LGNZ report deserves more than Key's dismissal

It turns out that you can both agree with Local Government New Zealand that we need to change how local government is financed, and with the Taxpayers’ Union that a lot of local governments could be more efficient. I think we can manage to hit both targets with one instrument in this case: fixing how local government is financed can help to make local government more efficient. Read more

Dr Eric Crampton
Insights Newsletter
5 February, 2015

Can families trust in Tony Abbott?

After what have been a turbulent few weeks for the Australian Prime Minister, the isolated chirps that Abbott should resign have reached a united cacophony after the Queensland election last weekend. In fact, on Wednesday, iPredict was trading at a 75 percent probability that Abbott departs as leader by July. Read more

Insights Newsletter
5 February, 2015

The value of public sector bosses

Before Christmas, The Dominion Post asked why public sector pay “hardly ever come[s] down” and whether it has to follow international and corporate trends. It is a reasonable concern, especially for taxpayers who ultimately foot the salary, but is it as simple as the numbers suggest? Read more

Mark Maciolek
Interest.co.nz
2 February, 2015

Media release: Think tank welcomes LGNZ funding report

Wellington (2 February 2015): The New Zealand Initiative has welcomed the launch of LGNZ’s latest discussion paper on local government funding as an important step towards improving how councils deliver services to communities. The think tank’s Executive Director, Dr Oliver Hartwich, said New Zealand has one of the most centralised forms of government among developed countries, with 90 cents in every tax dollar spent by officials in Wellington. Read more

2 February, 2015

Charities regulation fit for purpose?

Late last year, Australia proposed a repeal bill that could see the Australian Taxation Office and Australian Securities and Investments Commission take charge from the Australian Charities and Not-for-profits Commission (ACNC). ACNC is the body that regulates and maintains a database of all registered charitable entities in Australia. Read more

Mark Maciolek
Insights Newsletter
30 January, 2015

Scaffolding Regulation: The Morality of Cost-Benefit Analysis

One critical response to my 12 January 2015 Dominion Post article here on the need for the benefits from government scaffolding regulation to exceed the costs asserted that: This misses the point that that decisions about people's safety at work should never be based solely on money. There is a moral test that also needs to be satisfied. Read more

Dr Bryce Wilkinson ONZM
Insights Newsletter
30 January, 2015

Restricting foreign ownership is a restriction of property rights

There is nothing like a Kiwi summer to make you proud to be a New Zealander - from our pristine beaches, to our acres of green pastures, to the great sense of community that naturally forms in holiday parks and campgrounds across the country. There is something special about this land and its people that many of us feel is worth preserving. Read more

Interest.co.nz
26 January, 2015

Foreign ownership of land register is misguided

The contentious debate over foreign ownership has been heartily reignited, subsequent to Labour MP Stuart Nash questioning whether foreign investors are really adding value to the country. He has described the selling off of productive land to foreign investors who repatriate the profits overseas as a “dead end street” and is demanding greater transparency in the approval process of foreign investment applications. Read more

Khyaati Acharya
The National Business Review
23 January, 2015

NZ not Godzone (but it’s okay)

In case you missed the flurry of stories surrounding the release of the latest census data, New Zealand may at some point in the foreseeable future have to give up its status as God’s Own Country. According to the data, the number of people who stated their religious affiliation as Christian dropped below the 50 per cent for the first time in 2013 census, while the number of people claiming no religion rose to just under 42 per cent. Read more

Insights Newsletter
23 January, 2015

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