NZ imports of unhealthy ultra-processed foods have risen sharply since 1990 – new study

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Kelly Garton, Senior Research Fellow in Population Health, University of Auckland, Waipapa Taumata Rau

Over the past three decades, New Zealand’s imports of “ultra-processed” foods and drinks increased significantly, from 16 kilograms per person in 1990 to 104 kilograms in 2023.

Our research shows the share of ultra-processed foods (UPFs) in New Zealand’s total food and drink imports rose from 9% in 1990 to 22% in 2023.

The medical journal The Lancet defines UPFs as:

branded, commercial formulations made from cheap ingredients extracted or derived from whole foods, combined with additives, and mostly containing little to no whole food.

These foods include soft drinks, sweet and savoury snacks and ready meals. They are gaining global attention as a major health and environmental concern.

Diets high in UPFs carry a risk of developing a wide range of serious health conditions – including being overweight or obese, type 2 diabetes, hypertension, heart disease, chronic kidney disease and depression – and premature death.

Due to their reliance on plastic packaging, and water and energy use in production, they are also environmentally damaging.

We don’t have a clear picture of how much ultra-processed food New Zealanders are eating because the country has not run a national nutrition survey since 2008.

But if New Zealand is anything like Australia or Canada, it is likely about half the population’s energy intake is represented by UPFs.

The rise in dominance of UPFs observed over three decades in this study highlights the need for policies to counteract these trends in order to protect population nutrition.

Cheap and high in energy

UPFs are are generally made of cheap inputs such as high-yield crops (soy, maize, wheat, sugarcane, palm fruits) or scraps of meat, which are separated into starches, fibre, sugars, proteins and oils and fats.

These components are then chemically modified and combined, using industrial techniques such as extrusion, moulding and pre-frying.

They are typically high in calories as well as sugars, salt and fats. Most contain additives such as flavours, colours and emulsifiers to make the final product look and taste good.

We know about 70% of packaged food in New Zealand supermarkets is ultra-processed. We also know that 18% of premature death and disability is due to unhealthy diets and excess weight; two risk factors linked to high UPF consumption.

History of UPF entry into New Zealand

UPFs have entered the global market during the past 70 years. Initially developed as military rations during the second world war, they have since become ubiquitous.

Research shows US tobacco companies bought UPF manufacturers and applied their knowledge of flavours and child-focused marketing to develop sweetened drink brands and products with purposeful combinations of salt, fats and sugars that trigger a dopamine-like reward response.

Combined with chemical flavourings, these products became “hyper palatable” and designed to be over-eaten.

UPF producers based mainly in the US and Europe then sought to expand their reach into other regions, including the Pacific, vying for entry into untapped markets in middle- and lower-income countries.

New Zealand is an interesting case because it had a highly regulated food system until the neoliberal reforms of the 1980s and early 1990s. The market was insular and food choices were limited until then.

After the World Trade Organization was established in 1995, New Zealand rapidly opened up to overseas imports as well as foreign investment to develop its own food processing industries.

Tracking imports reveals concerning trend

Even more than the UPF products themselves, food derivatives such as industrial sweeteners and other commodity ingredients (for example, refined wheat flour and plant oils) destined to go into UPFs produced domestically make up a large and growing proportion of import volumes.

In 2023, New Zealand imported nearly 21 kilograms of industrial sugar sweeteners per person (in addition to 47 kilograms per person of regular cooking sugar).

These trends have occurred alongside a dramatic rise in obesity in the New Zealand population. While correlation does not imply causality, the influx in UPFs suggests we are likely consuming too much to be healthy.

The world’s top food system experts recommend dietary patterns with a diversity of whole or minimally processed foods (that are mostly plant-sourced), and minimal consumption of added sugars, saturated fats and salt.

But New Zealand’s food environments are increasingly dominated by UPFs, including products that target children. Social and economic circumstances (with one in three households struggling with food insecurity) increase people’s reliance on cheap, less perishable and convenient food.

Many people are time-poor, financially constrained and have limited inter-generational and community support, and whole foods are increasingly expensive. The addictive properties of UPFs and constant marketing make people crave these products.

Shifting these trends isn’t going to happen through market self-correction or individual behavioural change.

According to a 2023 progress report, successive governments have failed to implement internationally recommended policies for regulating unhealthy food products, falling well behind global best practice.

The report highlights the need for New Zealand to introduce mandatory regulations to reduce unhealthy food marketing in all media and on packaging, with a particular focus on protecting children.

It also recommends a levy on sugary drinks and mandatory targets for reducing salt and added sugar in key food categories of processed and ultra-processed foods. However, interventions will also be needed to make healthy, whole foods more available and affordable.

Each of these interventions stands to put a significant dent in New Zealanders’ consumption of UPFs, especially if implemented together as a comprehensive policy package to promote healthier food environments.

ref. NZ imports of unhealthy ultra-processed foods have risen sharply since 1990 – new study – https://theconversation.com/nz-imports-of-unhealthy-ultra-processed-foods-have-risen-sharply-since-1990-new-study-278085

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/03/19/nz-imports-of-unhealthy-ultra-processed-foods-have-risen-sharply-since-1990-new-study-278085/

Project Hail Mary is packed with hard science. An astrophysicist breaks it down

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Sara Webb, Course Director, Centre for Astrophysics and Supercomputing, Swinburne University of Technology

As an astrophysicist, my world revolves around the wonders of space and the mysteries of the universe. This means I can be a tough critic of science fiction books and films that explore these topics.

But when I walked out of a recent preview screening of the film adaptation of Andy Weir’s 2021 science fiction novel Project Hail Mary, I had tears of joy in my eyes. The filmmakers had done justice not just to the original story, but also to the science at the heart of it.

The story revolves around Ryland Grace, played by Ryan Gosling, who awakes from a coma with no memory and no idea why he’s on a space ship 11.9 light years away from Earth. As his memories slowly start to return, the truth becomes clear. The Sun is dying, and he is our only saving grace.

So here are the science facts – as well as the science fiction – of the film, which is in cinemas in Australia and New Zealand from today.

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A dying sun

In Project Hail Mary the Sun is dying due to an alien organism that has spread around our part of the Milky Way.

Firstly, could an organism spread from one solar system to another? According to some scientists, yes. It’s a theory called panspermia.

We have no hard evidence to prove it right now. But the theory isn’t completely wild. We know material from solar systems can be transported great distances – we ourselves have witnessed as least three interstellar visitors enter and fly through our Solar System.

If life forms could survive the harshness of space and live on such rocky bodies, it’s possible this is how life could spread. But that life would likely be basic organisms.

As for the organism at the centre of this movie, astrophage, its mechanics and behaviour sit rightly in the wonderful world of science fiction.

The size of space

The idea of humans travelling between stars feels like an almost impossible challenge.

In our galaxy alone there are more than 400 billion stars, but only roughly 100 of them are within 20 light years of Earth.

Project Hail Mary focuses it’s attention on one of those systems, known as Tau Ceti, sitting 11.9 light years away.

If we were to travel to this star with the fastest spacecraft humans have ever flown in, the Apollo 10 module, travelling at more than 39,900 kilometres per hour, it would take us 320,000 years. In a story where the Sun is dying now, there is no time for that. So how does Project Hail Mary overcome this problem?

Enter special relativity.

Special relativity is one of the most paradigm-shifting theories of modern history. Developed by Albert Einstein in 1905, it equated mass and energy as one and the same. It best known by the famous E = mc2 formula.

What Einstein was able to work our mathematically, and we’ve later proved observationally, is that the closer to the speed of light something travels, the slower the time it experiences in its reference frame.

It’s called a Lorentz transformation – and it allows us to determine the time experienced in a reference frame different to our own, say travelling close to the speed of light.

The movie doesn’t give a full physics lesson on this, but rather uses visual cues, including correct mathematics worked out by Grace on a whiteboard to demonstrate this time change.

What Grace determines is that he’s only been in a coma for four years due to the effects of time dilation on a ship travelling that fast. Which is scientifically spot on.

We have to talk about the aliens

While on the mission to save our world, Grace meets another being trying to do the same – Rocky.

We (us astronomers at least) do believe aliens exist somewhere in the universe. This belief isn’t based on crop circles or UFOs; it’s based on statistical chances.

In the Milky Way alone we estimate there are at least 100 billion planets. If life was able to form, evolve and thrive on Earth, there are many reasons why astronomers believe that could be true in other systems.

A lot of our confidence relates to the essential building blocks of life as we know it. All life on Earth is carbon based. But if we break down our existence even more, we find one thing: amino acids. These organic compounds are the foundation of our DNA.

What’s most exciting is that we’ve identified these in space. Samples from asteroids and fallen meteorites have confirmed many of the amino acids needed for life on Earth also exist on other objects in our Solar System.

Alien earths beyond our own

The film allows audiences to see what other planets might look like.

When Andy Weir originally wrote this novel, it was scientific consensus that alien worlds likely existed around Tau Ceti and the home planet of our new friend Rocky, 40 Eridani A.

But in recent years science has progressed and new data suggests both of these systems appear to have had false detections of planets.

So at least for now, Rocky’s home doesn’t exist – but thousands of others do. As of March 2026 astronomers have confirmed 6,100 exoplanets. These are worlds that exist beyond our own solar system, around distant stars, and can be either rocky or gaseous.

One place Grace and Rocky need to explore on their adventure to save the stars is a theoretical planet orbiting Tau Ceti. Here we see stunning hues of green and red, and distinctive swirls of gases mixing in the atmosphere.

It’s reminiscent of the gas giant of our own Solar System, Jupiter.

Project Hail Mary is more than just an epic adventure film with beautiful visuals. It’s a story that reminds us how important our world is – and how vital science is to our continued existence on it.

ref. Project Hail Mary is packed with hard science. An astrophysicist breaks it down – https://theconversation.com/project-hail-mary-is-packed-with-hard-science-an-astrophysicist-breaks-it-down-278428

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/03/19/project-hail-mary-is-packed-with-hard-science-an-astrophysicist-breaks-it-down-278428/

In a world of AI text, speech still reigns supreme

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Celeste Rodriguez Louro, Associate Professor, Chair of Linguistics and Director of Language Lab, The University of Western Australia

I remember the first time I attended a linguistics lecture as an undergraduate in Argentina. The lecturer asked a simple question: where does language come from? My instinctive answer was: books.

After four decades researching language and linguistics, that response now seems almost absurd. But it reflects a common bias among those of us raised in text-based cultures. We tend to view written language as the ultimate form of expression, knowledge transmission and even thinking itself.

Yet linguists know that speech comes first – historically, developmentally and cognitively.

Writing is a relatively recent technological invention layered on top of something much older and more fundamental. Swiss linguist, semiotician and philosopher Ferdinand de Saussure puts it best:

Language and writing are two distinct systems of signs; the second exists for the sole purpose of representing the first.

The heart of language

In sociolinguistics – the study of language in society – the most valued form of language is what researchers call the vernacular: the way people speak naturally when they are not paying attention to how they sound.

The pioneering sociolinguist William Labov famously argued that “the history of a language is the history of its vernacular”. In other words, languages vary and change through everyday speech, not through formal writing.

Because of this, sociolinguists focus on capturing naturally occurring conversation. The gold standard is storytelling – moments when speakers become so engaged they forget they are being recorded, pay little attention to their speech, and slip into their most naturalistic type of interaction.

In my own research with Glenys Collard, we use yarning, an Indigenous cultural form of storytelling and conversation, to gather spoken Aboriginal English. Yarning is not just a research method. It is also a culturally grounded way of sharing knowledge that respects the protocols and safety of the communities involved in sociolinguistic research.

Why are we so preoccupied with writing?

If speech is central to language, why do modern societies treat writing as the ultimate form of knowledge?

Part of the answer lies in why humans invented writing systems in the first place. Writing allowed information to be recorded for posterity, freed memory from having to carry everything around, and enabled administrative and scientific systems to expand.

Writing also became a tool of power – from the management of empires to the spread of colonial governance. For instance, the so-called “conquest” of the Americas by Spain was greatly facilitated by the publication, in 1492, of Nebrija’s Grammar of Castilian which facilitated the task of imposing the Spanish language to the detriment of Indigenous ancestral languages.

Over time, Western institutions came to treat written language as the primary vehicle of knowledge. Universities, bureaucracies and courts all operate through documents. Written scholarship became the gold standard of learning and authority.

Even our most famous dictionaries relied on writing. The Oxford English Dictionary was built through generations of volunteers who read texts and submitted written examples of words in use.

Education followed the same model. Students read books, wrote essays and were assessed through written exams. From medieval monastic libraries such as the Old Library at All Souls College, Oxford to modern universities, writing became synonymous with thinking.

The challenge of generative AI

Today, that model is under significant pressure.

The emergence of large language models has unsettled longstanding assumptions about writing and learning. If a machine can generate coherent essays in seconds, how can educators be sure students are doing the intellectual work themselves?

This has sparked renewed interest in something linguists have always considered to be primary: speech.

