Economy grew by 0.2 percent in last three months of 2025

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Quin Tauetau

  • Economy grows 0.2 pct in December quarter, 1.3 pct on year ago
  • Data at the low end of expectations
  • Previous quarter revised to 0.9 pct growth from 1.1 pct
  • Primary sector and tourism industries lead growth
  • Manufacturing flat, construction sector contracts
  • Data not likely to change Reserve Bank holding cash rate at 2.25 pct next month.

The economy posted tepid growth at the end of last year as the rural sector and tourism growth offset soft manufacturing and weak construction before the Middle East conflict threatened to stymie recovery.

Stats NZ data showed gross domestic product (GDP), the broad measure of economic growth, rose 0.2 percent in the three months ended December, to be 1.3 percent higher than a year ago. On an annual average basis, the economy grew 0.2 percent over the year.

Expectations were for quarterly growth in a range of 0.2 to 0.5 percent, although the growth of the previous quarter was revised lower to 0.9 percent from 1.1 percent.

Stats NZ spokesperson Jason Attewell said it was the first time the economy had posted annual growth in more than two years.

“GDP has now risen in three of the last four quarters.”

Turned the economic corner

The strongest sectors were primary industries, which grew 0.9 percent, and service industries, which make up about 70 percent of the economy and grew 0.7 percent.

Attewell said strong spending by overseas visitors in the quarter boosted a broad range of businesses.

“This flowed through to parts of the economy that service tourism, such as rental car hire, retail trade [and] accommodation.”

Exports of goods and services were up 0.1 percent, with higher meat and forestry exports offsetting lower dairy sales.

There were positive contributions from real estate and financial services, retail, recreation, and energy and water industries.

The main drag on growth was from construction, which was down 1.4 percent on the previous quarter because of a fall in non-residential building.

Individual shares of the economy – per capita GDP – were unchanged for the quarter, to be 0.4 percent lower than a year ago.

The country’s purchasing power (disposable income) was also flat for the quarter, but 1.5 percent ahead of a year ago.

Derailed recovery ?

The GDP reading has already been discounted by economists as historical information overtaken by the Middle East conflict.

The latest monthly partial monthly read on inflation and a further slip in consumer confidence driven by a surge in fuel prices are seen as pointers for future activity.

Forecasts before the hostilities were for a gradual pick-up in growth this year to more than 2.5 percent, rising towards 3 percent in 2027.

The Reserve Bank last month held the official cash rate (OCR) at 2.25 percent and signalled rates would be held at an “accommodative level” to support the economy.

Economists have highlighted the uncertainty caused by the US/Israel-Iran war and its ability to derail economic activity through higher inflation, disruption to supply chains, and dampening of household and business demand and activity.

New Zealand’s quarterly growth rate was the same as or close to those in the US, UK, EU, and Japan, but lagged Australia’s 0.8 percent.

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Rocket Lab wins record contract with US Department of War

Source: Radio New Zealand

Rocket Lab founder and chief executive Sir Peter Beck. Supplied / Rocket Lab

Rocket Lab has won a US$190 million (NZ$327m) contract from the United States Department of War, formerly the Department of Defence, for a series of hypersonic test flights using its HASTE launch vehicle.

It is the largest single contract in the NZ-founded company’s history and lifts its total order backlog to more than US$2 billion (NZ$3.44b).

The four‑year agreement covers 20 test flights of Rocket Lab’s Hypersonic Accelerator Suborbital Test Electron (HASTE) rocket, a modified version of its Electron launcher designed to carry suborbital payloads of up to 700 kilograms at speeds above Mach 5.

The launches will be carried out under the Multi‑Service Advanced Capability Hypersonic Test Bed (MACH‑TB) 2.0 programme – a partnership between the Department of War and the Naval Surface Warfare Centre Crane Division that aims to accelerate hypersonic flight testing and related technologies.

Rocket Lab has already conducted several HASTE missions since 2023 under the MACH‑TB programme.

Rocket Lab founder and chief executive Sir Peter Beck said the expanded partnership with the Department of War and MACH‑TB would help strengthen US national security by providing rapid and affordable hypersonic testing.

“Our advanced technology, responsive launch schedules, and mass production of our HASTE hypersonic rockets are enabling faster progress across a range of hypersonic experiments by our government and industry partners,” he said.

Sir Peter described the new deal as “another proud moment for the team that builds the strength and resiliency of the United States’ aerospace efforts”.

The contract takes Rocket Lab’s launch backlog to 70 missions, and the company has sold 28 launches in the first quarter of 2026 – almost as many as it sold during the whole of 2025.

