Globalisation is good for you, says new book

Globalisation is good for you — but it needs a lot of improvement. So says journalist Philippe Legrain in a readable new book which could usefully top every executive’s, politician’s and protester’s list to take to the beach this summer.

Open World: The Truth about Globalisation is a definition, defence and dissection of the phenomenon that has stirred passions for and against across the globe. read more

Floundering National puffs up small parties' importance

Over the next two weekends two important smaller parties will remind National activists how badly their party has bled.

New Zealand First will celebrate its rise from the dead this weekend. The next weekend United Future will meet in search of a party.

New Zealand First represents a strand of opinion — on immigration — that is at odds with the majority. read more

I'm a bear and I'm here to eat — I mean, hug — you

Right now, if she hadn’t jumped the gun midwinter, Helen Clark might be heading towards, or have just recently obtained, the majority she once coveted, or a result close to it.

A mid-October or early November election would have conferred a powerful benefit on Labour compared with the July one. Genetic modification would not bitten so hard. read more

Now it's the turn of blokey icons

When a blokey icon company like DB Breweries takes an interest, maybe “sustainable development” and “triple bottom line” are edging into the business mainstream.

DB had human resources general manager Mark Campbell at the Business Council for Sustainable Development’s conference last week. Campbell is in charge of developing a triple bottom line report over the next year. read more

What next when civilisation clashes with darkness?

The President of You Know Where flies round in Air Force 1. Our equivalent is a sort of Air Force 0.15: a crate held together with chewing gum and rubber bands. A great advertisement.

The Prime Minister sensibly flies commercial.

The National party feigns shock/horror. That is the party that cut defence spending 30 per cent in GDP terms during the 1990s. Had it not, the army might have had some radios and ground transport that worked and clapped out planes replaced. read more

Under-resource the public service at your peril

We have, it seems, an oversupply of corner-cutting developers, architects, engineers and builders and inattentive building inspectors policing inadequate law.

Low-life has invaded the high-rise. Town houses and apartment blocks have leaked stains on our national honour.

My favourite story is actually of a non-leak: an apartment block’s fire sprinklers not connected to water, allegedly ticked off by the Fire Service. Whom can you trust? read more

Get closer to Australia, Oz expatriate bosses say

New Zealand is too small and has to get more lined up with Australia, three Australian chief executives of New Zealand organisations told a conference on Saturday.

“If we (Australian and New Zealand) don’t get it together, it’s going to be a Texan boot or something like that that kicks us,” said TelstraClear CEO Rosemary Howard at the conference, organised by Victoria University’s Stout Centre and Institute of Policy Studies (IPS) and part-sponsored by the Australian High Commission and Qantas. read more

Peter Dunne: centring the Labour party

Peter Dunne hasn’t shifted his generally dry-ish economic stance to accommodate his big centre-left partner in government. So United Future will likely oppose new workplace regulation. But neither will the party relitigate past changes.

And, Dunne said in an interview, so far the arrangement with Labour-Progressive Coalition ministers is working “punctiliously”. “Ministers are going out of their way to build relationships.” read more

The scramble is on for an STV omelette

You don’t need to know how electricity works to turn on the lights in your house.

That’s how Social Crediters, now all but defunct, locked up in Jim Anderton’s Progressive Coalition, used decades ago to deflect scepticism about their wondrous A-plus-B theorem to solve the world’s financial ills. read more

A biosecurity horror story

Biosecurity Minister Jim Sutton isn’t panicking despite a gloomy assessment of biosecurity strategy and procedures by his Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry in its post-election briefing.

A Biosecurity Council set up in 1997 produced a draft strategy earlier this year but it has been concluded that it was not sufficiently focused, Sutton said in an interview [on Monday]. read more