Some scholars now argue universities should place greater emphasis on oral assessment – conversations, presentations and live examinations – where students explain their thinking in real time. Once that understanding is demonstrated, AI tools could still assist with shaping the final written output.

In this sense, new technology may be pushing education back toward one of the oldest forms of knowledge exchange: spoken dialogue.

Orality can broaden who gets heard

A renewed emphasis on speech may have other benefits too.

Written academic English often acts as a gatekeeper, particularly for multilingual students whose most dominant language is not English. Many people can think, analyse and debate complex ideas more effectively in their first language than in the global language of academia.

Emerging technologies increasingly allow students to brainstorm orally in their own language, then translate or refine their ideas into written English. In theory, this could make academic spaces more linguistically inclusive.

According to some, artificial intelligence may end up amplifying something deeply human: our capacity to think through conversation.

Returning to the spoken word

None of this means writing will disappear. Written records remain essential for preserving knowledge, building scholarship and communicating across time and distance.

But it may be time to rebalance our assumptions.

Speech is where daily language lives. It is where stories are told, identities negotiated and new linguistic forms emerge. For millennia, humans have thought together by talking.

As technology reshapes how we write, we may rediscover something linguists have long known; to understand language – and perhaps even thinking itself – we need to start with the spoken word.

Through a complex combination of privilege, prestige and standardisation, written language has occupied a prime position in Western societies for the past few centuries. Yet spoken language remains the foundation on which writing rests. Large language models have disrupted this longstanding hierarchy, but speech remains. Let the spoken word be our guide as we walk together through rapidly changing times.

ref. In a world of AI text, speech still reigns supreme – https://theconversation.com/in-a-world-of-ai-text-speech-still-reigns-supreme-278654

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/03/19/in-a-world-of-ai-text-speech-still-reigns-supreme-278654/

Chalmers says latest Treasury modelling shows Australia’s inflation could reach 5%, as national cabinet meets on fuel

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra

Australia’s inflation rate could peak in “the high 4s or even higher” this year, according to Treasury modelling, Treasurer Jim Chalmers says.

The latest modelling comes as Anthony Albanese prepares to meet state and territory leaders in a national cabinet hook up on Thursday to discuss the fuel crisis and announce a national coordinator-general to help address its issues.

Albanese has asked the governments to each appoint a “point person” to liaise with the Commonwealth. The meeting will hear and share information and discuss actions that can be taken.

Chalmers will give details of the Treasury modelling of the impact of the oil shock in a Thursday speech in Melbourne, released ahead of delivery.

Treasury has modelled scenarios. The shorter-term one has the oil price staying at $100 a barrel for the first half of the year, gradually returning to pre-conflict levels by year’s end. The second has it reaching $120 in the first half of the year then taking three years to return to its former price.

“While both scenarios could underestimate the cost, given where the oil price is and the uncertain duration of these events, they give us a sense of the second round impacts,” Chalmers says.

“Treasury’s latest advice is the war could cut GDP growth by up to 0.2 percentage points across our major trading partners.

“In both cases, inflation rises and growth is hit.”

The latest Treasury work takes account of the impacts of factors such as lower global growth and higher LNG, coal and fertiliser prices.

It indicates “headline inflation would peak ¾ of a percentage point higher in the short term scenario and 1¼ percentage point higher in the prolonged one.

“It means the prospect of inflation peaking in the high 4s or even higher this year is very real.

“In the short term case, output would be 0.2 per cent lower around the middle of this year but this gap would quickly close because the shock is short lived.

“But the more prolonged scenario would leave a bigger scar.

“There would be an immediate hit to output but it would build over time.

“Treasury estimates that GDP would be 0.6 per cent lower in 2027 and even by 2029 would still be below where it would have been without the conflict.

“Around half of the impact to GDP is due to the impact of higher oil. The other half is due to broader consequences.”

The estimates of the worsening outlook for inflation and growth come after Tuesday’s interest rate rise of a quarter of a percentage point and amid some suggestions Australia might be pushed into recession, although the government discounts the chances of that.

Soaring fuel prices and the rate rise mean many Australians are being hit with a double whammy.

Ahead of the national cabinet, New South Wales Premier Chris Minns said the biggest current concern was diesel supply, “which keeps trucks moving, farms and construction projects running and goods and food getting around the state”.

Minns said NSW wanted to see “a national plan that sets out a clear escalation pathway, including what further actions may be taken if the conflict continues and conditions worsen”.

Albanese said the government was conscious of shortages in some areas, especially of diesel, and had taken action including to release 20% of the national fuel reserve.

He said Australia had its largest fuel reserves in 15 years and also emphasised that scheduled ships carrying fuel were arriving. “All of our ships have arrived at this point in time, but we’ve had a surge in demand, which is leading to some shortages in some areas, particularly of diesel.”

Chalmers says the Middle east conflict “will be a defining influence” on the May 12 budget.

Chalmers sets out principles for his tax reform

In this speech Chalmers also sets out the principles that will underpin his plans to reform taxation in the budget.

He says the budget will be focused on “three ambitious reform packages”. These will be a savings package, a productivity and investment package, and a tax package.

The first principle, on tax reform, will be the recognition “an outdated tax system is weighing on the opportunities faced by younger Australians and future generations.” Changes would focus on intergenerational responsibilities.

He says as a second principle, the government was focused on “better incentivising productive business investment, if we can afford to”.

The third principle was to make the system “simpler and more sustainable”.

Chalmers says the Middle East crisis is a stark reminder of why it was urgent to address the three economic challenges: budget repair, productivity and tax reform.

The economic uncertainty and volatility meant more reform was needed, not less. “It’s a reason to go further, not slower.”

EU President here next week as government close to finally nailing trade deal

The president of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, will visit Australia from Monday to Wednesday next week, with the government expecting to clinch the long-awaited free trade deal with the EU.

The finalisation of the agreement must be at leadership level, with the issue of access for Australian red meat to Europe among issues still to be resolved.

ref. Chalmers says latest Treasury modelling shows Australia’s inflation could reach 5%, as national cabinet meets on fuel – https://theconversation.com/chalmers-says-latest-treasury-modelling-shows-australias-inflation-could-reach-5-as-national-cabinet-meets-on-fuel-278190

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/03/19/chalmers-says-latest-treasury-modelling-shows-australias-inflation-could-reach-5-as-national-cabinet-meets-on-fuel-278190/

Project Vault: Peace in the moana or military outpost?

COMMENTARY: By Niamh O’Flynn

To most of us in Aotearoa, the current illegal war in Iran feels distant. We see it in our news feeds, we feel it at the petrol pump, and we hear about it in “trade disruptions”.

We tell ourselves we’re just a small, peaceful nation caught in the crossfire of superpowers.

But behind the scenes, a deal is being negotiated that changes our role entirely.

The New Zealand government is currently negotiating a critical minerals deal with the Trump administration. Under “Project Vault”, the US is aggressively stockpiling minerals from both land and sea through a blend of private mega-capital and government-backed loans.

And at the heart of the deal with New Zealand is an anonymous metal, Vanadium.

Vanadium is mostly unknown to New Zealanders. But the US Department of Defense classifies it as a top-tier strategic mineral. Why? Because you can’t build a modern war machine without it.

It is the literal backbone of the high-strength steel used in missiles, armour-piercing projectiles, and the jet engines currently flying sorties in the Middle East.

Strange mining candidate
In New Zealand, vanadium isn’t commercially mined. Which, you would think, makes it a strange candidate to be at the heart of a trade deal. But dig a little deeper.

Vanadium is the mineral that would be mined by Trans Tasman Resources (TTR, wholly-owned by Australian mining company Manuka Resources) in the hugely controversial proposed seabed mining project in the South Taranaki Bight.

Iwi, Greenpeace, KASM and many others have actively opposed this project for more than a decade. It’s getting difficult to keep track of all of our wins, but we’ve beaten it through the EPA (including TTR’s withdrawal the second time), The High Court, The Supreme Court, and most recently, the Fast-Track process.

TTR has epically failed in Iwi relations, has been unable to convince experts, or even a government-appointed fast-track panel that it could mine without significant damage to the environment, or show how the mine would benefit people in New Zealand.

Despite a track record of abject failure to get seabed mining off the ground in Aotearoa, TTR and the government are hell-bent on starting it, no matter the consequences.

The industry arguments for mining the sea have long been around the need for supplying green tech, specifically batteries for renewables. But this has been widely dismissed as Greenwash, and several EV manufacturers have pledged not to use deepsea-mined minerals.

Certainly, the US administration is clearly citing munitions, not renewables in their desire for vanadium, making it clear that this is about war and superpowers.

Failing fast-track bid
TTR pulled out of its failing fast-track application on the day that the government announced its $80 million critical mineral fund, helping mining companies get access to the minerals found across the country.

The company’s CEO, Alan Eggers, said that the company was not walking away from its plans to mine the coasts of South Taranaki.

It represents the zombie project that keeps coming back from the dead. And it seems the government is planning to throw it yet another lifeline.

Now when we talk about seabed mining in the South Taranaki Bight, we are talking about turning the habitat of the blue whales into a quarry for the US military-industrial complex.

We cannot claim to be a nation of peace while actively digging up the ingredients for war, with an exclusive deal to provide them to the US.

The man tipped to become the next US ambassador to New Zealand, Niue, Samoa and the Cook Islands, Jared Novelly, has gone on record talking of his priorities for the Pacific region.

I had to laugh when I heard he told the US Senate he would be promoting a “free and open Pacific” while in office, which includes expanding the US security presence, and getting access to critical minerals.

Marshall Islands fallout
Let’s not forget the last time the US brought their military agenda to Pacific shores, testing nuclear weapons in the Marshall Islands for more than 15 years. The fallout of these tests, the displacement and horrific health impacts, are still being felt by the community decades later.

The Pacific, of which Aotearoa is part, is a region of peace. This was declared when the region aligned on making it a nuclear-free zone back in the 1980s (although French nuclear testing continued until the 1990s), and it remains an important common value.

But doing deals with warmongerers like Trump, signing up to supply the US with the very things they need to carry out their illegal wars, is something that should concern every Pacific nation currently being courted for mineral deals.

Aotearoa should, just as it has in the past, be a strong voice for de-escalation, not a military outpost providing the hardware for global instability. Do we want our legacy to be as a silent partner in the illegal wars shaking the globe?

This minerals deal means the future of Aotearoa’s seabed has become a test of whether we can still stand up to a superpower. We’ve beaten TTR’s seabed mining project at every turn so far, now we need to double down and get seabed mining banned for good, and ensure that no minerals deal is struck with Trump’s America.

Niamh O’Flynn is programme director of Greenpeace Aotearoa.

Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/03/19/project-vault-peace-in-the-moana-or-military-outpost/

Iran’s ‘Samson option’ : Deterrence restored or nothing – the logic behind Tehran’s next move

ANALYSIS: By Kevork Almassian

When the Strait of Hormuz closes, you don’t need to be a military analyst to understand what just happened. You only need to understand what the world runs on.

Oil. Gas. Shipping lanes. Insurance rates. Container schedules. Energy prices that decide whether factories hum or go dark, whether households heat or freeze, whether governments fall or survive.

This is why serious analysts have been saying for years that Hormuz is not a “threat” Iran invented for propaganda; it is a structural red line that the US and its allies kept treating like a bluff because they could not imagine a regional actor actually pulling the lever that exposes a vulnerability — dependence.

And this is why what we are watching now is a massive US miscalculation that will be studied later the way the Iraq invasion is studied today, with the same disbelief that decision-makers could be so arrogant, so blind, and so certain that the other side would fold.

Because Washington didn’t only miscalculate Iran’s will. It miscalculated geography, logistics, and blowback. It miscalculated the fact that the US empire in the Middle East is not a fortress; it is a web of exposed arteries: bases scattered across Gulf monarchies, troops housed in predictable locations, air defenses that are expensive and finite, radars and communications nodes that can be degraded, and a regional order that can be shaken with one choke point.

You can see the arrogance in the assumptions. For years, Iran warned that if its survival is threatened—if the U.S. and Israel push the conflict into an existential zone—Hormuz becomes part of the battlefield. Washington heard that and filed it under “Iranian theatrics,” because the American political class is addicted to the idea that their enemies always bluff, while they alone possess the right to act.

But Iran was not bluffing. Iran was describing the rules of an environment where deterrence is the only language that keeps you alive.

Hormuz was always the red line
The Strait of Hormuz is the world economy’s pressure point, and the fact that it remained open for years was not proof of Western strength. It was proof that Iran understood escalation control, because keeping Hormuz open — even while under sanctions, sabotage, assassinations, and constant threats — was Iran’s way of signaling restraint.

The West interpreted that restraint as weakness.

That’s the miscalculation.

Washington assumed Iran would keep absorbing blows, keep taking “limited strikes,” keep responding in contained ways, because Washington has lived for decades inside a fantasy where escalation is something the US controls.

But in a real war environment, you don’t get to decide the boundaries alone. The other side gets a vote. And Iran’s vote is written in the geography of the Gulf.