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Vigilantes racially profiling Asian community at Auckland rockpools

Source: Radio New Zealand

Starfish at Army Bay. MARK LENTON / SUPPLIED

A week since a two-year harvesting ban on the Hauraki Gulf coast in north Auckland came into force, no fines have been handed out.

It is now illegal to take seaweed, shellfish, and other rockpool sea life from intertidal zones along the Whangaparāoa Peninsula, and further north at Kawau Bay and Ōmaha Bay.

Fisheries north regional manager Andre Espinoza said officers had “educational discussions” with six groups who were planning to harvest at the newly protected beaches this past week.

All were cooperative and unaware of the rules.

“You’re always going to have a few people who are unaware,” Espinoza said.

“There’ll be a very small minority that will just continue doing it anyway, and they’re the ones that are very much of interest to fishery officers.”

He said they had several conversations with people about taking seaweed.

“After a big storm, and seaweed has been washed up, you can take it if it’s above the high water mark. If it’s below the high water mark, it’s prohibited to take.

“People who take seaweed are across the spectrum, pretty much all ethnicities. People use it for gardening and various purposes.

“Seaweed has its place in the ecosystem, so it’s really important everyone sticks to the rules so we can see recovery faster.”

People harvesting sea life at Army Bay before the ban was introduced. Protect Whangaparoa Rockpools

He said racism, particularly targeting Asian communities, has been troubling.

“Some bus tour groups intercepted by very passionate locals looking to do the right thing were church groups, not there to gather shellfish but for a picnic. But because they were of a certain ethnic group, they’ve been challenged for being at that beach.

“There is a very small minority who take it too far and judge people based on their race. We have on a number of occasions had complaints saying a certain ethnic group has arrived at the beach, they must be doing something wrong.

“It’s something that I really struggle with on a personal level, the profiling and dehumanisation.”

He said Fisheries was focused on educating, not shaming. About 60 signs have been put up in the area, and the new rules are being promoted on social media platforms, including Facebook, RedNote, and Sky Kiwi.

He encouraged people to report any suspected illegal activity through the appropriate channels.

Protect Whangaparāoa Rockpools founder Mark Lenton said people using the rockpool issue to voice hate speech was shameful.

“It doesn’t help the cause. It doesn’t help the credibility,” Lenton said.

“Blaming any single ethnicity for what’s going on is just plain stupid.”

He believed it would take more than two years for the rockpools to recover and that it would be a long-term commitment.

“We need to discourage the promotion of this term called beachcombing, which actively encourages people to go to a beach and take whatever they can find whenever they can find it.

“That’s the attitude we need to shift, and that also is done through targeted education.”

Chief executive of the Ngāti Manuhiri Settlement Trust, Nicola MacDonald, applied for the ban. She said beaches were for everybody.

“It is not a vigilante witch-hunting exercise, because nobody wins out of that.

“People who may be indulging in harvesting like that will continue to take those practices elsewhere and harvest in areas that may not be protected, and we don’t want that.”

She called for more education, which was inclusive of Aotearoa’s diverse communities, so everyone could understand why people were concerned about the amount being taken from rockpools.

“We want people to understand these are species that we absolutely protect so that our children, our next generations, don’t have dead oceans.”

Sir Peter Blake Marine Education and Recreation Centre general manager Yuin Khai Foong agreed that education was crucial to protect marine life across the country.

“We have this displacement effect that kind of says, well, if we can’t collect here, then a very natural and understandable human response to that is to go somewhere else. That’s because legislation has boundaries.

“Education doesn’t really have boundaries. So it’s a really good complement to legislation, if we understand why the legislation had to be put into place and why the marine ecosystem is so important.

“It’s about people understanding what a rockpool actually is, what the species are, how they work together, how the whole ecosystem functions, and that the health of the ocean ultimately is going to impact the health of humans.”

But he said a kind approach was needed to raise awareness.

“As a migrant from Southeast Asia, a lot of my views on conservation have been through fundamentally my parents, understanding why we made the move to New Zealand and how special New Zealand is as a country and celebrating all those things.

“And then having the lived experience that I’ve had of engaging in natural spaces and engaging in the ocean, reinforced why our country is so special and why it’s so important that we take care of it.

“If we don’t take care of it, we’ll lose it.”

Meanwhile, Luella Bartlett, from the community group Protect Piha Rockpools, said harvesting on Auckland’s West Coast had not slowed down, and a similar ban was desperately needed for places like Muriwai, Bethells, and Piha.

She said if harvesting continued at its current rate, they would not only lose species like green shell mussels, but the snapper that fed on them.

