Here we go again. A new bird-flu virus in China, the H7N9 strain, is spreading alarm. It has infected about 130 people and killed more than 30. Every time this happens, some journalists compete to foment fear, ably assisted by cautious but worried scientists, and then tell the world to keep calm. We need a new way to talk about the risk of a flu pandemic, because the overwhelming probability is that this virus will kill people, yes, but not in vast numbers.
Thursday, May 23, 2013
Phil McDermott: The Unravelling of the Auckland Plan
Labels:
Auckland Housing,
Auckland issues,
Phil McDermott,
Planning
Getting the housing equation wrong
The failure of the Auckland Plan to reflect the simple aspirations of Aucklanders for home ownership and predominantly low-rise suburban lifestyles and promote instead the lofty compact city vision held by its planners and policy-makers made its unravelling inevitable. And now it’s started. Rationing land to squeeze the city upward was always going to create problems.
The failure of the Auckland Plan to reflect the simple aspirations of Aucklanders for home ownership and predominantly low-rise suburban lifestyles and promote instead the lofty compact city vision held by its planners and policy-makers made its unravelling inevitable. And now it’s started. Rationing land to squeeze the city upward was always going to create problems.
Stephen Franks: FTAs inevitable for loan-dependent NZ, but expect one way enforcement
Labels:
FTA,
NZ trade,
Politics,
Stephen Franks
I've just listened to Nathan Guy talking down concern about
Chinese blocking of meat imports on Radio Live Drive, before Andrew Patterson
interviewed me on the topic. My firm has paid particular attention recently to the way
FTAs (Free Trade Agreements) can effectively over-ride Parliamentary
sovereignty (our legal self determination).
Saturday, May 18, 2013
Frank Newman: Budget 2013
Labels:
Auckland Housing,
Budget,
Frank Newman,
Housing,
Tax Policy

This years
Budget has good news, but not for those who are expecting a handout. The good
news is the government’s books are on track to return to surplus. That’s a
remarkable achievement given the dire state of many of our trading partners,
and the billions of dollars the government has contributed towards the rebuild
of Christchurch.
Lindsay Mitchell: 'Feed the kids' bill starts with a lie
Labels:
Child poverty,
Lindsay Mitchell,
Welfare issues
Hone Harawira's bill, Education (Breakfast and Lunch
Programmes in School) Amendment Bill, starts with a lie. From the Explanatory
note:
Growing levels of poverty in New Zealand have resulted in too many parents being unable to afford to provide their children with breakfast before school and/or lunch at school, or being unable to afford to provide their children with sufficiently nutritious meals before and during school.
Eric Crampton: Breakfast
Labels:
Child poverty,
Eric Crampton
A few months ago, Social Service Providers Aotearoa asked me to review the literature on school breakfast programmes and provide an assessment of whether public funding of school breakfast programmes offered value for money. I spoke on the issue in Wellington and in Christchurch in February. As the government seems to be looking at the Mana Party's proposals around food in schools, it seems worth posting things here as summary.
Karl du Fresne: The elimination of poverty will just have to wait
Labels:
Budget,
Karl du Fresne,
poverty,
Welfare issues
The team of Key and English may go down as one of the more effective political partnerships of modern times. John Key is the schmoozer, the salesman. His incorrigibly sunny disposition infuriates a lot of people, who see it as smarmy and ingratiating. But it’s hard to argue with his poll ratings, which have held up extraordinarily well after one and a half terms during which the government has had to grapple with one crisis after another.
Monday, May 13, 2013
Richard Epstein: The Way Forward in Bangladesh
Its hard-working people have suffered far too long under the weight of its bankrupt public institutions.
The death toll from
the recent collapse of Rana Plaza, a garment factory in a suburb of Bangladesh’s
capital, Dhaka, is still climbing. The Rana Plaza catastrophe comes
on the heels of a smaller Bangladesh tragedy at Tazreen Fashions that claimed
the lives of 112 people in 2012.
Karl du Fresne: Confessions of a dinosaur
My wife reckons that if I had
been alive in 1893, I probably would have opposed women getting the
vote. Ouch. That’s a bit harsh. I would, of course, prefer to
think it’s not true – but how can I be sure? It’s unknowable. I have never thought of myself
as sexist; quite the reverse. The people I most admire and respect have been
strong women. I have never identified with the Kiwi bloke culture that thinks
women should be kept in their place, whether it be the kitchen or the bedroom.