Iran’s ‘Samson option’
I used the phrase “Samson option” not to be dramatic, but to describe the logic of a state pushed into a corner: if the enemy wants you neutralised, disarmed, and humiliated, you don’t respond only with missiles; you respond with the full spectrum of leverage you possess — military, diplomatic, economic, and psychological.

Iran’s leverage is not limited to striking targets. It includes making the war economically unbearable for everyone who enabled it. It includes turning a regional conflict into a global cost spiral. It includes demonstrating that the “free flow of energy” is not a natural law; it is a contingent privilege that can evaporate when a state is pushed past its red lines.

This is what the West still struggles to internalise. It thinks deterrence is only about bombs and bases. Iran thinks deterrence is about making aggression unaffordable.

And Hormuz is how you make it unaffordable.

The three “solutions” don’t solve anything
Once Hormuz becomes the choke point, you immediately hear the same three proposals recycled through Western media.

First: “military escorts”: The idea that you can escort tankers through the most militarised, most surveilled, most missile-saturated corridor on earth as if this is a piracy problem. But escorts do not remove risk; they merely concentrate it.

They turn commercial shipping into military convoys, and that increases the probability of a clash that escalates further. You can escort 10 ships. Can you escort everything, every day, indefinitely, under constant threat? And at what cost in interceptors, drones, naval assets, and insurance panic?

Second: “ceasefire”: The idea that Washington can call a pause and re-freeze the conflict after crossing lines that Iran considers existential. But a ceasefire is not a magic reset button; it is a negotiation outcome.

And Iran is no longer interested in ceasefires that reproduce the same cycle: war, negotiations, pause, then war again. Iran has learned — painfully — that diplomacy has been weaponised against it.

Third: “capitulation”: The fantasy that Iran will disarm itself and accept a future where it is strategically naked. This is the most delusional solution of all, because it assumes Iranians are incapable of reading the regional record.

Iraq disarmed and was invaded. Libya dismantled its programme and was destroyed. Syria gave up its chemical file and was still ripped apart. In that record, capitulation is not peace. Capitulation is an invitation.

So no, none of the three “solutions” solves the crisis. They only reveal the empire’s problem: it assumed it could impose costs without paying them.

Even The New York Times admits miscalculation
One of the most interesting developments is how even mainstream reporting — carefully framed, carefully sourced — has begun to concede what was obvious from day one: the Trump administration and its advisers miscalculated Iran’s response.

The New York Times, in the sections I cited, points to something the propaganda refuses to admit: Iran is not acting like a decapitated regime. Iran is adapting. It is learning. It is targeting vulnerabilities, not staging symbolic retaliation.

It is degrading key radar and air defence systems, hitting communications infrastructure, and shifting the battlefield away from the tidy “Israel–Iran” framing into a wider map that includes US assets and allies across the Gulf.

That matters because for years the West comforted itself with the idea that the Iranian response would be predictable and containable. The NYT reporting suggests the opposite: Iran is adjusting its tactics as the campaign evolves, hitting systems that matter to US coordination and defence, and doing so without the old “ample warning” pattern that allowed the US to frame everything as controlled.

In other words, Iran is making the environment less manageable for the US, which is exactly what deterrence looks like when you cannot match the empire symmetrically.

The miscalculation wasn’t only military
There is another layer that people avoid saying out loud, but it’s central: the US and Israel did not only miscalculate Iran’s missiles; they miscalculated Iran’s society.

Even Iranians who dislike the Islamic nature of their political system can still connect a basic dot: wherever America and Israel intervene, the country becomes worse.

People don’t need to love their government to recognise a foreign assault on their nation. This is why the fantasy of “decapitation + instant uprising” is so dangerous: it projects Western wishful thinking onto a society that is being attacked and then expects the society to celebrate its attacker.

That is not how national psychology works under bombardment.

‘They want Iran’s energy’ is the quiet part out loud
Now we come to the part that explains the deeper imperial logic behind all this: energy.

I referenced the mindset openly circulating among the empire-adjacent influencer class: the idea that “we need Iran’s energy for AI projects,” that the AI race with China will be decided by securing energy inputs, and that therefore this war is not only Israel’s war, but “our war”.

This is imperial logic in its purest form. It doesn’t even bother to hide behind democracy or human rights. It says: we need your resources for our future, and if you will not give them to us under cooperative terms, we will take them under coercive terms.

And here is the thing these people cannot understand, because their mindset is trapped in a 19th-century colonial reflex: cooperation is possible.

China shows that cooperation is possible. China buys resources, builds infrastructure, creates contracts, offers development pathways, and yes, does it for its own interests, but it does it through exchange, not through looting. The US model, by contrast, is too often: bully, sanction, destabilise, bomb, then pretend it’s about “order”.

So when I say this war has gone “too wrong” for Washington even to benefit from Iranian energy later, I mean something very simple: you do not kill people, destroy families, and then expect business as usual. You don’t kill children and then expect Iranian society to say, “Sure, let’s partner with you.”

This is where imperial arrogance collides with a proud, dignified Iranian society.

[embedded content]
How Trump miscalculated                            Video: Syriana Analysis

Iran’s demands are not cosmetic
Now the crucial point: why Iran won’t stop now.

Iran is not continuing this because it “loves war”. It is continuing because the war created leverage, and Iran’s leadership understands that if you stop now, you waste the leverage you paid for in blood and risk.

This is why Iran’s demands are emerging with clarity.

First: deterrence restored. Not just for Iran, but for the wider deterrence ecosystem that includes Hezbollah. Iran wants to punish its enemy to a degree that makes future attacks psychologically and strategically unthinkable.

Second: US bases constrained or removed. Iran is not naïve; it knows it may not expel the US from the region overnight. But it can force a new reality where US installations become purely defensive or are reconfigured in ways that reduce their offensive utility against Iran.

In plain language: if Gulf monarchies host bases that are used to strike Iran, those bases become part of the battlefield, and Iran is signaling it wants to break that model permanently.

This is why the Iranian foreign minister’s tone matters, and why voices like professor Marandi’s matter: the message is no longer “we can negotiate and return to normal.” The message is “normal is what created this war, and we need a new security architecture.”

‘Deterrence or nothing’ framework
This is where Amal Saad’s analysis captures the logic cleanly: deterrence or nothing; total war or total ceasefire.

Her point is that the old conflict-resolution framework doesn’t apply, because Iran is not seeking a temporary suspension of hostilities; it is seeking to alter the bargaining space itself. Tehran rejects the framework in which negotiations are essentially arms control over Iran, and insists instead that the real issue is US-Israeli aggression and the regional order that enables it.

That is why Iran refuses a ceasefire that simply resets the cycle.

And that is why the US miscalculation is so profound: Washington thought it could strike under a cover of “diplomacy,” then return to negotiation as if diplomacy were a neutral channel. Iran now treats that as subterfuge, and it wants to make the weaponisation of diplomacy costly enough that it cannot be repeated.

Why Iran won’t stop now
So we return to the simple truth: Iran won’t stop now because stopping now would mean relinquishing the leverage it has finally acquired — militarily, economically, psychologically — at the very moment when the US and Europe are feeling pain they cannot hide.

Trump was elected on promises of prosperity. Now energy prices surge, markets shake, global supply lines tighten, and allies panic. From Tehran’s point of view, this is the rare moment when the empire is vulnerable enough that Iran can increase its demands instead of being forced to accept humiliating ones.

And when you understand that, you understand why this isn’t ending with a tidy “ceasefire” press release. Iran believes that if it accepts another temporary arrangement, it will simply be attacked again when the West finds a better moment.

So the choice Iran is presenting is brutal but clear: a settlement that restores deterrence and rewires the regional security order, or continued pressure through the one lever that forces the world to pay attention.

Hormuz.

Washington assumed it was a bluff.

Now the world is learning what happens when a red line is real.

Kevork Almassian is a Syrian geopolitical analyst and the founder of Syriana Analysis. This article was first published on his Substack Kevork’s Newsletter and shared via Collective Evolution.

Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/03/18/irans-samson-option-deterrence-restored-or-nothing-the-logic-behind-tehrans-next-move/

Sir Anthony Mason, a jurist who shaped Australia, dies at 100

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Anne Twomey, Professor Emerita in Constitutional Law, University of Sydney

Sir Anthony Mason, the former Chief Justice of Australia and one of Australia’s greatest and most influential jurists, has died just shy of his 101st birthday. He was a man of sharp mind, strong principles, and a wicked sense of humour. His jurisprudence shaped Australia, from the recognition of native title to a constitutional freedom of political communication.

Anthony Frank Mason was born on April 21 1925, and grew up in Sydney during the Great Depression, the tumultuous era of Premier Jack Lang, and the second world war. His father was a surveyor who wanted his son to follow in his footsteps, but his mother was determined he would be a barrister, like his uncle. Young Mason agreed, and his course was set from an early age.

But war intervened, and after leaving school, Mason joined the Royal Australian Air Force in January 1944. This was a courageous choice, because the life expectancy of air crews in action was poor. He trained first in Australia and then in Canada as a navigator. The war ended before he saw active service.

Returning to Sydney, Mason studied arts and law at the University of Sydney, where he gained first-class honours in both. He also later taught equity at the university for five years, including to three students who were later to become Justices of the High Court. One of those, Mary Gaudron, served with him on the court.

But his vocation was to be a barrister, and he was called to the bar in 1951, enjoying a stellar career from very early on. In 1964, at the age of 39, the Menzies government appointed Mason solicitor-general of the Commonwealth. In that role he provided the government with legal advice on matters ranging from the restriction of Privy Council appeals to voting rights and casual Senate vacancies, and argued cases in the High Court.

In 1969 his path changed course when he was appointed as a judge of the NSW Supreme Court, serving on the Court of Appeal. But he was not there long. In August 1972, the McMahon government appointed him as a Justice of the High Court of Australia. He was still only 47, which gave him a long time to serve on the bench.

At the time of his appointment, Mason was regarded as a conservative, black-letter lawyer – meaning he was not inclined towards reform or innovation. But unlike most people, who tend to grow more conservative as they age, Mason grew more receptive to change. This became particularly notable after the Hawke government appointed him as chief justice of the High Court in 1987, and he grew into the leadership role.

Mason rejected strict adherence to incoherent or inconsistent precedents. Instead, he favoured the development of the law based on fundamental principles, often rooted in their historical context.

A notable example was Cole v Whitfield, where Mason united the court in a unanimous judgment on the meaning of section 92 of the Constitution. It rejected decades of infuriatingly inconsistent and bewildering judgements on the freedom of interstate trade and commerce, in favour of a revised test derived from the constitutional history of the provision. This is the judgement of which Mason was most proud, because of both the effort it took and its achievement in bringing greater rationality and certainty to the law.

His change in judicial approach brought him the ire of those who preferred the conservative “Mason 1” to what they saw as a more progressive or activist “Mason 2”. Others, however, saw Mason as providing the intellectual heft to undertake necessary reforms in a logical and principled manner. Mason himself considered that he ought to have been the subject of greater criticism if he had not changed his views over 30 years.

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Mason’s judgement in the Franklin Dam case in 1983, which gave a very broad interpretation to the Commonwealth’s external affairs power, was an early indicator that he was shedding his mantel of judicial conservatism. He held that the Commonwealth Parliament could rely on the external affairs power to legislate to implement treaty obligations, even though that legislation dealt with internal domestic matters, such as the building of a dam in Tasmania.

A major influence on the High Court was the enactment of the Australia Acts in 1986, which cut off most of Australia’s ties with the United Kingdom. They terminated Privy Council appeals, making the High Court the ultimate court of appeal for Australia. This led Mason, and the rest of the court, to adopt a much more Australian-focused jurisprudence, which could depart from British precedents.

Mason, a nationalist, was instrumental in developing an implied “nationhood” power. This allows the Commonwealth parliament to legislate in relation to certain national matters, from the flag and the bicentenary through to national emergencies.

Mason was also critically important to the recognition of an implied freedom of political communication in the Constitution, in the Australian Capital Television case. It imposed constraints on legislative efforts to restrict freedom of speech, which governments continue to butt against today.

Perhaps the best known case of the Mason Court was the Mabo case in which native title was recognised in Australia for the first time. Its consequences were profound for the nation and continue to play out on the national stage.

[embedded content]

The 50th anniversary of the Whitlam dismissal last year brought forth much discussion of the role Mason played in providing informal advice to Sir John Kerr. Mason has explained his role, including his advice to Kerr that Whitlam should be given warning before any dismissal. Kerr took his own course, as controversial as it was.

After his compulsory retirement from the High Court in 1995, Mason continued to serve the public in many roles. He was chancellor of the University of New South Wales, chairman of the council of the National Library, a judge of the Supreme Court of Fiji and president of the Court of Appeal of the Solomon Islands.

For many years he was also a judge of the Hong Kong Court of Final Appeal. His jurisprudence on that court, such as his important judgement on the common law of misconduct in public office, continues to be relied on today.