Racism had also been an issue there.

“People are making assumptions that aren’t necessarily true. It’s causing huge social problems.”

She said a two-year ban was their best course of action, and her group had been talking to the local iwi about applying for one.

Suspected illegal harvesting or fishing activity can be reported to the toll-free HOTLINE at 0800-4-Poacher (0800-476-224).

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All bets off over NZ petrol prices after Iran gas field strike, AA says

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Dan Cook

All bets are off on the price of petrol in New Zealand following Israel’s attack on the world’s largest natural gasfield in Pars overnight, AA is warning.

Brent Crude prices have surged since the attack, climbing to $US109 a barrel by 9am on Monday (NZT).

AA’s transport policy adviser Terry Collins says the move from military to economic targets marks an escalation in the war that will drive up the price of oil and petrol.

Pars is the Iranian sector of the world’s largest natural gas deposit, which Iran shares with Qatar across the Gulf.

Iran has vowed to retaliate.

Collins told Morning Report after prices appeared to stabilise on Wednesday, they were once again uncertain.

Israel’s attack marked the first reported strikes on Iranian energy infrastructure in the Gulf during the US-Israeli war, a major escalation that prompted Tehran to warn its neighbours that their energy installations would be targeted “in the coming hours”.

Oil prices shot up after the attack in a conflict that has already halted shipping from the world’s most important energy-producing region and could now bring lasting damage to its infrastructure.

Before the overnight attack, Finance Minister Nicola Willis said she was looking at targeted, temporary support for some households if the Middle East conflict worsened.

She said the help could be available, for example, to a cleaner needing to drive to work early in the morning when there was no public transport – a proposal welcomed by E tū union member Ayesha Paki.

She has a 30-minute drive, six days a week, to her job at Auckland Airport.

“Everything is expensive and now the petrol has affected all of us cleaners and low pay workers. We are so worried,” she said.

Willis said the government was “anticipating, and to the extent possible mitigating the impact on the New Zealand economy, including what could potentially be acute cost of living pressures for some households”.

Westpac chief economist Kelly Eckhold said if the crisis were to continue, the price of oil could hit US$200 a barrel, which would take retail petrol prices past $4.

More to come…

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‘Colonial-style arrogance’: China unhappy with NZ-Australia statement

Source: Radio New Zealand

author:rnz digital reporters_]

The Chinese Embassy. RNZ / REECE BAKER

The Chinese Embassy says New Zealand and Australia’s recent comments on China are unwarranted and inappropriate, accusing the nations of “inexplicable colonial-style arrogance”.

Australian Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Defence Richard Marles and Minister for Foreign Affairs Penny Wong hosted New Zealand Minister of Defence Judith Collins Minister of Foreign Affairs Hon Winston Peters MP on 17 March in Canberra.

Earlier this month, Australia raised concerns with China after what it called an “unsafe and unprofessional” close call between two military helicopters.

In a joint statement on Tuesday, the two defence ministers called behaviour by China in the South China Sea “unsafe and unprofessional”.

They “reiterated concerns about the intensification of destabilising activities and instances of unsafe and unprofessional behaviour by China in the South China Sea”

Ministers also expressed concerns about human rights violations in Xinjiang and Tibet, and Hong Kong authorities’ targeting of pro-democracy activists within Hong Kong and overseas.

The embassy said it firmly denied the allegations. It says those issues are China’s internal affairs and they would not accept international interference.

New Zealand and Australian ministers also called on China to use its influence to stop Russia’s war on Ukraine.

“The statement overlooks the root cause of the ongoing military actions in the Middle East conducted in blatant violation of international law and the basic norms governing international relations, which have resulted in civilian casualties and disruptions to the global economy,” a spokesperson for the embassy said.

“It also remains silent on the two countries’ own poor records concerning human rights and ethnic minority issues.

“Instead, it contains unwarranted, inappropriate, and extensive comments on China’s internal affairs. As a Chinese saying goes, one should first ensure one’s own conduct is beyond reproach before criticising others.”

The embassy blamed other nations for tensions in the South China Sea, reiterating China’s claim over Taiwan.

“A small number of extra-regional countries have travelled vast distances to the South China Sea to engage in shows of force and deliberately stoke tensions under various untenable pretexts, thereby serving as a primary source of instability in the region.”

The embassy said the comments damaged the countries’ relationships with China.

“We urge the New Zealand side to take a clear-eyed view of the prevailing situation, to approach China’s development and the China-New Zealand relationship in an objective and impartial manner, and to work in the same direction as China – doing more to build mutual trust and advance practical cooperation.”

