Is Social Security a Ponzi Scheme?

Elon recently re-opened the perennial debate about whether Social Security is a ponzi scheme. Here’s my, lightly edited post from 2011. Elon is in good company calling social security a ponzi scheme. First up is Nobel prize winner Paul Samuelson who wrote: The beauty of social insurance is that it is actuarially unsound. Everyone who reaches […]

Is Social Security a Ponzi Scheme?

Inability to understand te reo Māori does not prevent people from asking questions about race relations in New Zealand

Ananish Chaudhuri writes –  Dame Anne Salmond recently wrote a column on Newsroom berating people for having views on the Treaty of Waitangi when they cannot even read the Māori version of the treaty. So, what she is saying is that even when customs, laws or treaties impinge on your daily life, you cannot hold any views […]

Inability to understand te reo Māori does not prevent people from asking questions about race relations in New Zealand

The Upcoming Transfer of Power Between Justin Trudeau and Mark Carney

The Ministry Depends on the Prime Minister The Governor General’s first constitutional duty is to appoint a Prime Minister and ensure the continuity of government. The Governor General usually appoints the leader of the political party which has either an outright majority or a plurality of MPs in the House of Commons, or barring that, […]

The Upcoming Transfer of Power Between Justin Trudeau and Mark Carney

US AID, current status

After a 6 week review we are officially cancelling 83% of the programs at USAID. The 5200 contracts that are now cancelled spent tens of billions of dollars in ways that did not serve, (and in some cases even harmed), the core national interests of the United States. In consultation with Congress, we intend for […]

US AID, current status

The WaPo describes (and distorts) a big “culture war” in New Zealand

ADDENDUM:  See added comments and clarifications under “addendum” at bottom. ******************** I’ve written many times about the battle of the indigenous people in New Zealand (the Māori) to get their “way of knowing”—which includes a lot of superstition and unreliable word-of-mouth “knowledge,” as well as legends and morality—adopted as official policy or as a “way […]

The WaPo describes (and distorts) a big “culture war” in New Zealand

My Former Economics MPhil and DPhil Class-Mate for many hard years, Mark Carney, becomes PM of Canada.

Congratulations Mark Carney. When I went to the UK to study economics, we started off doing a degree called Master of Philosophy in…

My Former Economics MPhil and DPhil Class-Mate for many hard years, Mark Carney, becomes PM of Canada.

Working paper: Why nationalize the production of public goods?

I have a new working paper out. It proposes a price theory-based explanation of why states nationalize the production of “public goods” (i.e., non-excludable and non-rivalrous). This is different than existing explanations as the theory ignores whether private provision is efficient or superior to public provision. I call it the “redistributive engine” theory whereby the […]

Working paper: Why nationalize the production of public goods?

Max Rashbrooke has been kidnapped again to be replaced by a neoliberal doppelganger

The Licensing Racket

I review a very good new book on occupational licensing, The Licensing Racket by Rebecca Haw Allensworth in the WSJ. Most people will concede that licensing for hair braiders and interior decorators is excessive while licensing for doctors, nurses and lawyers is essential. Hair braiders pose little to no threat to public safety, but subpar […]

The Licensing Racket

RICHARD PREBBLE: Letter of resignation from the Waitangi Tribunal

Hon Tama Potaka Minister of Maori Development 28 February 2025 Dear Minister, After careful consideration I must resign as a Member of the Waitangi Tribunal. The treaty is not just our founding document, it makes New Zealand unique. Two peoples peacefully agreeing to form a nation. Over the summer I have been reading Tribunal reports […]

RICHARD PREBBLE: Letter of resignation from the Waitangi Tribunal

Adrian Orr resigns

Adrian Orr has resigned as Reserve Bank Governor. I normally try to highlight the good as well as the bad when someone resigns, but I have to admit in this case I struggle. I welcomed his appointment in 2017. I noted the currency rose on his appointment and that he had a very good legacy […]

Adrian Orr resigns

Australia’s Pandemic Exceptionalism

That’s the title of a 2024 book by a couple of Australian academic economists, Steven Hamilton (based in US) and Richard Holden (a professor at the University of New South Wales). The subtitle of the book is “How we crushed the curve but lost the race”. It is easy to get off on the wrong […]

Australia’s Pandemic Exceptionalism

The cost of Reserve Bank regulation

Roger Partridge writes: A new submission to the Committee from banking experts Andrew Body and Simon Jensen provides fresh evidence of these costs. Their analysis shows the Reserve Bank’s capital rules add between 0.25 and 0.375 percentage points to mortgage rates compared with Australia. For a million-dollar mortgage, that means between $2,500 and $3,750 in […]

The cost of Reserve Bank regulation

$50 million of taxpayer money on a ski field

Newsroom has a summary of taxpayer money spent on Mt Ruapehu: How often have we been told this is the final assistance. We are now deep into the sunk cost fallacy.

$50 million of taxpayer money on a ski field

Paris Accord could determine election

The government’s commitment to the Paris Accord has garnered opposition from farmers and farming organisations. Federated Farmers is not supportive: The Government’s announcement today of a 2035 climate target of a 51-55% emissions reduction has signed New Zealand up for a decade more of planting pine on productive land, Federated Farmers meat and wool chair […]

Paris Accord could determine election

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NOT A LOT OF PEOPLE KNOW THAT

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