At his 100th birthday party, Sir Anthony Mason remained full of intellectual brilliance and wit, with a sparkle of mischief in his eyes. He will be sadly missed by his family, the associates who worked for him and felt like a second family to him, and his fellow judges and lawyers who respected him beyond measure.

ref. Sir Anthony Mason, a jurist who shaped Australia, dies at 100 – https://theconversation.com/sir-anthony-mason-a-jurist-who-shaped-australia-dies-at-100-278662

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/03/18/sir-anthony-mason-a-jurist-who-shaped-australia-dies-at-100-278662/

Thousands urge NZ prime minister Luxon to condemn illegal US-Israeli war on Iran

Greenpeace Aotearoa

Thousands of people have signed a petition demanding New Zealand Prime Minister Christopher Luxon stand up and condemn the illegal attacks on Iran by the United States and Israel.

Greenpeace delivered the petition to opposition Labour leader Chris Hipkins in Wellington today.

Standing on the steps of Parliament, Greenpeace Aotearoa executive director Dr Russel Norman said: “This war is plainly illegal — it is not an act of self-defence nor is it sanctioned by the UN Security Council.

“While we have come to expect that the US government approach to international law is more honoured in the breach than the observance, nonetheless international law is critical for the security of everyone on the planet but especially for a small nation like New Zealand.”

Dr Norman said Luxon was expected to advocate in favour of international law and hence condemn “this reckless illegal war”.

“Silence in the face of injustice is complicity, and thousands of New Zealanders agree that Luxon should be standing up to bullies like Trump, who is attempting to destroy any possibility of a rules-based international order.”

Greenpeace delivered the petition to the Parliament opposition who have been open about their condemnation of Trump’s illegal war.

Fossil fuel price war link
Greenpeace also made the link from this illegal war to the escalating price of fossil fuels.

“This illegal war has disrupted oil, gas and fertiliser supplies, exposing Luxon’s Trump-like obsession with outdated fossil fuels, leaving New Zealanders paying the price,” said Dr Norman.

“Luxon has collapsed the EV market by killing the clean car discount, making it cheaper to import gas guzzling cars. He’s ended public transport subsidies for young people, blocked funding for cycleways, but wants to spend billions of dollars to build new roads.”

The Prime Minister now wanted to expose the country even further to the volatile global fossil fuel market by charging New Zealanders a gas tax to build an LNG import terminal.

“The Luxon government should be investing in renewable energy and the electrification of transport to insulate New Zealanders from energy supply shocks and rising energy prices, as well as cutting climate pollution,” said Dr Norman.

Republished from Greenpeace Aotearoa.

Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/03/18/thousands-urge-nz-prime-minister-luxon-to-condemn-illegal-us-israeli-war-on-iran/

Electric vehicles: what to know if you’re considering an EV

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Hussein Dia, Professor of Transport Technology and Sustainability, Swinburne University of Technology

Soaring petrol prices are once again making many Australians think seriously about switching to an electric vehicle.

As politicians warn Australians not to resort to panic buying, finding constructive ways to reduce your petrol costs and cut carbon emissions has become increasingly appealing.

The strikes on Iran have seen prices of Brent crude – the global oil benchmark – trade around US$104 (A$150) per barrel, up from roughly US$68 (A$96) a few weeks earlier. There is no clear end in sight for the current crisis.

The good news is buying and owning an electric car is becoming much easier as more models arrive in Australia and charging networks expand. But there are still a few things worth considering before making the switch.

What should you look for when choosing an EV?

Choosing an electric vehicle is not very different from choosing any other car. Size, price and safety features still matter.

But there are a few additional things worth checking.

The first is driving range, which is how far the vehicle can travel on a full battery. Most new EVs sold in Australia offer between 300 and 500 kilometres of range, which is more than enough for typical daily driving.

It is also worth looking at charging capability. Some vehicles can accept faster charging speeds than others, meaning they can recharge more quickly when using high-power public chargers. This can make a difference on long trips.

Finally, check the battery warranty. Most manufacturers offer warranties of eight years or around 160,000km, providing reassurance about long-term battery performance.

For most buyers, the key is simply choosing a vehicle that suits their everyday driving needs.

[embedded content]
How To Buy The Right Electric Car.

Check how much you drive

An important question to ask when choosing an electric vehicle is: how far do you usually drive each day?

Most Australians drive far less than they think. Car passenger kilometres per person have reduced from a peak of 13,184 in 2004 to 10,238 in 2024–25.

That’s roughly 28km per day, meaning many drivers could go several days between charges with today’s EVs. Most new models now sold in Australia have a real-world driving range of 300–500km on a full battery.

In practice, many EV owners simply plug their car in at home overnight once or twice a week.

Most EV drivers charge at home a few times a week. Fast chargers are used on longer trips. Zaptech/Unsplash

Do you need to install a charger at home?

Many people assume installing a home charger is essential, but that is not always the case.

Electric vehicles can be charged from a standard household power point. This is the slowest method, but it can still add 10–15km of range per hour of charging. At that rate, a 12-hour overnight charge could give you up to 180km.

Many owners choose to install a dedicated wall charger instead. These typically cost A$1,000–2,000 plus installation. These charge much faster, allowing most vehicles to fully recharge overnight.

Fast chargers are useful, but usually not for everyday charging. Public fast chargers are designed mainly for longer trips.

These high-power chargers can add 150–300km of driving range per hour, depending on the vehicle and type of charger.

They are very convenient for highway travel but usually cost more than charging at home. Public fast charging can range from around 50 to 70 cents per kilowatt-hour, which is still cheaper than petrol, but the savings are smaller than charging at home.

Many EV owners only use public chargers occasionally, not every day.

[embedded content]
EV drivers in Australia will come across three different charger speeds. Here’s how they work.

How much should you charge the battery?

Another common question is whether EV batteries should always be charged to 100%.

For everyday driving, many manufacturers recommend keeping the battery between 20% and 80% most of the time. This helps maximise long-term battery health.

A fully charged battery is generally under more stress. However, charging to 100% shortly before a long trip is fine. Modern EV battery management systems are designed to protect the battery automatically.

In practice, drivers quickly develop simple routines, often charging overnight a few times per week.

How much could you save on fuel?

One of the main reasons drivers consider switching to an EV is the potential saving on running costs.

Electric cars are typically cheaper to run because electricity costs less than petrol and electric motors are far more energy efficient than combustion engines.

Home charging is also the cheapest way to run an EV. Electricity for overnight charging typically costs 20–30c per kilowatt-hour, which can translate to around $3–5 per 100km of driving.

By comparison, fuel-efficient petrol cars typically consume 6–8 litres per 100km and cost $14–18 to drive that distance at current fuel prices.

That difference can add up quickly over a year. Online tools, such as our public EV payback calculator, allow drivers to compare different vehicles and test how savings change depending on electricity prices, fuel costs and driving distance.

What if you live in an apartment or unit?

Charging can be more complicated for people living in apartments or units, but options are expanding quickly.

Many new residential developments now include shared EV charging infrastructure in car parks. Some apartment owners are also installing chargers in their individual parking spaces where building rules allow it.

Workplace charging is another growing option. Many employers are beginning to install chargers for staff vehicles, allowing drivers to top up their battery during the day.

Public charging networks are expanding across Australian cities. While these chargers typically cost more than home electricity, they provide an important option for drivers without dedicated parking or charging access at home.

As EV adoption increases, improving charging access for apartment residents is becoming a major focus for building managers and policymakers.

Where next?

The decision to switch to an electric vehicle has never been more straightforward. Ranges are longer, models are more affordable, charging networks are expanding and running costs are lower than ever.

As petrol prices remind Australians of their exposure to global oil markets, the case for making the switch gets stronger.

For most drivers, the question is no longer whether an EV could work for them – it is simply a matter of when.

The best EV choice usually depends on three things: how far you drive, where you charge, and whether the running-cost savings outweigh the upfront premium. Swinburne University of Technology

ref. Electric vehicles: what to know if you’re considering an EV – https://theconversation.com/electric-vehicles-what-to-know-if-youre-considering-an-ev-278419

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/03/18/electric-vehicles-what-to-know-if-youre-considering-an-ev-278419/

Yes, what you think about inflation can influence what the RBA does next

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Stella Huangfu, Associate Professor, School of Economics, University of Sydney

After two back-to-back interest rate hikes by the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) in February and March, all eyes are on the next policy meeting set for May.

While much attention tends to focus on current inflation, the central bank’s latest decision on Tuesday highlights another concern: what people think inflation will be in the future.

In its statement, the RBA noted that “short-term measures of inflation expectations have already risen” and warned “there is a material risk that inflation will remain above target for longer than previously anticipated”.

This matters, because inflation is not just about what prices are doing today. It is also shaped by what households and businesses expect prices to do in the future.

What are inflation expectations?

Put simply, inflation expectations are beliefs about how quickly prices will rise over the next year or two.

Economists track these beliefs in several ways. In Australia, one widely watched measure comes from the Melbourne Institute, which surveys households about their expectations for inflation over the next 12 months.

These expectations are not just abstract numbers. They influence real decisions.

If households expect prices to rise quickly, they may bring forward spending to avoid higher costs later. Businesses may increase prices in anticipation of rising input costs. Workers may seek higher wages to protect their purchasing power.

Together, these responses can push inflation higher – even if the initial increase in prices was temporary.



Why the RBA cares so much

Central banks aim to keep inflation expectations “anchored”. This means ensuring people continue to believe inflation will return to the target range over time.

For the RBA, that target is 2–3%.

Earlier this month, Governor Michele Bullock warned “we already have elevated inflation” and there is a “risk that inflation expectations might become a little bit unanchored”.

If expectations remain anchored, temporary shocks – such as higher fuel prices caused by the Middle East war – are less likely to turn into sustained inflation. People assume inflation will settle back down, and their behaviour reflects that belief.

But if expectations begin to drift higher, the task of taming inflation becomes much harder.

Signs expectations may be rising

Recent data suggest inflation expectations in Australia may be edging up again.

The Melbourne Institute survey shows households’ expectations for inflation over the next year have increased in recent months.

What is surprising is that this rise has occurred even during periods when petrol prices were falling.

As National Australia Bank’s chief economist Sally Auld has pointed out, this suggests households remain concerned about broader price pressures, not just temporary movements in fuel costs.

In other words, even when some prices ease, people may still expect general inflation to remain elevated.

Could inflation psychology become entrenched?

One of the biggest risks for central banks is that inflation becomes embedded in people’s thinking.

This was a defining feature of the 1970s. Workers expected prices to keep rising and demanded higher wages, while businesses raised prices to cover those costs – creating a self-reinforcing cycle known as a wage–price spiral.

Today’s economy is different in important ways.

Workers now generally have less bargaining power than in the 1970s. Wage negotiations are less frequent, and union membership is much lower at just 13%, down from 40% in 1992.



This makes a classic wage–price spiral less likely.

Even so, the risk today is more subtle: expectations could still be drifting higher without triggering a full wage–price spiral.

Why expectations still matter

Even without a wage–price spiral, inflation expectations remain a key part of the story.

If households believe prices will continue rising quickly, they may adjust their behaviour – spending sooner, accepting higher prices, or expecting stronger wage growth in the future.

This can make inflation more persistent than it would otherwise be.

That is why the RBA is placing such strong emphasis on expectations. As Bullock put it:

The board is really focused on inflation expectations. We’ve been able to achieve this because inflation expectations have been anchored. If we see that they are not, then interest rates are going to have to respond.

The bottom line

Interest rate decisions are not just about current inflation data. They are also about managing expectations.

Keeping inflation expectations under control is crucial. If households and businesses remain confident that inflation will return to the 2–3% target range, the RBA has a much better chance of bringing inflation down gradually.

But if that confidence weakens, the central bank may need to act more aggressively – with higher interest rates and a greater risk of slowing the economy.

That is why inflation expectations, though less visible than prices themselves, are at the centre of the RBA’s latest rate increase.

ref. Yes, what you think about inflation can influence what the RBA does next – https://theconversation.com/yes-what-you-think-about-inflation-can-influence-what-the-rba-does-next-278549

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/03/18/yes-what-you-think-about-inflation-can-influence-what-the-rba-does-next-278549/

As Israel invades again, Lebanon faces more turmoil and possible civil war. Here are 3 ways this could go

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Mariam Farida, Lecturer in Terrorism and Counter-Terrorism Studies, Macquarie University

Just two days after the US and Israel killed Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, in late February, Hezbollah opened a second front in the war by launching six rockets into Israel from Lebanon.

The rockets came as a surprise to many. Hezbollah, once one of Iran’s most powerful proxy fighting forces, had been severely weakened by Israel during 13 months of fighting from late 2023–24.

The militant group had also stopped firing rockets into Israel since signing a ceasefire agreement in November 2024.

According to the ceasefire, the Lebanese army was to take control of the territory south of the Litani River in southern Lebanon and prevent Hezbollah from rebuilding its infrastructure. Hezbollah was also expected to move its fighters north of the river, about 30 kilometres from the border with Israel.