Collins brushed off China’s comments.

“When China sent its task group down to the Tasman Sea, circumnavigated Australia as well, did live firing, interrupted… around 50 civilian flights to New Zealand, we upheld China’s right to use international law, the UN Convention [on] the Law of the Sea, to be in that area,” she told Morning Report on Thursday.

“And what we’ve simply said is, ‘Please give us more notice if you’re doing low firings, because civilians don’t like…having to be diverted like that.’ It’s very similar in terms of the Australian recent transit that they did up north.

“They were very concerned about some of the behaviour towards them. I think it’s always important to avoid miscalculation when it comes to aircraft, ships, and people.”

She was not concerned about being called names, saying she had been “called a lot of names in politics”.

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Call for low-emission zones in Auckland

Source: Radio New Zealand

Traffic jam in Auckland. 123RF

Health researchers are calling for policy changes to combat air pollution in Auckland, saying traffic is silently killing locals.

More than 700 Aucklanders die every year from air pollution from traffic, compared to 2000 deaths nationally, according to a new report by the University of Auckland.

It’s similar to the number of people who die from smoking cigarettes, with almost 4000 more ending up in hospital, the report said.

Dr Jamie Hosking, a public health researcher at Waipapa Taumata Rau University of Auckland, said petrol and diesel burn produce the gas nitrogen dioxide and small particles of soot, smoke, dust and chemicals.

“Those particles are really, really fine, so we can’t see them,” Dr Hosking told Morning Report. “But because they’re so fine, they get right down into our lungs and cause damage there, and can even get through into our bloodstream and cause inflammation there and give us problems such as heart disease, strokes, lung cancer and in our kids, asthma as well.”

Dr Hosking said it is really difficult for individuals to combat air pollution.

“We can’t avoid breathing in polluted air. The solution here is with our councils and with the government,” he said.

The report outlines several solutions on both a national and city level, such as investing in better public transport, raising vehicle emission standards, improving air quality monitoring and introducing equitable congestion charges.

Dr Hosking said central cities around the world, such as London, have implemented low-emission zones, which means only the cleanest cars can come into central city areas.

“That’s been really effective at lowering air pollution and giving them cleaner air,” he said.

“That’s really good for people’s health and something that we could be putting in place in Auckland.”

The report would be presented to Auckland Council’s Transport Committee, where researchers will call for urgent action towards the city’s air pollution.

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Families open up homes to homeless teens under The Safety Net programme

Source: Radio New Zealand

[brightcove]https://players.brightcove.net/6093072280001/default_default/index.html?videoId=6391056234112

When Auckland couple Sue and Tony Kerr first opened their door to a homeless teenager as part of an organised programme to shelter young people in crisis, they were nervous about how it would go.

They are retired and worried the generation gap might prove problematic, that their home cooking would be left uneaten and that their things might be stolen.

“I was worried about security, needlessly, and that they might take anything that was precious to us and we haven’t found that was an issue,” Sue said.

“They always joined us for dinner … ate lots of vegetables so it was fine.”

They are one of six host homes in west Auckland in a programme called The Safety Net, who house homeless rangatahi to get them off the streets while more permanent housing is found.

It was working so well the programme was looking to expand into other parts of the city.

A recent report by youth support organisation Kick Back found teen homelessness was getting worse, with 22 percent of young people sleeping rough when they first sought support.

The Kerrs lived in Hobsonville and in between grandchildren’s visits they had so far had eight young people stay.

“It’s definitely given me more compassion and understanding about the problem and the need. If you can just help them this short time, all eight of them have apparently been helped into better accommodation. It’s just great to know we’ve helped.”

They had been hosting homeless young people for over a year – often for just a week at a time – one young man even stayed during Christmas 2024.

“I was putting up the Christmas tree which of course our sons always used to do … and I asked him if he’d like to join in and he had never decorated a Christmas tree before and I thought that is so sad he loved doing it, he was very proud of the outcome.”

They first heard about The Safety Net through their church, had a spare room and said they strongly felt it was something God wanted them to do.

Sue and Tony Kerr, host family for The Safety Net. RNZ / Marika Khabazi

Tony said having young people stay had opened his eyes to their struggles.

“The benefit has been benefiting them. It’s given me greater insight into what goes on that we didn’t have before.”

Josh Hendry oversaw The Safety Net and said since it began two years ago they had found stable housing for 36 rangatahi who were hosted by families short-term, just a few nights or a week.

He said often teenagers had left home due to a family breakdown, whether that was violence or substance abuse or even just a lack of beds for families living in poverty.

