Media release: Reserve Bank needs support, not scapegoating, in inflation fights

Wellington (Monday, 22 September 2026) - The Reserve Bank of New Zealand has been unfairly scapegoated for the current recession when it was simply doing its job of bringing inflation under control, according to new research from The New Zealand Initiative. The research note, Monetary Policy Without Mates, reveals that while the RBNZ fought to tame inflation that peaked at nearly 8%, the government's fiscal policy worked against these efforts – forcing interest rates to stay higher for longer. Read more

Dr Oliver Hartwich
Dr Eric Crampton
Dr Bryce Wilkinson ONZM
Media release
23 September, 2025
NewstalkZB Mike Hosking square

Newstalk ZB: Mike Hosking mentions the Initiative's monetary policy report

Mike Hosking discussed the Initiative's report "Monetary policy without mates" on Newstalk ZB, agreeing with its argument that the Reserve Bank has been unfairly scapegoated for the current recession when it was simply doing its job of bringing inflation under control. He emphasised that the government's fiscal policy worked against the Reserve Bank's efforts, with Grant Robertson's spending forcing interest rates to stay higher for longer. Read more

Mike Hosking
Newstalk ZB
23 September, 2025
Sean Plunket

The Platform: Dr Oliver Hartwich debates Robert MacCulloch over government influence claims

Dr Oliver Hartwich debated Robert MacCulloch on The Platform over claims that the New Zealand Initiative has "captured" the National government and is controlling fiscal policy. Dr Hartwich defended the Initiative, stating they have minimal contact with government ministers and would have pursued different policies if they truly had influence, particularly opposing last year's tax cuts in favour of budget consolidation and deficit reduction. Read more

Dr Oliver Hartwich
Sean Plunket and Robert MacCulloch
The Platform
22 September, 2025
kerre woodham newstalkzb

Newstalk ZB: Dr Eric Crampton says returning spending to 2019 levels would have allowed rate cuts

Dr Eric Crampton told Kerre Woodham on Newstalk ZB that New Zealand’s 0.9% economic contraction reflects the Reserve Bank “going incredibly overboard” in 2020–21 and losing credibility on inflation, making today’s correction unavoidable. He criticised government claims of restraint, noting budgets remain “incredibly stimulatory” with “massive structural deficits,” and argued that if spending had returned to 2019 wellbeing-budget levels, the Bank would have had far more room to cut interest rates. Read more

Dr Eric Crampton
Kerre Woodham
Newstalk ZB
19 September, 2025

Press Statement: Initiative Welcomes Commerce Commission Governance Reform, Cautions on Overreach in Commerce Act Changes

Wellington (Tuesday, 16 September 2025) – The New Zealand Initiative welcomes the Government’s decision to strengthen the governance of the Commerce Commission, describing it as an important step towards world-class regulatory practice. The Initiative’s 2018 report Who Guards the Guards? Read more

Dr Eric Crampton
Roger Partridge
Press Statement
16 September, 2025

Media release (Local Government Business Forum): Business groups call for binding referendums on major council spending

The Local Government Business Forum has today released a report calling for binding referendums on major council spending projects, giving ratepayers a way of saying yes to projects that they support. “Council rates increased an average of 12% last year and are estimated to rise another 9% this year. Read more

Dr Eric Crampton
Insights Newsletter
11 September, 2025

The Platform: Roger Partridge discusses streamlining New Zealand's bloated government structure

Roger Partridge talked to Sean Plunket on The Platform about The New Zealand Initiative's report proposing consolidating New Zealand's fragmented public service structure. Partridge outlined a three-step plan to streamline government by reducing ministerial portfolios from 81 to 15-20, creating junior minister roles, and consolidating departments from 43 to around 20, similar to peer nations like Ireland and Norway. Read more

Roger Partridge
Sean Plunket
The Platform
4 September, 2025

The Platform: Dr Michael Johnston discusses university grade inflation

Dr Michael Johnston talked to Michael Laws on The Platform about grade inflation at New Zealand universities, explaining how A-grade rates have increased from 22% to 35% since 2006 and pass rates now exceed 90%. Dr Johnston argued that this trend stems from universities' commercial focus on retaining students for fee income, creating pressure to pass students regardless of assignment quality. Read more

Dr Michael Johnston
Michael Laws
The Platform
3 September, 2025

Newstalk ZB: Rt Hon Chris Hipkins finds merit in the Initiative's ministerial reform report

Nick Mills discussed The New Zealand Initiative's report on government reform with Rt Hon Chris Hipkins on Newstalk ZB, focusing on our recommendations to reduce the number of government departments and ministerial portfolios. The Leader of the Opposition expressed sympathy for the Initiative's main point about convoluted relationships between departments and ministers, acknowledging merit in their research despite often disagreeing with their reports, and indicated he would consider such restructuring if Labour wins the next election. Read more

Rt Hon Chris Hipkins and Nick Mills
Newstalk ZB
3 September, 2025
wallace chapman portrait SQ

RNZ: Roger Partridge discusses streamlining New Zealand's bloated ministerial structure

Roger Partridge talked to Wallace Chapman on RNZ's "The Panel" about his report "Unscrambling Government" which calls for reducing New Zealand's 81 ministerial portfolios to improve government efficiency. He argued that New Zealand's fragmented structure, with three times as many portfolios as comparable countries like Norway, creates accountability issues and inefficient decision-making compared to more streamlined international models. Read more

Roger Partridge
Wallace Chapman, Jennie Moreton and Peter Field
RNZ
3 September, 2025

Media release: Too many ministers, too little accountability: New report calls for Cabinet overhaul

Wellington (Tuesday, 2 September 2025) - New Zealand has one of the most complex systems of executive government in the developed world. With 81 ministerial portfolios, 28 ministers and 43 departments, we have three times as many portfolios and nearly twice as many departments as comparable countries. Read more

Roger Partridge
Media Release
2 September, 2025

Webinar video: Unscrambling Government: Less Confusion, More Efficiency

This webinar launches Unscrambling Government: Less Confusion, More Efficiency, a report by Roger Partridge proposing practical reforms to New Zealand’s fragmented executive of 81 portfolios, 28 ministers, and 43 departments. Hosted by Dr Oliver Hartwich with commentary from Dr Murray Horn (former Treasury Secretary; ex-ANZ CEO), the discussion explores how consolidating portfolios into 15–20 senior ministers supported by junior ministers, and aligning departments to around 20, could restore clarity, speed up decisions, and sharpen accountability—drawing on lessons from Ireland, Norway, Singapore, and Australia’s Hawke-era reforms. Watch below. Read more

Dr Oliver Hartwich
Roger Partridge
Dr Murray Horn CNZM
Webinar video
2 September, 2025
NewstalkZB Mike Hosking square

Newstalk ZB: Roger Partridge calls for major government restructure to cut ministerial maze

Roger Partridge talked to Mike Hosking on Newstalk ZB about his latest report calling for a major overhaul of government structure. Partridge argued that New Zealand's complex system of 81 ministerial portfolios across 28 ministers and 43 departments creates fragmented decision-making and higher costs, advocating for consolidation to around 15-20 policy areas and 20 departments similar to other developed countries. Read more

Roger Partridge
Mike Hosking
Newstalk ZB
2 September, 2025

Stay in the loop: Subscribe to updates