The Lebanese government and the Lebanese army then launched an enthusiastic public campaign to show their commitment to the systematic disarmament of Hezbollah’s fighters and dismantling of its missile launches.

But this has proved to be a monumentally difficult task for both the government and army.

The Israeli army has continued to carry out airstrikes on Hezbollah military sites and targeted assassinations of Hezbollah fighters on a near-daily basis since the ceasefire.

Hezbollah has repeatedly refused to disarm and withdraw north of the Litani River if these strikes continue.

So, the ceasefire deal was already shaky. And when fighting resumed earlier this month, Israel decided it was time to “finish the job” in Lebanon.

This week, it launched another ground invasion to completely destroy Hezbollah’s remaining military infrastructure, “just as was done against Hamas in Rafah, Beit Hanoun and the terror tunnels in Gaza”, Israel’s defence minister, Israel Katz, said.

More than 1 million Lebanese people have already been displaced, leading to fears Israel will reoccupy southern Lebanon, as it did for 18 years from 1982 to 2000.


Read more: Israel has invaded Lebanon six times in the past 50 years – a timeline of events


Israeli soldiers with tanks gather at an undisclosed position along the Israel-Lebanon border in northern Israel on March 16. Atef Safadi/EPA

There are three possible scenarios for what could happen next.

1. A short-term or “limited” ground operation

Israel does not want a return to its 18-year occupation, when it was dragged into a guerrilla war with Hezbollah and other groups, and by some estimates lost hundreds of soldiers.

A limited ground operation lasting a few weeks would therefore be the most desirable scenario to minimise troop casualties on the ground.

But this carries risk, too. A limited operation would make it difficult for the Israeli army to successfully destroy Hezbollah’s infrastructure. Israel has attempted these types of limited operations in the past and so far failed to stop Hezbollah rockets. Hezbollah, too, is unlikely to want to de-escalate quickly.

As such, a limited ground operation seems unlikely.

Mourners carry the body of a Hezbollah fighter who was killed by Israeli airstrikes during his funeral procession in Khraibeh village, eastern Lebanon, on March 8. Bilal Hussein/AP

2. A war of attrition that lasts for months

This is a more possible scenario since the Hezbollah–Israel conflict is closely linked to the US–Israel war on Iran.

It has become obvious that Iran is engaged in a war of attrition with its adversaries. The regime doesn’t need to “win” the war; it just needs to hold on long enough for the US and Israel to feel enough global and domestic pressure to stop. Then, the regime can claim “victory”.

In this scenario, Hezbollah is fully capable of mirroring this strategy. If it can withstand Israeli airstrikes, it can retaliate with the type of guerilla warfare it has successfully used in the past to drag Israel into a longer conflict.

There are already signs Hezbollah fighters are adopting these strategies.

3. Another major war that will lead to reoccupation

This is the most likely scenario with highest chance of regional ripple effects.

If Israel launches a much larger ground operation, it would be aimed at fundamentally reshaping the balance of power with Hezbollah and putting more pressure on the Lebanese government before engaging in any negotiations or diplomatic settlements.

This is typical of negotiating processes: one side uses excessive violence to try to establish “new facts on the ground” and gain more leverage before entering into talks.

However, this could result in major losses for the Israeli army, similar to those suffered during its 1982 invasion and subsequent occupation.

Another possible outcome is a power vacuum in Lebanon and the outbreak of another civil war.

A Lebanese civil war would have serious implications for the region, much as the last one did from 1975 to 1990. Then, Lebanon was torn apart by multiple armed militias with different (and often competing) agendas. Hezbollah emerged from the chaos, giving Iran a powerful proxy group to threaten Israel for decades to come.

A Palestinian refugee camp near Tyre, Lebanon, during the civil war in 1982. Wikimedia Commons

There would most likely be a major surge of refugees across Lebanon’s borders, as well.

Lebanon is already a fragile and weak country, struggling to sustain some 250,000 Palestinian and 1.3 million Syrian refugees. Now, there are 1 million displaced Lebanese from the recent fighting.

This kind of disruption would no doubt spill over into Europe, with displaced people trying to seek refuge there, similar to the height of the Syrian civil war.

An Israeli reoccupation of southern Lebanon could also give Hezbollah a much-needed boost in legitimacy among the Lebanese people, if it is able to survive the war and targeted killings of its leaders.

Hezbollah will easily be able to frame its operations as a form of resistance or muqawama, much as it did in its early years. This could be viewed in several ways: resistance against occupation, resistance against oppressive regimes and resistance against the US and Israel.

Wherever this conflict goes, the Lebanese people – and beleaguered Lebanese state – will pay the highest price, trapped again in a geopolitical contest they didn’t start and feel powerless to stop.

ref. As Israel invades again, Lebanon faces more turmoil and possible civil war. Here are 3 ways this could go – https://theconversation.com/as-israel-invades-again-lebanon-faces-more-turmoil-and-possible-civil-war-here-are-3-ways-this-could-go-278408

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/03/18/as-israel-invades-again-lebanon-faces-more-turmoil-and-possible-civil-war-here-are-3-ways-this-could-go-278408/

Men can get out of the manosphere. Here’s what former incels say about why they left

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Joshua Thorburn, PhD Candidate, School of Social Sciences, Monash University

Louis Theroux’s recent documentary Inside the Manosphere, alongside Netflix’s 2025 hit drama Adolescence, has driven a spike in public discussion about the “manosphere”. The term refers to a loose ecosystem of anti-feminist online communities and influencers that promote male dominance and hostility toward women.

Much of the public conversation about the manosphere focuses on how boys and young men fall into these spaces. A new study by the Australian Institute of Criminology asks a different question: how do some men manage to leave?

Real-world dangers

Concern about this online culture has grown in recent years. Increasing attention has been paid to adolescent boys and young men going down toxic online rabbit holes, moving from the misogynistic worldview of manosphere influencers toward more extreme spaces.

This includes “incel” (involuntary celibate) forums. These frame women as enemies standing in the way of men’s perceived entitlement to sex. Violent revenge against women is sometimes openly encouraged.

These concerns are warranted. Earlier anxieties largely focused on incidents of lone-offender violence in North America perpetrated by men linked to the misogynistic incel movement. It’s a threat Australia’s security agency ASIO has also flagged.


Read more: How boys get sucked into the manosphere


More recently, researchers and educators have raised alarms about the broader cultural impact of manosphere ideas. This includes their influence on young men’s attitudes toward women and relationships, resulting in growing rates of hostile sexism in Australian schools.

Understandably, much of the attention focuses on radicalisation into these communities. However, far less attention has been paid to what happens when some men begin to disengage from them.

‘An unhealthy loop of depression’

The Australian Institute of Criminology study provides rare insight into this process. Drawing on surveys and interviews with former participants in incel communities, the research explores how men become disillusioned with these spaces and eventually step away.

The findings add to a growing body of evidence suggesting many men first encounter these communities during periods of insecurity or loneliness.

Participants frequently described anxieties about their physical appearance, social status, sexual experience or financial success. Incel and manosphere forums claim to offer explanations and solidarity for these frustrations.

As one former incel in the institute’s study recalled, he initially felt “some togetherness with others” in the forums.

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Yet the same environment often becomes corrosive. Another respondent described how the community functioned as an “echo chamber […] fulfilling their own prophecy”, fuelling what he called “an unhealthy loop of depression”.

Over time, some participants begin to notice the gap between the ideology promoted in these spaces and their everyday experiences. Positive interactions with women, supportive friendships, or simply observing that relationships in the real world do not follow the rigid rules promoted online can begin to undermine the worldview.

One participant in the study described the moment it “clicked that all of it was really wrong” when his peers, “regardless of gender”, treated him with kindness and respect.

In another study of people leaving the manosphere, a former participant reflected that the movement’s claims about women collapsed when he realised he still had a happy relationship with his wife despite being “unfit and definitely not wealthy”.

Research consistently shows leaving these spaces is a challenging experience. Disengagement is usually gradual and uneven. It often involves the slow rebuilding of identity, relationships and belonging outside the forums that once defined participants’ worldview.

Finding the pathways out

The perspectives of people who have left the manosphere deserve greater attention in public discussions. For people currently within the manosphere (and for those vulnerable to falling into it) amplifying such stories can reveal how these communities ultimately harm many of the people who believe in them.

These stories matter because public discussion about the manosphere often focuses almost exclusively on its harms. Those harms are real and serious.

But we need to be hopeful the scale of the problem can be arrested and that the men who fall into these spaces are not permanently lost to them.

Schools, policymakers and families all need these first-hand perspectives. They offer more than just insight into why boys and young men fall down the rabbit hole: they provide a crucial road map for how we might help pull them out. This is essential to violence prevention work focused on how to promote “positive masculinity”.

Maintaining that cautiously hopeful perspective is important. Without it, we risk treating radicalisation as inevitable and disengagement as impossible.

The growing body of research on men leaving these communities suggests something different. While the harms of the manosphere are real, understanding the pathways out may offer some of the most important clues for how to respond.

ref. Men can get out of the manosphere. Here’s what former incels say about why they left – https://theconversation.com/men-can-get-out-of-the-manosphere-heres-what-former-incels-say-about-why-they-left-278312

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/03/18/men-can-get-out-of-the-manosphere-heres-what-former-incels-say-about-why-they-left-278312/

Israel caught in a permanent state of war mindset – peace is taboo

INTERVIEW: C.J. Polychroniou and Idan Landau

Israel’s war on Iran is a direct result of a political culture that depends for survival upon a permanent state of war, says Israeli academic and left-wing activist Idan Landau in the interview that follows.

He observes that Israeli society on the whole has embraced a fascist mindset, “reflecting extreme paranoia and anxiety,” and thus intolerance for dissent.

Subsequently, peace is a taboo and there is total indifference to genocidal acts and human casualties. Moreover, there is very little hope for a different trajectory, argues Landau, “as long as the US and Europe continue to insulate Israel from the moral consequences of its actions.”

Landau is professor of linguistics and head of the department of linguistics at Tel Aviv University. He writes a political blog (in Hebrew) on Israeli affairs and has been imprisoned on several occasions for his refusal to serve in the Israel Defense Forces reserve.

C.J. POLYCHRONIOU: Since the Hamas’ October 7 attack on southern Israel, the Netanyahu government embarked on a genocidal campaign against Palestinians in Gaza, expanded Jewish settlements in occupied West Bank and thus encouraged settlers to escalate West Bank terrorist attacks, exchanged fire with Hezbollah and the Houtis, then attacked Iran in what has been dubbed as the 12-Day War, and finally persuaded US President Donald Trump to go to war with Iran.

What is Israel’s endgame in terrorising the Middle East, and how has permanent war impacted Israeli society and the Israeli psyche?

IDAN LANDAU: I think the whole point of permanent war — I agree this is the most appropriate concept to use here — is that there is no endgame. Permanent war, with ever growing economic, emotional and political costs, is exactly what keeps the Israeli right-wing in power; it feeds on anxiety, paranoia and visions of imminent destruction (interestingly, our own and our enemies’ destruction, equally vivid).

Not being able to concentrate on and fully understand what’s going on is also crucial; the Israeli public is extremely underinformed about key issues, like the fraudulent nuclear talks in Geneva, the far-reaching proposals by the Lebanese government, etc. The media — always complicit, these days criminal — bombards us with caricatures of our surrounding countries.

That said, I think there is one constant, never-changing endgame lurking behind all the upheavals: The expansionist project in the West Bank. Not just Smotrich but a dedicated section within the Likkud, of right-wing religious settlers, are working tirelessly on this project, actually from the first week after October 7.

Plans for resettlement of Gaza combined with increased settlement in the West Bank (specifically, the northern Samaria, surrounding Jenin and Tulkarem) were immediately aired and pushed forward by the settlers’ lobby together with their MK partners.

The surge we now see in ethnic cleansing and forced displacement of Palestinian communities throughout the West Bank is inherent to the overall vision of this government, and it was stated as such even before October 7 — that only gave it a huge impetus.

The impact on Israeli society is perhaps the most depressing aspect of it all. Political discourse has been reduced to hollow slogans. Every single issue in foreign affairs in framed as either “existential threat” or “unavoidable use of military force.” There’s absolutely no room for talk about non-violent paths (“peace” is a taboo even on the left).

The Enemy is an undifferentiated mass of Hamas/Iran/Hezbollah/Houthis, in short, different guises of Amalek. Much of that, as I noted, is fueled by the deliberate absence of facts and evidence for rational conduct on the part of our enemies.

Israelis live in a peculiar state of mind: total disbelief in the possibility of normal life, clinging on to the very ideology that perpetuates this state of mind.

C.J. POLYCHRONIOU: Israel has actual and perceived enemies. But is Benjamin Netanyahu alone the actual problem behind Israel’s permanent state of war? I mean, even most of Israeli opposition supported the genocide in Gaza and it’s doing the same thing now with the war against Iran.

IDAN LANDAU: Netanyahu is the most able consolidator of all the dark impulses of Israeli society, but of course he didn’t make up anything on his own. If you go back to Begin’s speeches in the 1970s-1980s, they also constantly invoked the Holocaust as the ultimate justification for whatever Israel does.

