wallace chapman portrait SQ

The Panel: Dr Eric Crampton on pricing street parking to fix the intensification squeeze

Dr Eric Crampton talked to Wallace Chapman on RNZ's The Panel about the growing problem of on-street parking in intensifying suburbs, arguing that free street parking is poorly managed and creates perverse incentives for townhouse buyers to forgo on-site car parks. Dr Crampton proposed tradable resident parking passes as a market-based solution, giving existing homeowners something valuable they can sell to newcomers while better managing scarce street space. Read more

Dr Eric Crampton
Wallace Chapman, Richard Pamatatau and Penny Ashton
RNZ
1 April, 2026
Emile Donovan

RNZ: Dr Michael Johnston on why a blanket ban on new single-sex state schools goes too far

Dr Michael Johnston talked to Emile Donovan on Nights on RNZ about the Ministry of Education's plan not to build any new single-sex state schools, arguing that while co-education has clear social benefits, a blanket ban removes choice, particularly for families who can't afford private alternatives. Dr Johnston noted that his research found single-sex schools showed better academic results on average for both sexes, especially for Māori and Pasifika boys and boys from lower socioeconomic communities. Read more

Dr Michael Johnston
RNZ
31 March, 2026

Event video: Why the future is more abundant than you think with Dr Marian Tupy

Dr Marian Tupy is the editor of HumanProgress.org, the world's most comprehensive database tracking improvements in human wellbeing, a senior fellow at the Cato Institute, and co-author of the acclaimed book Superabundance: The Story of Population Growth, Innovation, and Human Flourishing on an Infinitely Bountiful Planet. A leading voice on human progress, globalisation, and economic development, Marian's work does something rare: it challenges the pessimistic narratives we hear every day — not with opinion, but with hard evidence. Read more

Dr Marian Tupy
Event video
26 March, 2026
Heather du Plessis-Allan talentimage 880x495 square

Newstalk ZB: Heather du Plessis-Allan on Dr Bryce Wilkinson's fuel crisis analysis

Heather du Plessis-Allan discussed Dr Bryce Wilkinson's NZ Herald article on Newstalk ZB, drawing on his analysis of the 1970s oil shocks as a cautionary lesson for today's politicians. Dr Wilkinson argues that the government should resist pressure to intervene through price controls, subsidies, or fuel tax cuts, and instead rely on price signals and targeted income relief for the most vulnerable, while leaving risky energy investments to private capital. Read more

Dr Bryce Wilkinson ONZM
Heather du Plessis-Allan
Newstalk ZB
26 March, 2026

Event video: Making Cities Work with Alain Bertaud

Bertaud is an urban planner whose work has shaped city policy debates internationally. Over a career spanning several decades, he has advised governments and institutions on urban development, housing markets and infrastructure, including work with the World Bank and on major city reforms across Asia, Eastern Europe, and Latin America. Read more

Alain Bertaud
Event video
25 March, 2026

Q+A: Alain Bertaud on why zoning laws, not poverty, drive New Zealand's housing crisis

Alain Bertaud, former principal urban planner at the World Bank and guest of the New Zealand Initiative, talked to Jack Tame on Q+A about what makes cities function well. Bertaud argued that cities are fundamentally labour markets, and that restrictive zoning laws, not poverty, are the root cause of New Zealand's housing affordability crisis, advocating for both upward density and greenfield development to meet Auckland's projected population growth. Read more

Alain Bertaud and Jack Tame
TVNZ's Q+A with Jack Tame
22 March, 2026

RNZ Nine to Noon: Alain Bertaud on what makes cities work

Alain Bertaud, former principal urban planner at the World Bank and guest of The New Zealand Initiative, talked to Kathryn Ryan on RNZ's Nine to Noon about what makes cities work. He argued that cities should be understood as large labour markets, and that affordable housing and good transport are essential foundations — warning that without them, everything people value about city life will collapse. Read more

Alain Bertaud and Kathryn Ryan
RNZ
15 March, 2026

Markets Summit 2026: Dr Oliver Hartwich on investing in a post-rational world

Dr Oliver Hartwich argued at the Portfolio Construction Forum's Markets Summit 2026 in Sydney that the erosion of the rules-based world order — driven by cognitive decline, political tribalism, and the rise of "institutional theatre" — demands a fundamental rethink of how investment professionals assess risk. Dr Hartwich introduced the concept of "Enlightenment Islands" — stable, high-trust jurisdictions such as Singapore, Switzerland, and the Scandinavian countries — and urged portfolio managers to supplement traditional financial metrics with civilisational indicators like PISA scores, rule of law indices, and trust barometers. Read more

Dr Oliver Hartwich
Markets Summit 2026
6 March, 2026

Media release: Government urged to recycle Crown assets to fund infrastructure without new taxes or debt

Wellington (Monday, 2 March 2026) - New Zealand could unlock more than $24 billion for essential infrastructure by recycling mature Crown-owned commercial assets, according to a new report by The New Zealand Initiative. Renovating the Nation: How Asset Recycling Can Help Solve the Infrastructure Deficit, by the Initiative chair Roger Partridge, argues the government should redirect capital tied up in commercial enterprises into hospitals, schools, roads and water systems — without raising taxes or increasing public debt. Read more

Roger Partridge
Media release
2 March, 2026

Webinar video: Renovating the Nation: How Asset Recycling Can Help Solve the Infrastructure Deficit

This webinar launches Renovating the Nation: How Asset Recycling Can Help Solve the Infrastructure Deficit, a report by Roger Partridge arguing New Zealand can fund new infrastructure by recycling Crown-owned commercial assets the government does not need to own. Hosted by Dr Oliver Hartwich and featuring Fran O’Sullivan and Fraser Whineray (former CEO of Mercury), the discussion unpacks the New South Wales model and why New Zealand’s past asset sales failed to build trust. Read more

Dr Oliver Hartwich
Roger Partridge
Webinar video
2 March, 2026

RNZ: Roger Partridge on asset recycling to fund New Zealand's infrastructure deficit

Roger Partridge discussed the Initiative's new report on asset recycling on RNZ, proposing that selling selected state assets — including TVNZ, NZ Post, energy company stakes, Transpower, and Landcorp — could free up around $25 billion for a ring-fenced infrastructure fund. Partridge argued the model, drawn from a successful New South Wales programme, would direct proceeds exclusively to infrastructure priorities vetted by an Independent Infrastructure Commission, and called for public debate to move beyond slogans like "selling the family silver." Listen below. Read more

Roger Partridge
RNZ
2 March, 2026

Stay in the loop: Subscribe to updates