Parliament
  

Is our Government too Big?
22 March 08
Muriel Newman

How big should our government be? To what extent do we want politicians to decide how we should be living our lives? That, one hopes, may be an issue in this year’s general election... More >>>

Some Concerns about the State of the State in NZ
22 March 08
Graham Scott
The years of the Clark administration have seen a steady expansion of the influence of politicians in the economy and society. In this election year the voters will choose a government partly on what they think have been the results of this and whether they approve of it in principle. The list of illustrations is a long one. More >>>

Everyone Pays
17 February 08
Muriel Newman
Last week renowned economist and author Thomas Sowell published a column in which he shed light on the origins of Fascism. He describes how Fascism’s industrial policies attracted the political ‘left’ but public opinion eventually forced them to back off... More >>>

Housing Affordability Crisis
3 February 08
Muriel Newman

Housing affordability is set to become a key election issue. Ill advised policies from local and central government are turning the Kiwi dream of home ownership into a fantasy... More >>>

Restoring the Housing Opportunity
2 February 08
Hugh Pavletich

The 2008 4th Edition Demographia International Housing Affordability Survey released recently, illustrates clearly why so many young and vulnerable New Zealanders, are being denied the right to the opportunity of affordable housing.
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The Cost of Power
Muriel Newman
8 December 2007
Our home used to be our castle, but eight years of intrusive new laws and regulations have put paid to that. 
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New Zealand's Energy "Strategy"
Bryan Leyland
8 December 07

I have been involved in the electricity and energy business in New Zealand for the last fifty years. From 1992 to 2003, I produced the only independent review of electricity generation and demand in New Zealand. More >>>

Corrupting Free Markets
Muriel Newman
29 September 2007

Socialism has become much more sophisticated in recent times. Socialist power no longer comes from the barrel of the gun, but from using populism to “corrupt” free market principles. There are no better examples than the present introduction of carbon trading to change the dynamics of the energy industry and the government’s intrusion into telecommunications. Both rely on “convincing” an uninformed public that a problem exists that can only be solved through government regulation. More >>>

Defiling the Rank: How Useful are the OECD League Tables?
Bronwyn Howell
29 September 2007

Using OECD rankings as either a measure of a country’s performance or as a target to justify adopting a particular policy has become popular amongst the member states in recent years.  Policies benchmarked using rankings are simple concepts to market to voters and appeal to a sense of nationalistic pride: ‘winning’ is important, but if you can’t win, then at least you want to be seen to be outranking your fiercest national rival (e.g. Australia if you are New Zealand; Sweden if you are Finland; the United States if you are Canada). More  >>>

Political Answers to Real Problems
Muriel Newman
16 September 2007

Almost every day there are calls from one group or another for the government to “do something” about some critical problem they have identified. Whether it is immunisation rates that are said to be too low, air quality standards that campaigners claim are killing people, or too much computer spam, lobbyists are convinced that new laws are the panacea to society’s ills. The problem is that not only do new laws almost never solve the problem, but they often do far more harm than good. It seems that the “cure” is often far worse than the sickness.  More >>>

Regulating finance companies Act in Haste, Repent at Leisure
Prof Glenn Boyle
15 September 2007

The woes of finance companies have been much in the news recently. A combination of small and/or undiversified loan portfolios, impenetrable business models, ructions emanating from the collapse of the United States sub-prime mortgage market, and a self-fulfilling loss of confidence by New Zealand investors in the safety of their money, have seen nine such companies collapse in the last 18 months. 
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Defending Free Speech
Muriel Newman
26 August 2007

Every New Zealander who cares about our democratic right to free speech should be concerned about the Labour Party’s dangerous new bill on election financing. As John Armstrong, a senior political journalist at the Herald wrote: “Wake up to what Labour is doing with its shabby, self-serving Electoral Finance Bill. Or let it be on your conscience that you stood back and watched your right to free speech being flushed down the drain.”
 
