Media release: $12 billion defence plan won't work without system overhaul, new report warns

Wellington (Thursday, 23 April 2026) - The Government’s 2025 Defence Capability Plan commits $12 billion over four years, including $9 billion of new spending. But without institutional reform, new money risks being absorbed into a system too slow and fragmented to deliver modern capability, a new report from The New Zealand Initiative warns. Read more

Major General John G. Howard, MNZM (Ret)
Media release
23 April, 2026

Webinar video: God Defend New Zealand

New Zealand's defence investment is landing the same way it always has: slowly, bureaucratically, and after the need has already been declared. In this webinar, retired Major General John Howard presents his new report God Defend New Zealand, which argues the country must move from an industrial-age acquisition model to one that operates at the speed of technological change. Read more

Dr Oliver Hartwich
Major General John G. Howard, MNZM (Ret)
Sir Rod Drury
Webinar video
23 April, 2026

Taxpayer Talk: Dr Oliver Hartwich on restoring democratic control of the public service

Dr Oliver Hartwich talked to Peter Williams on Taxpayer Talk about his paper arguing New Zealand's public service system is fundamentally broken, with the Public Service Commissioner, not elected ministers, controlling the appointment of department chief executives and shaping their career incentives. Drawing on Germany's model of ministerial responsibility and contrasting it with the American and Australian systems, Dr Hartwich proposed a transition toward giving ministers direct control over their departments while maintaining safeguards such as qualification requirements and a duty to object to unlawful orders. Read more

Dr Oliver Hartwich
Peter Williams
Taxpayer Talk
13 April, 2026
Ryan Bridge

Newstalk ZB: Dr Oliver Hartwich on the case for ministerial power over department chief executives

Dr Oliver Hartwich talked to Ryan Bridge on Newstalk ZB about why ministers should have the power to appoint and dismiss their department chief executives, arguing the current system, where the Public Service Commission makes these appointments, is unusual internationally and can hinder a government's ability to implement its agenda. He pointed to the resource management reforms as an example where bureaucratic resistance may have watered down the government's plans, and highlighted Germany's model, where ministers appoint a qualified state secretary while the rest of the public service remains neutral and protected. Read more

Dr Oliver Hartwich
Ryan Bridge
Newstalk ZB
8 April, 2026

Newstalk ZB: Dr Oliver Hartwich on reforming how public sector chief executives are chosen

Dr Oliver Hartwich was featured on the news segment of Newstalk ZB discussing The New Zealand Initiative's push for legislation allowing ministers to help choose public sector chief executives. Dr Hartwich says New Zealand should look to Germany's system, which gives ministers a say in appointments while including safeguards such as whistleblower protections and a duty to object to unlawful instructions. Read more

Dr Oliver Hartwich
Newstalk ZB
8 April, 2026
sean plunket square

The Platform: Dr Oliver Hartwich on the fuel crisis

Dr Oliver Hartwich talked to Sean Plunket on The Platform about the looming fuel crisis, explaining that New Zealand's roughly nine-week oil supply chain from the Middle East means the real impact of the current war will be felt in the coming weeks as existing supplies run out. Dr Hartwich warned that even if peace were achieved quickly, damaged infrastructure and disrupted shipping logistics would take months to restore, leaving New Zealand facing a prolonged period of fuel uncertainty. Read more

Dr Oliver Hartwich
Sean Plunket
The Platform
7 April, 2026
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

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