Making private prisons palatable

For anyone interested in how the private sector may be involved in improving social outcomes, Corrections Minister Sam Lotu-Iiga’s interview on TV3’s The Nation is a must watch. The interview, which focussed on private prisons, is revealing. Read more

Insights Newsletter
8 May, 2015

Why, why, why? Housing supply

This week the price of an average house in Auckland reached the $800,000 mark. The housing problem must be solved and small children might just have the answers to achieve this. Read more

Rose Patterson
Insights Newsletter
8 May, 2015

Critical thinking needed on ECE claims

Early childhood education (ECE) has been under the spotlight. The New Zealand Herald’s Kirsty Johnston recently reported major quality issues, with 150 ECE providers rated by the Education Review Office (ERO) in 2014 as “requiring further development”. Read more

Rose Patterson
Interest.co.nz
4 May, 2015

What's in a cost?

If we took seriously the dozens of reports tallying the alleged costs of every social ill, the world would seem a pretty depressing place. I would be surprised if the sum of high-end costs reported in studies into alcohol abuse, obesity, incontinence and mental illness were much less than annual GDP. Read more

Dr Eric Crampton
Insights Newsletter
1 May, 2015

Toeing the rule of the land

It would have been very interesting to see what the late Lee Kwan Yew would have made of this week’s Bali Nine executions. While we can only speculate, a retrospective glance at the hard-line stance that Singapore’s founding father took on foreigners committing crimes in his country suggests he would have sided with Indonesia’s decision to execute Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran. Read more

Jason Krupp
Insights Newsletter
1 May, 2015

Let's ban sports

Early last week, a friend recounted to me in gruesome detail the vicious war wounds incurred during that weekend’s rugby match. The physiotherapist bills would be expensive. Read more

Khyaati Acharya
Insights Newsletter
1 May, 2015

Media release: Social service reform should develop Social Impact Bonds

Wellington (29 April 2015): The New Zealand Initiative is calling the Productivity Commission’s draft report on effective social services a useful contribution to the debate on how government delivers more efficient services, as greater accountability is needed. Jenesa Jeram, researcher at The New Zealand Initiative said the Productivity Commission’s report showed that around $34 billion of taxpayers’ money is spent on health, education and social services per year, yet there is currently little accountability for whether these services are achieving the outcomes they are set up to achieve. Read more

29 April, 2015

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