The Messianic drive to settle the greater Israel predates Netanyahu, as well as the overall brutal, racist degradation of Palestinians inside and outside Israel. You can go on and on — nothing is new here. At most, as you note, it is the subservience of the “opposition”; I don’t recall anything like it in the past.

If you look at the governments that went to wars in 1973 and 1982, they faced considerable opposition, within the Knesset and outside of it, on the very issue of whether the war was justified (in 1973, it was clearly preventable; in 1982, it was pure imperial vanity). None of that is left today.

Which is why the temptation of permanent war is so strong: You’re guaranteed to make the willful silence of the opposition also permanent.

C.J. POLYCHRONIOU: In Lebanon, the Israeli armed forces are using Gaza tactics, attacking hospitals and killing medical staff, while in Iran they have engaged in what has been rightly described as chemical warfare on account of strikes on fuel depots. Isn’t the country concerned at all about its blatant assault on international law and that it has turned into a pariah state in the eyes of the overwhelming majority of the people across the globe? What happened to Israel’s labor party which combined socialism with nation-building?

IDAN LANDAU: As to the Labour Party, I always say that one should not speak ill of the dead. A handful of members of Knesset (MKs) that are obsessed with displays of liberal values and with welfare legislation when genocide is in full force and Apartheid shifts from de facto to de jure.

The other “opposition” parties are either led by generals (Golan, Eizenkot) who offer zero alternatives to military dominance, or by right-wing neoliberals (Bennet, Lapid). The only representatives of left values in the Knesset are the Arab MKs.

As to International Humanitarian Law (IHL), my impression is that Israelis are unconcerned insofar as Uncle Sam is, and it sure looks like he is, thoroughly unconcerned. The Trump administration vindictively sanctioned the International Criminal Court (ICC) judges presiding over the Israeli case, and quite explicitly stated that IHL does not apply to the US and its allies.

There’s a lot of duplicity in Israeli discourse regarding the so-called “Principle of Complementarity”; the official response to the ICC described the “independent and robust judicial system” of Israel, which investigates any suspicions for wrongdoings. Most Israelis simply think that the rules don’t apply to us since they don’t apply to Hamas (they do apply to both parties; I already said that Israelis are shrouded in disinformation).

But even the liberals that appeal to our own “independent and robust judicial system” look ridiculous in face of the massive cover-up we witness from the beginning of the genocide; the dropping of charges against the five torturers/rapists in Sde-Teiman is but the latest instance.

Hundreds of heinous crimes did not even yield any charges.

C.J. POLYCHRONIOU: Courageous voices against war and violence can be heard here and there across Israeli society and peace activists have organised scores of demonstrations in cities like Tel Aviv, Haifa, and Jerusalem to express their opposition to the war in Iran.

Are anti-war demonstrations really seen as a threat to national security by the Netanyahu government and even segments of the Israeli citizenry?

IDAN LANDAU: These things happen and they do lift our spirit. In honesty, I don’t think anyone views them as “a threat to national security,” that’s fascist talk. The public atmosphere is just incredibly intolerant, with or without the presence of the police, with or without any legal process.

Just try to voice your opposition to the war — any war, pick your favourite — out in the street, and you’re sure to be harassed and probably beaten by random pedestrians within 15-20 minutes. So I think it is a typical fascist all-embracing violent climate, reflecting extreme paranoia and anxiety.

The mere verbal expression of “sacrilegious” opinions is seen as a personal threat to our carefully maintained peace of mind; so tenuous and feeble, that it cannot even stand to face dissent.

Point it out to Israelis and urge them to make out what it means for their confidence in what their state is doing that they must violently banish any expression of doubt and criticism (this is now the position of many journalists as well!) — well, see if you get an answer.

C.J. POLYCHRONIOU: Israel censored reporting on the genocide in Gaza. Is the same thing happening now with the war in Iran?

IDAN LANDAU: Luckily, the IDF doesn’t control the entrance and exit to Iran. So we don’t have the brute force censorship, instead it’s the good old “filter and distort and leave out the context” censorship.

They would report civilian casualties only if forced (because it’s getting too much international media), and you wouldn’t be surprised to hear that the “human shield” trick is now applied reflexively, before any facts are even known.

In this sense, as all human right organisations pointed out, the Gaza genocide has set a shocking new standard of indifference to civilian casualties: All targets are criminalised by association to your favourite Amalek (currently the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps or IRGC), and we stopped bothering about substantiating this association with actual facts; declaring it so makes it so.

In this context, one can watch civilian suffering in Iran with a level of detachment and blame it all on the IRGC. We should remember, though, that the Iranian regime is no more scrupulous in its choice of targets in Israel — the war crimes are on both sides.

Yet I cannot say that Israeli media covers the wider civilian effects of the war on Iranian citizens in any serious way. Pretty much 95 percent of what we get are silly, heroic odes to our courageous pilots and genius cyber fighters.

C.J. POLYCHRONIOU: In your view, is there a pathway towards peace in Israel? Is permanent peace even possible for Israel?

IDAN LANDAU: Ultimately there can’t be any other solution; wars eventually end, consuming nations. I just don’t think it will be “Israel” as we now know it that will see the fruits of peace.

It will be a totally different entity, somehow letting Jews and Arabs live together as equals. That’s not possible within the current regime. Sadly, the shift to non-violence only occurs after the level of death and suffering is insurmountable to both sides.

No one knows when that will be. As long as the US and Europe continue to insulate Israel from the moral consequences of its policies, it won’t change trajectory.

C.J. Polychroniou is a political economist/political scientist who has taught and worked in numerous universities and research centres in Europe and the United States. His latest books are The Precipice: Neoliberalism, the Pandemic and the Urgent Need for Social Change (A collection of interviews with Noam Chomsky; Haymarket Books, 2021), and Economics and the Left: Interviews with Progressive Economists (Verso, 2021).

Idan Landau is an Israeli social justice activist and professor of linguistics in the Department of Linguistics at Tel Aviv University.

Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/03/18/israel-caught-in-a-permanent-state-of-war-mindset-peace-is-taboo/

ER Report: A Roundup of Significant Articles on EveningReport.nz for March 18, 2026

ER Report: Here is a summary of significant articles published on EveningReport.nz on March 18, 2026.

What’s ‘dirty fuel’ doing to our lungs? The same as it did for most of 2025
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Brian Oliver, Professor, School of Life Sciences, University of Technology Sydney Australians may have seen headlines warning “dirty fuel” is back, temporarily, to ease fuel supplies. The phrase sounds alarming, but it has a specific and fairly narrow meaning. In this context, “dirty fuel” refers to petrol

Western media failing to tell truth about war on Iran, says academic
Pacific Media Watch Western legacy media is failing to tell the truth on the US-Israeli war on Iran, says a leading US academic and analyst. “Mass murder has been normalised,” said Columbia University professor Jeffrey Sachs in an interview with the Chinese channel CGTN Live. He argues that mainstream media in the US and Europe

Sophie Devine’s record cricket contract can’t disguise a stubborn pay gap in NZ women’s sport
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Hoani Smith, Lecturer in Sport Management and Sport Science, Lincoln University, New Zealand When former White Ferns captain Sophie Devine secured the equal-highest deal in the United Kingdom’s pro-cricket league last week, it was greeted as another sign of how quickly investment in the women’s game is

Australia was once a world leader in innovation. A new report shows the system is now ‘broken’
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Roy Green, Emeritus Professor of Innovation, University of Technology Sydney Australia’s research and innovation system is “broken” and needs “bold reform”, according to a major new independent report released on Tuesday. Titled “Ambitious Australia”, it’s the culmination of a strategic examination of research and development in Australia,

Can’t stop endlessly scrolling? Tips to help you take back control
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Sharon Horwood, Senior Lecturer in Psychology, Deakin University It’s called the infinite scroll – a design feature on social media, shopping, video and many other apps that continuously loads content as you reach the bottom of the page. Handy? Yes. Clever? Also yes. Devious? Very much so.

MCPNG and UN hold media freedom talks in wake of attacks on women journalists
Pacific Media Watch The United Nations in Papua New Guinea has met the leadership of the Media Council of PNG to advance collaboration in support of a strong, independent and responsible media sector, reports UNPNG. The meeting addressed recent incidents of threats and violence against journalists — especially attacks against women journalists and the growing

A world-first quantum battery charges faster when it gets bigger – but it’s tiny and only lasts nanoseconds
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By James Quach, Science Leader, Quantum Batteries Team, CSIRO You’re late for an important appointment. Just as you are leaving your house, you realise your phone is flat. Imagine you could charge it almost instantly by exploiting the strange rules of quantum physics. That’s the promise of quantum

Is Spotify’s AI ‘killing’ Australian music? What we found from analysing more than 2 million tracks
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Mohsin Malik, Associate Professor, Project Management, Swinburne University of Technology Last year, former Spotify chief economist Will Page compiled a report for the Australia Institute that concluded music streaming algorithms were “killing” Australian music. The report found that, between 2021 and 2024, there was a 30% drop

With AI finishing your sentences, what will happen to your unique voice on the page?
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Gayle Rogers, Professor of English, University of Pittsburgh It’s a familiar feeling: You start a text message, and your phone’s auto-complete function suggests several choices for the next word, ranging from banal to hilarious. “I love…” you, or coffee? Or you’re finishing an email, and merely typing

Iran war shows how AI speeds up military ‘kill chains’
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Craig Jones, Senior Lecturer in Political Geography, Department of Geography, Newcastle University The US-Israel war on Iran has been described as “the first AI war”. But recent deployments of artificial intelligence are, in fact, the latest in a long history of technological developments that prize a need

Victoria’s school reports are set to change. What does this mean for teachers and families?
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Ilana Finefter-Rosenbluh, Senior Lecturer, Faculty of Education, Monash University On Tuesday, the Victorian government announced it is revamping its student reporting for public schools. As part of a broader push to cut down on teachers’ paperwork, it will simplify the reports that go home to families. This

Iran oil crisis: why NZ’s car dependence is now a strategic liability
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Timothy Welch, Senior Lecturer in Urban Planning, University of Auckland, Waipapa Taumata Rau The war in Iran and the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz have sent oil prices past US$100 a barrel – and Kiwis flocking to fill up. Petrol just hit NZ$3 a litre

War on Iran: Propaganda in overdrive as Trump’s war spirals out of control
Pacific Media Watch As the US and Israel battle to control the narrative of their war against Iran, their messaging gets harder to defend, reports Al Jazeera’s Listening Post. With the war entering its third week, the upper hand that the United States and Israel hold militarily is being countered asymmetrically by Iran which has

Capital gains tax discount ‘skewed’ housing towards investors: Senate inquiry
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra A Senate inquiry has provided Treasurer Jim Chalmers with ammunition for his plan to pare back the capital gains tax discount in the May 12 budget. The majority report of the inquiry into the operation of the capital gains tax

Saige England: Journalists must stand up and report with the moral courage of abolitionists
COMMENTARY: By Saige England Every week, health prevailing, I march with our Palestinian friends and their supporters in Aotearoa New Zealand. And my country is one which — under Britain — was colonised. Colonisation perpetrates injustices against indigenous people. This legacy is still felt by Indigenous people today. All around the world we must dismantle

RBA narrowly votes to lift interest rates. The Middle East war may determine if there’s more to come
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By John Hawkins, Head, Canberra School of Government, University of Canberra The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) has lifted official interest rates for the second time this year as it struggles to bring inflation under control, saying inflation is “likely to remain above target for some time”. But

Can brevetoxins from algal blooms make me sick? A toxicologist explains
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Ian Musgrave, Senior Lecturer in Pharmacology, Adelaide University For about a year, an algal bloom in South Australian waters has had devastating effects on marine life. At my local beach, walks were a sad parade of dead sea life. But what of the health effects of these

Attacks on hospitals are surging in war zones. What do the laws of war say about protecting them?
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Shannon Bosch, Associate Professor (Law), Edith Cowan University Afghanistan says at least 400 people have been killed in a Pakistani airstrike on a drug rehabilitation hospital in Kabul on Monday night, with potentially hundreds more wounded. Pakistan has denied deliberately targeting the health-care facility. In a statement

Remote communities are more vulnerable to fuel price shocks – could microgrids help?
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Saman Gorji, Associate Professor, Renewable Energy and Electrical Engineering, Deakin University When diesel prices jump, most Australians notice it at the bowser. But in parts of remote Australia, diesel is what keeps the lights on. That makes it indispensable. That’s why the federal government’s decisions to temporarily

As the war drags on, what does victory look like for the US, Israel and Iran?
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Amin Saikal, Emeritus Professor of Middle Eastern Studies, Australian National University; The University of Western Australia; Victoria University As the Middle East war enters its third week, there is no sign from either Iran or the United States and Israel that they will stop the fighting any

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/03/18/er-report-a-roundup-of-significant-articles-on-eveningreport-nz-for-march-18-2026/

Stories open to interpretation: the 2026 Biennale of Sydney embraces narratives with multiple meanings

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Tracey Clement, Lecturer in Visual Art and McGlade Gallery Director, Australian Catholic University

Storytelling is at the heart of Rememory, the 25th Biennale of Sydney. And we humans like nothing better than being told a tale.

