The Trotter Times Feb 2007 cover

The Trotter Times

A collection of speeches given by Sir Ronald Trotter between 1986 and 2002 on behalf of the New Zealand Business Roundtable. Read more

New Zealand Business Roundtable
1 February, 2007
Environmentalism vs constitutionalism cover

Environmentalism versus Constitutionalism: A Contest Without Winners

Some environmentalists believe that a pristine environment is a goal to be achieved regardless of the costs to human communities. Suri Ratnapala explains the need to balance threats to the environment with the threat to constitutional government that arises from ill-advised policy responses to the challenges of environmental protection. Read more

Suri Ratnapala
New Zealand Business Roundtable
8 December, 2006
Competing to win cover

Competing to win: An external strategy for a changed world

Competing to win is the fifth paper in a series that forms part of the New Zealand Institute’s research project on Creating a global New Zealand economy. This paper follows on from our first four papers No country is an island, Dancing with the stars?, The flight of the Kiwi, and Developing Kiwi global champions. Read more

Dr David Skilling, Danielle Boven
The New Zealand Institute
22 November, 2006
Trotter The Battle of Ideas

The Battle of Ideas: The 2006 Sir Ronald Trotter Lecture

In An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations, Adam Smith argued that there was a virtuous circle that led to increased prosperity. The source of economic growth and development was the gains from specialisation and trade realised through the greater division of labour and the expansion of the market economy. Read more

Peter Boettke
New Zealand Business Roundtable
8 August, 2006
School Choice the three essential elements cover

School Choice: The Three Essential Elements and Several Policy Options

The three essential elements of successful school choice policies are: the freedom to open, expand and close schools in response to increased or reduced demand; funding following the student, putting all schools on the same footing; and independent management, so that schools are free to innovate in areas such as teaching practices, teacher pay, and school organisation. The report draws on a wide range of evidence including a study of the impact of Chicago’s charter schools on the environment. Read more

Caroline M. Hoxby
New Zealand Business Roundtable
1 August, 2006
The flight of the Kiwi cover

The flight of the Kiwi: Going global from the end of the world

The flight of the Kiwi is the third paper in a series that forms part of the New Zealand Institute's research project on Creating a global New Zealand economy. This paper follows on from our first two papers No country is an island and Dancing with the stars?. Read more

Dr David Skilling, Danielle Boven
The New Zealand Institute
22 July, 2006
Why have Kiwis not become Tigers cover

Why Have Kiwis Not Become Tigers?

Modest growth in New Zealand is not the result of an overdose of reforms or bad cultural attitudes. The problem, in short, is that the reform process has not been completed, and needs to be continued and extended. Read more

Frederic Sautet
New Zealand Business Roundtable
6 May, 2006
Power in Employment relationships cover

Power in Employment Relationships: Is there an Imbalance?

The labour market is like any other market: pay and conditions are largely determined by supply and demand, rather than through a power struggle between employees and employers. Geoff Hogbin exposes the fallacies behind the arguments for labour regulation, and makes the case for a freely functioning labour market as the best protection for employers and employees alike. Read more

Geoff Hogbin
New Zealand Business Roundtable
20 March, 2006
Working Paper 1 Maori Economic Development cover

Te Oranga o te Iwi Maori Working Paper 1: Maori Economic Development: Glimpses from Statistical Sources

Provisionally entitled Te Oranga o te Iwi Maori: A Study of Maori Economic and Social Progress, the book will look at factors and institutions that have influenced Maori development and ways of building on past achievements. The first Working Paper, Maori Economic Development: Glimpses from Statistical Sources, was undertaken by Wellington-based Motu Economic and Public Policy Research. Read more

Dave Maré, Sylvia Dixon and Andrew Coleman
New Zealand Business Roundtable
25 January, 2006
Trotter The Future of Culture in a Globlised World

The Future of Culture in a Globalised World: The 2005 Sir Ronald Trotter Lecture

I sometimes describe my cultural and economic point of view as being that of a cultural optimist; that is, I expect the future in a commercial economy to bring us more choices and more diverse choices. If we put aside the concerns of the current day and look back at world history, it has been the globalising eras that have brought us cultural diversity. Read more

Tyler Cowen
New Zealand Business Roundtable
15 December, 2005
Human Progress and Collapse cover

Human Progress - And Collapse?

Against the human experience of long-term stagnation and misery, the record of growing prosperity over the past two centuries and, in particular, the last 50 years, is astounding. Economic growth owes much to the mobilisation of resources and structural flexibility, but this depends on the 'software of economic development' - institutions, which change slowly. Read more

Wolfgang Kasper
New Zealand Business Roundtable
14 September, 2005
Epstein cover Rule of Law

What Do We Mean by the Rule of Law?

'The rule of law' is at once one of the most persistent and mysterious phrases in jurisprudence. I am not aware of anyone who is opposed to the rule of law. Read more

New Zealand Business Roundtable
8 September, 2005

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