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Where greenies meet economists

Every corner you turn, there is another nature-loving, compost-making, bike-riding, community-befriending greenie - you know the type - they knit their own yoghurts. Perhaps this is because I live in New Zealand's oldest hippie suburb, Aro Valley in Wellington, but it seems the resurgence of green-thinking is not limited to this one neighbourhood. Read more

Rose Patterson
Stuff.co.nz
20 May, 2014

The lunacy of bureaucracy

20th century German-language novelist, Franz Kafka, said that “every revolution evaporates and leaves behind only the slime of a new bureaucracy.” Clearly, the man was not a fan of bureaucracies. In fact, “Kafkaesque” is how we now describe the worst aspects of bureaucracy. Read more

Khyaati Acharya
Insights Newsletter
16 May, 2014

'L' is for labour market

‘The labour market’ refers to all the places where firms look for people to hire, and where workers look for job opportunities. It exists because firms need workers and workers need jobs. Read more

The ABC of Economic Literacy
Insights Newsletter
16 May, 2014

Making New Zealand more open for business

This week, The New Zealand Initiative releases its third and final report in the foreign direct investment (FDI) series, Open for Business: Removing the barriers to foreign investment. The report focuses on New Zealand's policies towards inwards overseas investment, the centrepiece of which is the Overseas Investment Act 2005 (OIA). Read more

Khyaati Acharya
Stuff.co.nz
6 May, 2014

Does the Overseas Investment Act 2005 serve a useful purpose?

This week we published the last in our series of three reports on New Zealand’s external financial links. Our report, Open for business: Removing the barriers to foreign investment, co-authored by the writer and Research Assistant Khyaati Acharya, examines New Zealand’s Overseas Investment Act 2005 and associated regulations. Read more

Dr Bryce Wilkinson
Insights Newsletter
2 May, 2014

Labour’s monetary upgrade

When Labour announced its so-called “Monetary Policy Upgrade” this week, their finance spokesperson David Parker was aware of what a radical departure from conventional monetary practice it was. When asked whether one of its key proposals, a compulsory variable savings rate (VSR), was in place anywhere else in the world, Parker had to admit that “nowhere currently” was such a scheme practised. Read more

Dr Oliver Hartwich
Insights Newsletter
2 May, 2014

We need to be much less restrictive in welcoming foreign direct investment

New Zealand affords itself the luxury of treating overseas investment as a privilege rather than as a necessary and desirable means of better integrating ourselves with the world, so as to make the most of what it has to offer. That blinkered attitude permeates our regulatory regime, which the Organisation of Economic Co-operation and Development assesses to be more restrictive than the regimes of 47 other countries out of a total of 53 countries. Read more

Dr Oliver Hartwich
Interest.co.nz
30 April, 2014

Media release: New report says open doors to foreign investment

Wellington (30 April 2014): If New Zealand does not ease its restrictive foreign direct investment (FDI) regime, the country risks driving away overseas capital that could otherwise be invested to create jobs and contribute to the tax base. This is the message of Open for Business: Removing the barriers to foreign investment, the final report in The New Zealand Initiative’s series on FDI regulation. Read more

30 April, 2014

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