As literary critic Frank Kermode so persuasively argued, stuck as we are in the middle of our own stories, narratives with clear beginnings and endings help us make sense of an unpredictable world.

A key strength of art is its capacity to craft narratives with multiple meanings: ambivalent, ambiguous tales without end, open to interpretations.

By selecting Rememory as her theme – a phrase lifted from the brilliant author Toni Morrison – curator Hoor Al Qasimi highlights the fact that artistic narratives, like memories, are both personal and collective, enduring yet subject to change over time.


Read more: Sydney’s Biennale theme, ‘rememory’, urges us to confront trauma – now more relevant than ever


Displacement, and hope

Many of the narratives in Rememory are tales of migration, exile and the dispossession First Nations people experience without leaving home.

All the artists have something to say. Some artists choose to tell their tales with words spoken aloud or written down, but the stories that spoke loudest to me were utterly silent and text-less.

Marian Abboud describes herself as Lebanese, first generation Australian. Her installation at White Bay Power Station, Sister +++++ Familial Formations III, is a series of huge photographs suspended above an old battered sedan which is piled high with equally obsolete TVs.

Marian Abboud, Sister +++++ Familial Formations III, 2026, White Bay Power Station. Daniel Boud

Connected by tangled coils of electrical cords and roughly strapped together, this car/tech combo seems deliberately unstable. In several photos Abboud cradles a battered metal basin filled with dark liquid. Is it wine? Maybe it is blood or oil?

In other images she wears a black veil in front of a suburban garage. She appears to be just slightly hovering above the asphalt driveway, an apt metaphor for the diasporic experience.

As a migrant myself, I know firsthand this story of perpetual displacement – the sensation of not quite belonging in either the cultural homeland or the adopted country.

Fernando Poyón is a Maya Kaqchikel artist from Guatemala. His sculpture at Penrith Regional Gallery consists of five life-sized stalks of corn crafted from bright green pencils.

They appear to levitate over a bright circle of fake marigolds strewn across real dirt. It feels like we are witnessing a ritual suspended mid invocation, perhaps one celebrating the entwinement of nature and culture.

Fernando Poyón (b. 1982 Guatemala), Bringing joy to the earth, 2025; pencils, concaste, bamboo. Installation view in Rememory: 25th Biennale of Sydney at Lewers: Penrith Regional Gallery, 2026. Commissioned by the Biennale of Sydney and Fondation Cartier pour l’art contemporain. Courtesy of the artist. Photography: Maja Baska.

Poyón’s title, Bringing joy to the earth, is filled with hope. Yet this artwork also seems to issue a warning. Pencils may symbolise a certain kind of knowledge transfer, but they are also the skeletal remains of dead trees. Poyón reminds us we destroy the natural world at our own peril.

We are part of nature, not separate or superior. As the climate-crisis continues to accelerate, this is a story that needs to be heard again and again until those with the power to make change finally listen.

The labour of artwork

Ema Shin, a migrant to Australia from Japan, presents a gigantic woven and bejewelled heart at the Chau Chak Wing Museum.

In this sculpture she makes the most of what I call the linguistics of labour-intensity: that ability of protracted hard work to add an extra layer of meaning to some artworks.

Ema Shin Hearts of Absent Women (Tree of Family) 2026 wool, cotton, bamboo yarn, acrylic yarn, cotton pearls, glass beads, satin ribbon, aluminium. Commissioned by the Biennale of Sydney and BEEAH Group with generous support from National Center for Art Research, Japan and assistance from Tapestry Foundation Australia and Australian Tapestry Workshop (ATW). Woven by Ema Shin and ATW weaver Saffron Gordon. Courtesy of the artist and Gallerysmith, Melbourne Photograph: David James

Titled Hearts of Absent Women (Tree of Family), this richly ornamented organ can be read as a monument honouring matriarchal power. But this heart is not beating. And the textile techniques on display here aren’t the only traditional women’s work evoked by the labour-intensity of Shin’s magnificent creation.

It brings to mind the fact that not only do women still take on more than their fair share of domestic chores, but often they shoulder the bulk of emotional labour in families.

Shin’s huge heart is sumptuous and beguiling. But thinking about all this hard feminine work, the creamy accretions of bulbous fake pearls spilling from its oversized arteries start to resemble life-threatening cholesterol build-up, hinting at the toxic effects of systemic misogyny.

For me, Ngurrara Canvas II at the Art Gallery of New South Wales is the real heart of Rememory. The Ngurrara artists were 43 men and women whose Country includes the Great Sandy Desert, and this vividly coloured 80-square-metre canvas seems to vibrate with deep knowledge.

Installation view of the 25th Biennale of Sydney, Rememory, at the Art Gallery of New South Wales, 14 March – 14 June 2026. Artwork © the artists, photo © Art Gallery of New South Wales, Felicity Jenkins

The work is designed to tell a story of continuous connection to Country spanning millennia. They presented this painting as evidence in a 1997 Native Title tribunal and the tale it tells is one of resistance, persistence and ingenuity. It also contains an incontrovertible truth: this always was, and always will be, Aboriginal land.

The 25th Biennale of Sydney is full of stories. What I truly love about art is that the tales I’m told are unique. They are a collective narrative hybrid, a mash-up triggered by the artists’ visual poetry and all the associations reverberating around inside my mind.

Each visitor to Rememory will create their own stories.

The 25th Biennale of Sydney: Rememory is on until June 14.

ref. Stories open to interpretation: the 2026 Biennale of Sydney embraces narratives with multiple meanings – https://theconversation.com/stories-open-to-interpretation-the-2026-biennale-of-sydney-embraces-narratives-with-multiple-meanings-275561

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/03/18/stories-open-to-interpretation-the-2026-biennale-of-sydney-embraces-narratives-with-multiple-meanings-275561/

What’s ‘dirty fuel’ doing to our lungs? The same as it did for most of 2025

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Brian Oliver, Professor, School of Life Sciences, University of Technology Sydney

Australians may have seen headlines warning “dirty fuel” is back, temporarily, to ease fuel supplies. The phrase sounds alarming, but it has a specific and fairly narrow meaning.

In this context, “dirty fuel” refers to petrol with higher sulfur content than Australia’s newest fuel standards allow.

So how worried should we be about our health if we use petrol containing more sulfur over the coming weeks? What about people with asthma?

Why the backflip?

Sulfur is a naturally occurring component of crude oil. When fuel is burned in engines, sulfur contributes to air pollution, particularly the gas sulfur dioxide (SO₂) and fine particles (known as PM2.5). When inhaled, both can affect our health.

Australia only fully adopted ultra-low sulfur petrol standards in late 2025, bringing sulfur levels down to 10 parts per million (ppm) across all petrol grades.

Until then, Australians had been using petrol with sulfur levels of 50ppm or more for decades.

But last week, the federal government announced a temporary 60-day exemption allowing petrol with higher sulfur levels (up to around 50ppm) back into the domestic market.

The decision was made in response to severe global supply disruptions, driven by conflict in the Middle East and the partial closure of the Strait of Hormuz, through which a sizeable proportion of the world’s oil normally flows.

According to the government, the exemption allows around 100 million extra litres of petrol per month to be diverted from export markets into Australian service stations, particularly in regional areas.

The government has emphasised the change is temporary and that fuel quality will return to the lower level of permitted sulfur once supply pressures ease.

Sulfur is also found in diesel, but the recently announced changes only relate to petrol standards.


Read more: Oil, petrol, gasoline: a chemical engineer explains how crude turns into fuel


Why does sulfur in fuel matter for health?

We can’t inhale sulfur itself directly from fuel. But burning petrol containing sulfur increases emissions of SO₂, which we can breathe in.

Sulfur exhaust emissions of SO₂ are also chemically transformed into sulfate particles that make up an important fraction of fine particulate pollution (known as PM2.5).

Sulfur in fuel also interferes with vehicle emission-control systems. It makes catalytic converters less effective. This indirectly increases other harmful pollutants, including fine particulate matter (PM2.5), which is linked to:

Because of this, reducing sulfur in fuel is widely regarded as one of the most cost-effective air quality interventions, delivering population-wide health benefits over time.

What about a temporary increase like this one?

This is where context matters. The fuel now being allowed back into the system is no dirtier than what Australians were using for most of 2025.

In fact, for many drivers, it will be chemically similar to petrol they used last year without noticing.

Because Australia only switched to ultra-low sulfur petrol in late 2025, there has been little time for large population-level health gains to accumulate. Air quality improvements from cleaner fuels tend to emerge gradually, rather than within weeks or months.

That means a short-term reversal is unlikely to cause sudden, dramatic new health effects for the general population. There is no evidence a two-month increase will trigger a wave of new disease.

And while increased SO₂ levels in the atmosphere are not good for human health, Australian roadside monitoring studies (including monitoring SO₂) consistently report very low concentrations.

However, there are some important caveats:

  • sulfur emissions worsen air quality and disproportionately affect people with existing heart and lung diseases (especally asthma)

  • traffic-related pollution causes harm even at the relatively low levels found in Australia

  • we do not know precisely how much additional SO₂ or particulate pollution this temporary change will generate in Australian cities, because it depends on traffic patterns, weather and how petrol is blended at the refinery

  • we suspect any added health burden will be small, short lived, and concentrated near busy roads and enclosed spaces – but not zero.

In other words, this change is not ideal. But it is also not equivalent to introducing a brand new pollution source. It is closer to a brief return to very recent historical conditions.

What can people do to minimise their risk?

The advice for this period is largely the same as existing guidance on minimising harms from vehicle pollution. Practical steps include:

  • avoid idling vehicles in enclosed or poorly ventilated spaces such as garages and underground car parks. Exhaust pollutants, including SO₂, can build up quickly

  • reduce unnecessary car use where practical, particularly in congested urban areas

  • keep your distance from heavy traffic, especially for people with asthma, COPD (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease), heart disease, pregnant people, and young children

  • ensure good ventilation if driving in slow-moving traffic; close your windows and set the car aircon to recirculate

  • follow asthma or heart management plans, and seek medical advice if symptoms worsen.

For most Australians, no special protective equipment or behavioural changes are required beyond this type of air quality advice.

The bigger picture

Australia’s move to ultra-low sulfur petrol in late 2025 was a major public health win, long overdue and strongly supported by medical and environmental experts.

The current exemption reflects a genuine fuel security crisis – but it also highlights how fragile progress can be.

The key test will be whether this measure remains strictly temporary, and whether Australia continues to prioritise clean fuels as part of long-term health and climate policy once supply stabilises.

Cleaner fuel means cleaner air – and cleaner air saves lives. Even short detours from that path should be taken cautiously, transparently and for as little time as possible.

ref. What’s ‘dirty fuel’ doing to our lungs? The same as it did for most of 2025 – https://theconversation.com/whats-dirty-fuel-doing-to-our-lungs-the-same-as-it-did-for-most-of-2025-278534

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/03/18/whats-dirty-fuel-doing-to-our-lungs-the-same-as-it-did-for-most-of-2025-278534/

Western media failing to tell truth about war on Iran, says academic

Pacific Media Watch

Western legacy media is failing to tell the truth on the US-Israeli war on Iran, says a leading US academic and analyst.

“Mass murder has been normalised,” said Columbia University professor Jeffrey Sachs in an interview with the Chinese channel CGTN Live.

He argues that mainstream media in the US and Europe is not reporting the truth about what is really happening in the Middle East.

Professor Sachs describes how he attended a UN Security Council meeting on the day that the US-Israeli bombing started.

“And what did all the Western countries do? They attacked Iran for being bombed.

“You know this is propaganda. This is so-called narrative control.

“So yes, mass murder has been normalised.”

[embedded content]
Jeffrey Sachs: Western media is failing to tell the truth            Video: CGYN America

Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/03/18/western-media-failing-to-tell-truth-about-war-on-iran-says-academic/

Australia was once a world leader in innovation. A new report shows the system is now ‘broken’

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Roy Green, Emeritus Professor of Innovation, University of Technology Sydney

Australia’s research and innovation system is “broken” and needs “bold reform”, according to a major new independent report released on Tuesday.

Titled “Ambitious Australia”, it’s the culmination of a strategic examination of research and development in Australia, commissioned by the federal government in December 2024. It was led by Tesla chairwoman Robyn Denholm.

Ambitious Australia joins a long line of reports stretching back to the Hawke-Keating era in the 1980s and ‘90s, when public spending on science, research and innovation gained a substantial boost.

By the end of the 1990s, the fastest-growing component of Australia’s export mix was high-value, complex, finished products. Correspondingly, Australia’s rate of productivity growth was running well above the OECD average.

We are now in a very different world. As this new report shows, Australia has fallen behind its peers on many fronts.