Reuben Chapple: Gross Impudence
Labels:
Maori issues,
name changes,
Reuben Chapple,
Treaty of Waitangi
“In the Kingdom of the Blind, the one-eyed man is King.
And he that does not know his own history is at the mercy of every lying
windbag.” –
outgoing Governor-General, Lord Bledisloe, in his 1922 farewell address
New
Zealand is increasingly being referred to in the public square as “Aotearoa” or
“Aotearoa New Zealand.” This
fiction deserves to be mercilessly deconstructed.
Sunday, May 12, 2013
Mike Butler: State houses checked for WOF
A scheme to impose warrants of fitness on residential rentals is well under way with Housing New Zealand going through state-owned rentals to make sure they are up to scratch. Former Housing Minister Phil Heatley confirmed last August that he would go along with child poverty lobbyists’ demands for such a scheme, while the new Housing Minister, Nick Smith, who is known for his ready adoption of trendy causes, presides over the current scheme.
Sunday, May 5, 2013
Karl du Fresne: Debasing Debate
Once again, Radio New Zealand has debased the word “debate”.
It’s currently broadcasting
what it calls a series of “debates” on the current review of New Zealand’s
constitution. But they are nothing of the sort.
Bryan Leyland: Auckland will be liveable only if it is affordable
Labels:
Auckland issues,
Bryan Leyland,
Planning,
Smart growth,
Technology
The Auckland plan ignores the potential for modern technology to solve our transport and
other problems and, instead, pushes expensive and inappropriate 19th and 20th
century solutions. They plan to
spend about $3 billion on a rail tunnel that, like all tunneling projects will
cost much more and will demand huge subsidies for every passenger. The tunnel
is needed only because the plan decrees that people and employment must be
crowded into the city centre.
Sunday, April 28, 2013
Ron Smith: Losers
For some while now it has been evident that President Obama is reluctant to talk about ‘terrorism’ and, still less, about ‘Islamic terrorism’, or ‘Jihad’, or ‘the war on terror’, or all those other things that are so offensive to the political correct. It is now becoming clear that this ideologically-driven denial is extracting a price. Apart from the absurdity of continuing to refer to the Fort Hood shooting as ‘work-place violence’, it is now emerging that the various agencies responsible for home security have seriously dropped the ball in regard to the Boston bombing.
Richard Epstein: In Praise of Income Inequality
Labels:
income inequality,
Richard Epstein,
unemployment,
US Politics,
wealth
You cannot
make the poor richer by making the rich poorer.
One month
into the second term of the Obama administration, the economic prognosis looks
mixed at best. On growth, the U.S. Department of Commerce reports the last quarter of 2012 produced a small decline in gross domestic
product, without any prospects for a quick reversal. On income inequality, the
most recent statistics (which only go through 2011) focus on the top 1 percent.
Friday, April 26, 2013
Thursday, April 25, 2013
Mike Butler: Bombers’ anti-West influence
“Dzhokhar was a normal American kid,” the flabbergasted, politically correct media reported after it was discovered that the Boston Marathon bombing was carried out by two Caucasian Muslim brothers, one an American citizen, the other likely a green-card holder. Talk-radio host Rush Limbaugh came under liberal media attack for linking the bombers’ behavior to the “liberal elite intellectual thought” that infects the Boston community.
Frank Newman: TV tenants
Labels:
Frank Newman,
Property investment
Monday, April 22, 2013
Mike Butler: What the principal principal said
Sunday, April 21, 2013
Mike Butler: Sparks fly in electricity fight
Labels:
David Shearer,
Mighty River Power,
Mike Butler,
Russel Norman
A proposal from Labour leader David Shearer and Green co-leader Russel Norman, announced on Thursday, to bring down power prices, is the latest round in a tit-for-tat political struggle started by the National-led government’s policy of selling assets to keep the ship of state afloat. Labour had joined the Green Party in collecting 320,000 signatures to oppose the part-privatisation of electricity generating companies, and then 400,000 pre-registered for the Mighty River Power float, with 400,000 trumping 320,000.
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