A modest proposal for superannuation affordability

Being a practical scheme whereby New Zealand's retirees may personally contribute to the fiscal sustainability they currently enjoy Superannuation reform is politically impossible, so let us not bother. Instead, let us fix the problem the way we have been fixing it anyway, just more honestly. Read more

Jonathan Swift
Insights Newsletter
2 April, 2026

Podcast: Let prices do the job when fuel is scarce

In this episode, Eric talks with Andreas Heuser, partner at Heuser Whittington and lead economist on the government's fuel security study, about why the price system is New Zealand's best tool for managing fuel scarcity in the wake of the Strait of Hormuz closure. They discuss why calls for rationing are misguided, what the Marsden Point decision got right, and how the existing tax and transfer system can address the real pain households are facing. Read more

Dr Eric Crampton
Andreas Heuser
Podcast
1 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
annual report 2025 outline

2025 Annual Report

2025 marked a turning point for The New Zealand Initiative’s mission to build a more prosperous country. Ideas we have championed for years moved from research papers into the Government’s reform programme. Read more

Annual Report
31 March, 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

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