Jason Krupp

Former Research Fellow

Jason Krupp was a Research Fellow at The New Zealand Initiative from 2013 to 2017. Before joining the Initiative, Jason was a business reporter at The Dominion Post. He previously worked for Fairfax’s Business Bureau where he was chiefly responsible for covering equity and currency markets for the group. Prior to that, he wrote for BusinessDesk, New Zealand’s only dedicated business news agency. Jason has a degree in journalism from Rhodes University, and has previously lived in Hong Kong and South Africa.

Recent Work

The 'what's yours is mine' rules stymie economic development

If you wanted to sum up the madness of mining regulation in New Zealand the tongue-in-cheek phrase “what’s yours is mine and mine’s my own” is a great fit, as judged by a situation playing out in Northland right now. Minewatch Northland, an anti-mining group, is urging local residents to resist any attempt by Evolution Mining to conduct exploration work near Whangarei over concerns it could introduce heavy metals and other chemicals into the waterways. Read more

Jason Krupp
Interest.co.nz
12 October, 2015

Councils should be debating TPPA

The Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPPA) has made all kinds of waves in the media recently, but the least expected has to be the news that Auckland Council spent two and half hours debating the free trade agreement. The result of the meeting was that the council’s Regional Strategy and Policy Committee kicked for touch by requesting that the final text of the agreement be released before a firmer position was taken on the trade deal. Read more

Jason Krupp
Interest.co.nz
10 October, 2015

Put away the council hammer

The saying that if your only tool is a hammer, then every problem looks like a nail seems particularly apt when describing central government’s approach to local government reform. Staring some pretty daunting challenges in the face, like the wave of infrastructure that needs to be refreshed off an ageing ratepayer base over the next 30 years, central government’s preferred solution so far has been to amalgamate councils into bigger structures. Read more

Jason Krupp
The National Business Review
2 October, 2015

Let go of the amalgamation bone

This week the people of Central Hawkes Bay, Wairoa, Napier and Hastings voted two-to-one against a proposal to merge their authorities into a mega-council. The move is a third black eye for the National-led government in recent years, which seems to view bigger-is-better as the model for local government. Read more

Jason Krupp
Insights Newsletter
18 September, 2015

NIMBY hypocrisy

Do older Australians hate younger Australians? This is a question that some were left pondering after attending a recent presentation by John Daley of the Grattan Institute on the urbanisation challenge facing Australian cities. Read more

Jason Krupp
Interest.co.nz
14 September, 2015

Mayor's dream could turn nightmarish

Recently Wellington Mayor Celia Wade-Brown, in an open letter, pitched Wellington as a solution to those Aucklanders fed up with traffic jams, high house prices, and eye-watering rates increases (so everyone really). She made a compelling case. Read more

Jason Krupp
Insights Newsletter
4 September, 2015

Don't let urban planning ideologues have their way

One of the most commonly held views on cities you will hear is that urban centres need to be carefully designed by town planning regulators in order to be efficient. That is to say, that without trained professionals telling private developers what to build and where, cities will descend into chaos. Read more

Jason Krupp
Interest.co.nz
29 August, 2015

A profession worse than death

If you have a nemesis and want to inflict on them a brutal punishment, put away the thumb screws. Wish instead for them to be reincarnated as a transport planner. Read more

Jason Krupp
Insights Newsletter
28 August, 2015

Price signals drive Huntly power station decision

Earlier this month Genesis Energy announced it was mothballing New Zealand’s only large scale coal fired electricity plant. The move, effective as of late 2018, will reduce the country’s total CO2 emissions by about 2.5%, setting the sector on course to produce 90% of the country’s electricity from renewable sources. Read more

Jason Krupp
Interest.co.nz
24 August, 2015

Fear of foreigners a bitter crop

With Labour’s bid to cultivate a fear of foreigners buying houses failing to sprout in the polls, the party is now looking to sow the same message to a more fertile field. The farming sector. Read more

Jason Krupp
Insights Newsletter
14 August, 2015

Let's kill, stuff Ricky Gervais

If the irate masses on the internet value African conservation efforts and the survival of wild species like lion, they need to sign a petition calling for Ricky Gervais to be shot, stuffed and mounted on a trophy room wall. Although it sounds extreme, it is the only reasonable call to make based on the internet’s need to publicly flagellate anyone deemed to be hurting animals, and the actual economic facts of how trophy hunting works in Africa. Read more

Jason Krupp
The National Business Review
7 August, 2015

Supersized paternalism

(Warning: this editorial contains large doses of sarcasm and anti-paternalism that may exceed recommended nanny state allowances.) With that out of the way, the US Federal Government recently announced plans to make nutritional food labelling mandatory in restaurants, grocery stores, and at vending machines. The aim behind the plan is to tackle rising obesity rates on the assumption that there is an information market failure at the root of this health crisis. Read more

Jason Krupp
Insights Newsletter
31 July, 2015

LGNZ's funding reform proposal

This week, Local Government New Zealand launched a funding reform pitch at central government, broadly making a case that if you want the national economy to grow, you need to fund the enablers of that growth better. This is certainly not the first such pitch that the local government sector has made to officials in Wellington on the matter. Read more

Jason Krupp
Interest.co.nz
22 July, 2015

Stay in the loop: Subscribe to updates