Read more

Dr Oliver Hartwich
Insights Newsletter
1 March, 2013

Media release: Dinner with John Howard

Former Australian Prime Minister John Howard will be the keynote speaker at the The New Zealand Initiative’s annual retreat dinner in Auckland on 21 March. Mr Howard will speak about ‘Trans-Tasman Relations in the Pacific Century.’ “My talk will focus on some of the joint opportunities and challenges before Australia and New Zealand in a regional economy dominated by the continued development of China and many other Asian economies,” says Mr Howard Dr Oliver Hartwich, Executive Director of The New Zealand Initiative, says John Howard’s talk will be educational, inspiring, and enlightening. Read more

25 February, 2013

British planning and us

I am currently on a research trip studying local government and housing affordability in different jurisdictions around the world. This week, I have been in and around London conducting interviews and meetings. Read more

Luke Malpass
Insights Newsletter
22 February, 2013

Who owns the road?

The battle between motorists and cyclists never ends. Motorists think cyclists are pests and shouldn’t be allowed to ride on the roads because they block the way and are accidents waiting to happen. Read more

Brigitte Masters
Insights Newsletter
22 February, 2013

Three years is more than enough

When it comes to parliamentary term lengths and etiquette, my colleague and boss Dr Oliver Hartwich is sadly misguided. The arguments for four- (or five-) year fixed parliamentary term can be summed up as stability, predictability and giving government time to implement its agenda. Read more

Luke Malpass
Insights Newsletter
15 February, 2013

Shocking your system - reverse culture shock in New Zealand

When I landed on home soil in New Zealand two weeks ago having spent the past six months in Japan, I got on the wrong end of the bus by boarding through the back door and forgot to pay my bus fare. In Japan, you pay at the end. Read more

Rose Patterson
Insights Newsletter
15 February, 2013

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