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Regulating Freedom of Speech
Bernard Robertson
26 August 07

The so-called Electoral Finance Bill is really about participation in election activity by people who are not professional politicians. It says that politics is for politicians and that you and I, who are not self-promoting climbers of the greasy pole, have no business interfering. The policy agenda should be determined by the political parties and not by the public and so should the way those policies are marketed. More >>> 

The Politics of Law Making
Muriel Newman
11 August 2007

It is the trait of governments that don’t know what to do about a difficult problem to simply pass a law. They do this knowing that the law will not work, but at least they will be seen to be doing something. The difficulty is that not only does such knee-jerk legislation rarely solve the problem it invariably creates serious unintended consequences. More >>>

The Blame Game
Muriel Newman
17 June 2007

A year ago I reviewed a Labour Party communication strategy paper: “This paper is about Labour taking greater charge of the language of debate and discussion in New Zealand. It is called re-framing and it means gaining (or regaining) the use of concepts and phrases that spark public and media interest”  More >>>

Nanny State
Lindsay Perigo
17 June 07

I can't be sure, but it may well have been me who introduced the term "Nanny State" into the New Zealand vernacular, on my Politically Incorrect Show on Radio Pacific. Certainly I used it regularly there, and observed it creep into common usage thereafter, as did the related term, "Helengrad." In any event, the expression is well and truly out there now, and that's as good a thing as its referent is bad. Nanny State is vicious, anti-human … and, as we speak, relentlessly advancing.
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Know it all Politicians
Muriel Newman
27 May 2007

The latest Police prosecution figures show that there has been an alarming rise in the number of people drinking and driving. This is despite many millions of dollars of taxpayers’ money spent on drink-driving campaigns.
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The Road to Stagnation
Richard Epstein
12 March 07

It is a regrettable truth about political discourse that no bad lesson ever gets unlearned. The climate of political opinion in the United States, and probably in much of New Zealand, offers somber confirmation of that melancholy truth.  At issue in both nations, and everywhere else around the world, is a struggle two models of economic organization.  One is market driven. The other is corporatist. 
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Busybody politicians, get off our backs
John Stossel
6 September 2006 
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Freedom Under Attack
Muriel Newman
22 April 07
It was Thomas Jefferson who said: “The price of freedom is eternal vigilance”. These words are as valid today as when they were first uttered over two hundred years ago, as the natural inclination of government is to extend its own power and control at the expense of the freedom and liberty of citizens. More >>>

A Questionable Policy
Muriel Newman
8 April 07
Last week NZ Post announced it will be increasing the price of stamps: on June 1st, the cost of stamps for standard domestic letters will rise from 45 cents to 50 cents and fastpost stamps will increase from 90 cents to $1. Accordingly to the mail chief, Peter Fenton, while the company has absorbed a number of business cost increases over the last three years, wages and other employment expenses - which make up around 40 per cent of the cost of mail delivery - must now be passed onto the customer. More >>>

Regulatory Zeal
Muriel Newman
11 Mar 07
I  recently received the following email from a Newman Weekly subscriber: "I've just returned from our local pet shop to buy a replacement mouse for my 12 year old. $4.95. I had to fill out a form accepting a list of conditions informing me of my responsibilities as a mouse owner. The 12 year old wasn't allowed to sign, as you had to be over 16 or 18. If the pet shop was a Government agency I am sure that they would have rangers driving around checking on the comfort of mice and claiming that they need more resources as there are still mice out there suffering." More >>>

An Inconvenient Reality
Muriel Newman
3 Dec 06
Trying out new things is a normal part of everyday life. Whether it’s a new recipe, a quicker way to get home, or a different system of tracking emails in the office, if the initiatives work and produce positive benefits, they are continued, but if they don’t, they are rejected. More >>>

A Licence for Parents
Muriel Newman
23 September 06
The whole country continues to wait anxiously for news that the killer of Chris and Cru Kahui, the twins brutally murdered in July, has been arrested. More >>>

Political Correctness
Dr Wayne Mapp
25 Feb 06
School around New Zealand are holding team sports events but are refusing to allow scores to be kept, in case the children are unable to cope with defeat. What kind of lesson do the teachers think they are giving that children can't think; that games are not about lessons for life? The children are certainly smart enough to keep the scores anyway, as one youngster was overheard telling her father, “There is no score, but we won by three goals.”  More >>>

The PC Agenda
Muriel Newman
5 Nov 05

Political correctness is rarely out of the news these days.  Whether it’s stories about Josie Bullock being sacked by the Department of Corrections for refusing to give up her front row seat during a graduation ceremony, the on-going debate over whether fireworks should be banned, or the announcement by the National Party that they have finally recognised political correctness as an issue of public concern by appointing a ‘PC eradicator’, we are constantly being bombarded with PC headlines. More >>>

 

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