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Humanitarian aid versus development aid

Earlier this week, Foreign Affairs Minister Murray McCully announced that a further $2.975 million would be provided to the Filipino government in the aftermath of the devastatingly destructive Typhoon Haiyan. The additional funding will take New Zealand’s total contribution to the cause to more than $5 million. Read more

Khyaati Acharya
Insights Newsletter
22 November, 2013

KiwiAssure provides no assurance

The biggest surprise announcement out of Labour’s conference last weekend was the proposal to establish KiwiAssure, a new state-owned insurance company. Speaking to his party’s delegates, opposition leader David Cunliffe argued KiwiAssure would inject more competition into the insurance market. Read more

Dr Oliver Hartwich
Insights Newsletter
8 November, 2013

Crowd funding the public interest

In his book, The Great Degeneration, Niall Ferguson describes how the West’s six ‘killer applications’ (competition, science, property rights, medicine, consumerism, and work ethic) are on the decline. "Our democracies have broken the contract between the generations by heaping IOUs on our children and grandchildren. Read more

Dr Jens Schroeder
Insights Newsletter
8 November, 2013

What will unify the Taxpayers’ Union?

Last week the New Zealand Taxpayers’ Union was launched, with a purpose as challenging as its name. Claiming the term ‘union’ is a smart move strategically. Read more

Insights Newsletter
8 November, 2013

Why take the risk if there is no reward?

It is unreasonable to ask investors to risk their capital on start-up or research and development funding without offering them a return commensurate with that risk. And yet, this is precisely how the current government framework for funding start-ups and research grants is structured. Read more

Khyaati Acharya
Insights Newsletter
1 November, 2013

Big personalities but short on policy

Twenty-four hours from now local election voting closes. Time is ticking to tick those boxes, lick that envelope and proudly post your papers off, thus exercising your democratic right to vote for your chosen local government representatives. Read more

Ben England
Insights Newsletter
11 October, 2013

We should be grateful for the steady hand

Safely perched in the obscurity of Wellington, it’s with a strange combination of boredom and fascination that I’m watching the US budgetary showdown, a bid by the Republicans to force the Obama administration to dial back state healthcare spending. This is because as a former markets reporter, I know almost with a certainty that one side will blink before too long. Read more

Insights Newsletter
11 October, 2013

The government is not Santa

It is a sign of maturity when children discover that Santa is not real. There is no fat, bearded man who comes down the chimney and deposits gifts under the Christmas tree. Read more

Insights Newsletter
11 October, 2013

New Zealand, Australia face long-term spending crisis

Simon Cowan, at last weekend’s Liberty & Society conference, addressed the pressing issue of Australia’s ballooning federal expenditure and the huge economic and social impact this will have if spending isn’t curbed soon. The elephant in the room that Cowan, a research fellow at the Centre for Independent Studies, is referring to is Australia’s dwindling economic growth, an ageing population and the rapidly rising healthcare and pension costs associated with the demographic shift. Read more

Khyaati Acharya
Insights Newsletter
4 October, 2013

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