Diagnosing the problem

If the report did nothing other than highlight how fragile Australia’s hard-won prosperity is, it would still have performed a valuable service. And on this point, it does not hold back.

The report notes Australia’s manufacturing as a share of gross domestic product (GDP) is the lowest among developed economies in the OECD.

Australia also has among the lowest share of spending on research and development in the OECD at 1.69% in 2023–24. This is from a peak of 2.24% of GDP in 2008-09.

And between 2010 and 2020, Australia’s productivity growth was the weakest it had been in six decades.

Of course, correlation is not causation. But in most countries, manufacturing is where businesses make the biggest commitment to research and development. It is hardly surprising that as manufacturing has declined, so, too, has spending on innovation.

Australia’s economy has grown heavily dependent on natural resources. Alan Porritt/AAP

Rethinking our reliance on resources

The economic concept of “comparative advantage” suggests a country should specialise in producing the things it can with a lower opportunity cost than its trading partners.

The problem is that in pursuit of comparative advantage, successive federal governments have allowed Australia’s resources exports – such as iron ore and coal – to crowd out high-value manufacturing.

The task of this review was twofold.

First, it had to think through the reconstruction of our entire research and innovation system. This includes neglected “blue sky” research, which doesn’t have immediate practical use, but which has led to world-changing inventions.

For instance, work on black hole mathematics played a key part in the invention of WiFi at CSIRO.

Second, it had to ensure the system was “fit for purpose” as part of broader industrial policy to build new areas of competitive advantage in global markets and value chains.

The report’s recommendations

After a lengthy consultation process, the report proposes a comprehensive “plan for action”, with 20 recommendations, including:

  • better support for foundational research
  • consolidation of fragmented research and innovation programs
  • changes in the incentive structure for business research and development
  • improved startup and early-stage financing
  • embedding research and development in public procurement.

Echoing previous reviews, Ambitious Australia also called on the federal government to establish a new national innovation council. This body would set priorities and coordinate efforts to meet goals across six national innovation “pillars” in:

  • health and medical
  • agriculture and food
  • defence
  • environment and energy
  • resources
  • technology.

Overall, the idea is to promote more efficient teamwork across these pillars between government, business, investors and researchers on “high-risk, high-impact” challenges.

What could work better

The problem with this approach is that while the motivation is sound, the bureaucratic complexity of the new structure may prove a drawback. This is especially the case when it comes to getting industry involved.

As a number of submissions, including one from the Business Council of Australia, suggested, Australia should be following the lead of countries like Germany, the UK and US, which have built a network of collaborative research and innovation hubs in specific locations.

For instance, the UK Catapult centres bring together some of the UK’s top businesses, scientists, technical specialists and engineers to work side by side. In doing so, they bridge the gap between research and industry.

This is not a new idea. About 30 years ago, then-Prime Minister Paul Keating’s “Innovate Australia” policy statement favoured a similar model, with the CSIRO and universities as an engine for industrial transformation.

However, as with so many policy statements and reports, it became a casualty of a change of government. The Rudd-Gillard government’s Venturous Australia report suffered a similar fate.

Gaps to be filled

The recommendations in the report are mostly compelling. But there are still some significant gaps.

For example, the report offered no view on whether the current research and development tax incentive represented better value for taxpayer money than direct targeted funding.

Nor did it address the crucial role of management in improving productivity by engaging with workforces and building their capacity to adopt and adapt to new technology, such as embodied artificial intelligence in manufacturing.

And then there’s Australia’s regions. These can play a vital part in the research and innovation system because they address the related challenges of energy transition and economic diversification.

A separate report on the government’s Energy Industry Jobs Plan goes some way to filling this gap.

What’s next

Ambitious Australia outlines many recommendations whose time has surely come – especially given the federal government’s vision for a “Future Made in Australia”.

The challenge now is to work through the report in the lead-up to the 2027 federal budget and beyond. We must also ensure strategic intent is matched by transformative actions.

ref. Australia was once a world leader in innovation. A new report shows the system is now ‘broken’ – https://theconversation.com/australia-was-once-a-world-leader-in-innovation-a-new-report-shows-the-system-is-now-broken-274012

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/03/18/australia-was-once-a-world-leader-in-innovation-a-new-report-shows-the-system-is-now-broken-274012/

Sophie Devine’s record cricket contract can’t disguise a stubborn pay gap in NZ women’s sport

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Hoani Smith, Lecturer in Sport Management and Sport Science, Lincoln University, New Zealand

When former White Ferns captain Sophie Devine secured the equal-highest deal in the United Kingdom’s pro-cricket league last week, it was greeted as another sign of how quickly investment in the women’s game is growing.

Moments like this make it easy to believe women’s professional sport has finally arrived. But Devine’s £210,000 (NZ$470,000) contract to play for the Welsh Fire also highlights something else.

She’s still an exception.

For most elite women athletes – including many representing New Zealand internationally – professional sport still doesn’t pay enough to make a living.

Take netball. Players in New Zealand’s ANZ Premiership earn relatively modest retainers compared with other professional competitions.

After a 20% pay cut earlier this year, contracts reportedly sit somewhere between NZ$20,000 and $45,000 per season. Many players need secondary employment to sustain their careers.

By contrast, Australia’s Suncorp Super Netball competition operates under a team salary cap of about A$742,212, with average salaries approaching A$89,000 drawing top Kiwi players away from home.

Rugby and league pay gaps

Rugby shows a similar pattern. Despite the success of the New Zealand women’s team at the 2022 Rugby World Cup – the final at Eden Park drew more than 42,000 fans, the largest ever crowd for a women’s rugby match – the pay gap with the men’s game remains large.

Black Ferns players now receive retainers of roughly NZ$50,000–$70,000, and players in Super Rugby Aupiki (the professional club competition) earn about $25,000 for the season.

Male players in the Super Rugby Pacific competition commonly earn NZ$150,000–$250,000 per season, while All Blacks can earn $400,000 to more than $1 million annually.

The story is similar with rugby league. Salaries in Australia’s NRL Women’s Premiership are steadily increasing, with minimum salaries rising from A$30,000 in 2023 to $50,600 by 2027.

Meanwhile, the men’s NRL operates under a salary cap exceeding A$12 million per club, with some top players earning $1.3–$1.4 million per season.

Money isn’t the only factor shaping women’s sporting careers, of course. Historically, pregnancy often meant the end of a professional sporting career, with contractual protections rare.

This is changing, however. Some governing bodies have introduced parental leave protections for contracted athletes, including Cricket Australia which allows players to access paid parental leave for up to 12 months while retaining their contracts.

The English Rugby Football Union’s maternity policy provides up to 26 weeks of full pay, supporting players through pregnancy and a return to elite competition.

While important steps forward, this kind of support still varies widely between sports and leagues. Many athletes remain on short-term contracts that make long-term planning difficult.

High profile, lower pay: the Black Ferns in action against France at the Women’s Rugby World Cup in London in 2025. Mike Hewitt/Getty Images

Investing for success

Whenever pay equity in sport is discussed, one argument you’ll always hear is that men’s sport pays for women’s sport.

And there is some truth to that. Many sporting organisations bundle men’s and women’s competitions together in broadcast deals and sponsorship packages, meaning revenue from men’s competitions supports the wider system.

But the real issue isn’t equal pay – it’s the way these sporting systems are designed.

Men’s professional programmes have developed over decades into layered structures – school competitions, domestic leagues, professional clubs, international tournaments and commercial franchises. Each level generates revenue.

Under the partnership agreement between New Zealand Rugby and the Players Association, for example, 36.56% of player-generated revenue is distributed to professional players. Salaries therefore reflect the commercial value of the competitions themselves.

That model works well in mature competitions. But it also highlights the challenge for women’s sports, most of which don’t yet have that same depth.

If women athletes continue to be paid strictly according to the current market value of their competitions, the gap between men’s and women’s earnings could take decades to close.

This is why some sporting organisations are not waiting for women’s competitions to generate large audiences first.

The UK’s Hundred pro-cricket league features men’s and women’s double-headers and shared match days. The US Women’s National Basketball Association has benefited from sustained investment by its parent organisation. And Spain’s Liga F women’s football competition secured a five-season, €35 million centralised broadcast deal.

The logic is simple: investment builds visibility, which grows audiences, which attract sponsors, which generate revenue.

Over time, that creates the layered professional system needed to sustain careers. Sophie Devine’s contract shows what women’s sport can look like when investment finally meets performance.

The real challenge now is building systems that allow entire competitions – not just individual stars – to thrive. If organisations invest early to build deeper competitions and stronger commercial ecosystems, the next generation of athletes might not have to leave the country – or their sport – just to make a living.

ref. Sophie Devine’s record cricket contract can’t disguise a stubborn pay gap in NZ women’s sport – https://theconversation.com/sophie-devines-record-cricket-contract-cant-disguise-a-stubborn-pay-gap-in-nz-womens-sport-278301

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/03/18/sophie-devines-record-cricket-contract-cant-disguise-a-stubborn-pay-gap-in-nz-womens-sport-278301/

Can’t stop endlessly scrolling? Tips to help you take back control

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Sharon Horwood, Senior Lecturer in Psychology, Deakin University

It’s called the infinite scroll – a design feature on social media, shopping, video and many other apps that continuously loads content as you reach the bottom of the page. Handy? Yes. Clever? Also yes. Devious? Very much so. The infinite scroll is likely the main reason you find it so hard to stop scrolling once you begin.

To understand why this design feature is so devious, we need to understand the psychology and behaviours it taps into.

First, the infinite scroll takes away a natural stopping point – where you might decide that’s enough social media for today. For example, Instagram feeds once stopped after all chronologically new posts from followed accounts had been viewed, and even told us we were “all caught up” for the day. Now, algorithmic feeds combined with the infinite scroll mean there’s no way to ever be caught up with it all.

The second reason you find it so hard to stop scrolling is the promise of something good that might be just about to pop up in your feed. The algorithm “knows” what you like. So, hand-in-hand with the infinite scroll, it keeps feeding you all those tasty tid-bits.

Putting it bluntly, these features help create an addiction of sorts. The promise of a little hit of dopamine when we see content we love. And addictions are hard to beat – but not impossible.

Here are some quick wins and longer-term solutions if you want to break free from the grip of the scroll.

The quick wins

Create a break

Your device might be the problem, but it can also be part of the solution. Start by using your phone’s screen time features – such as Android’s Digital Wellbeing or Apple’s Screen Time.

You can also install a more sophisticated third-party app that forces you to break the patterns of mindless scrolling behaviour.

Apps such as One Sec, ScreenZen, Opal and Freedom can short-circuit the automatic habits associated with scrolling in various ways. These include putting mandatory pauses before social media apps open, or applying colour filters (like grayscale) to make apps less appealing.

They can even hard-block apps for specific periods of time if you really need a tough love approach.

Remove social media apps

This one’s usually met with an audible gasp when I suggest it, but you might find you adapt to not having social media at your fingertips faster than you’d imagine. You’re not deleting your accounts – just making it harder to open them and scroll.

Schedule some scrolling time

If you can’t imagine life without scrolling, schedule time each day for just that activity. It could be in your lunch break or when you get home from work: give yourself the freedom to scroll for the amount of time you set (say, 15 minutes) and don’t feel guilty about it. Just remember you still have to close the apps and get on with your life as soon as the time is up.

The hard work

The above might limit your scrolling in the short term, but long-term benefits (and emotional freedom) will likely take a bit more work.

The “easy” tips often work for a little while, when you’re motivated to change and feeling optimistic. But time and the pressures of life can start to erode your convictions.

So, to gain true freedom from scrolling, think about social media and whether it’s a relationship that serves you well. If you feel like it’s controlling you far more than you are controlling it, here are some things to consider. Be warned, they might not be easy.

What’s the deeper reason?

Think deeply about why you’re scrolling so much in the first place. Is it a lack of willpower? Are you avoiding something or someone? Are you suppressing feelings that you would prefer not to acknowledge?

All of these things can be reasons why we seek distraction. You might be avoiding a big thing (the state of a relationship) or a small thing (cooking dinner), but either way, scrolling is the symptom, not the disease. So, consider if scrolling might be part of a bigger problem you need to deal with instead.

Who’s benefiting whom?

Consider how much you really “need” social media. Do you actively use it in a way that benefits you (for example, as a business platform) or did you sign up out of curiosity years ago and have never really questioned why you’re still using it?

If it’s the latter, apply a critical lens to the platforms you use and how they serve you. On average, Australians use six to seven different social media platforms regularly. Think about what you might gain from spending less time scrolling, but also think about whether your life would be worse without some of them.

If you can’t think of a really compelling reason as to why it would be worse, it might be time to say goodbye to a few.

These “hard” options will take time and effort, and require you to reflect on your habits. But, like with most things, the reward for effort is likely to be greater, and last longer.

ref. Can’t stop endlessly scrolling? Tips to help you take back control – https://theconversation.com/cant-stop-endlessly-scrolling-tips-to-help-you-take-back-control-278418

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/03/18/cant-stop-endlessly-scrolling-tips-to-help-you-take-back-control-278418/