Hendry worked closely with his brother Aaron who ran the youth advocacy organisation Kick Back, helping young people off the streets.

“There’s very little youth specific housing for our young people but one significant gap that we’ve seen is for 16 and 17 year olds, where their reason for experiencing homeless might be to do with a family breakdown for a variety of reasons.”

He said it could take up to eight weeks for a young person in that situation to access government support, through the Youth Payment.

“In the meantime, how do we expect a young person to access housing when they can’t actually have the financial support when they need it.”

He said The Safety Net had six host homes, which included families, couples and singles, and wanted to expand in other suburbs by partnering with organisations. It was funded through grants and the hosts were volunteers.

Hendry said there was an extensive sign-up for host families to ensure they matched the tikanga of the programme, as well as police and reference checks.

He said they took care to match young people with suitable host homes, ensuring ongoing support for both the young person and hosts who also came from a variety of backgrounds.

“One of the big concerns is people have a lot of stigma around our young people and they’re actually just like any other young person. The potential with The Safety Net is we can intervene early, we can prevent our rangatahi from having a long term experience of homelessness, from experiencing all of the trauma that comes with that.”

Hendry said all the young people who were in education and hosted in homes were able to maintain their schooling, more than 80 percent had been housed and 30 percent had safely reconnected with whanau.

“We’ve seen amazing outcomes for our young people. When we provide an immediate safe, supportive caring place for our young people right when they need it most the ability to really change the trajectory of where that could have gone.”

He said the government’s proposal to give police more power to move on those rough sleeping or begging in public, from the age of 14 years old, was concerning because young people travelled to the city to access support.

“A lot of the young people we work with, even out west, will go to the city centre to get support so they’ll go to places like the Front Door or Rainbow Youth.

“The Safety Net is a direct solution to that. Rather than punishing people for being in the situation they’re in, if we actually provide them support we can really see that change.”

Massey Community Trust general manager Josh Hendry. RNZ / Marika Khabazi

No longer homeless

Late last year, Tina spent two weeks living in an alleyway while still attending high school because she had been kicked out of home.

She is 17 years-old and said it was a sensitive situation and she spent a few nights staying with a friend but was too ashamed to ask for help.

“I was very ashamed and embarassed to tell people that I was quite homeless during that time.”

So she sought shelter where she could hide – no one knew she was there.

“I was staying in my alleyway for two weeks and then that’s when I got tired of living that kind of life, I really did need help so I went to my school teacher and told her what happened and that’s when I found out about The Safety Net.”

Tina was placed with a host home where she stayed a few nights.

“I actually opened up to them, the host family that took me in. They were very sweet I loved them I really miss them as well.”

She said The Safety Net helped her to find a flat and she was now studying at tertiary level.

“It helped me build so much confidence in myself and now I’m doing everything that I love to do … I’m happy where I am now.”

Tina wanted to encourage other young people struggling with homelessness to ask for help.

“It’s always good to ask for help, it’s the bravest thing that you could do. One of the bravest things that I have accomplished was to ask for help and I stopped being embarassed.”

Another 17 year old, Mae, left home to escape escalating domestic violence last year and sought refuge at a hospital’s emergency department.

She said they let her sleep on a bench for a few nights while a social worker tried to find her somewhere to go but there was a lack of housing.

“The options were that I would have to sleep on the street and risk my safety or I would have to go back to the house I left and pretty much go through hell again.”

Mae said The Safety Net stepped in and gave her hope – she spent her first night with a host home in her room because she was so nervous but quickly found her feet.

“Being in a stable environment, it made me realise what I went through at my old house wasn’t normal. I realised what safety feels like and it was actually the first time I relaxed,” she said.

Mae was now living in stable housing with others her age, studying at tertiary level.

“Honestly it’s healing, I can imagine if I hadn’t have left home I wouldn’t have gotten as far as I have now.”

The hosts

In the last year, Ottolien Pentz had hosted six young people in her spare room, usually for less than a week each time.

She fostered about 25 children when her own were growing up and said teenagers were actually easier to have because they could voice their thoughts.

Each time she got a knock at her door, Pentz knew the young person would be feeling nervous about staying with a stranger.

“Most of them after a little [while] would say ‘I thought it would be really scary and I wondered if I would be safe’ and it’s a lovely surprise that they were safe and that there’s goodness in the world.”

Pentz said The Safety Net helped her as a host to set reasonable boundaries and whare rules that she talked the teenagers through when they arrived.

And she told them she would like them to rest and think about their next step, what they would like out of life.

“One of them said I felt cared for for the first time … and that I’m valuable enough that I can want good things,” Pentz said.

“Just for a few days there was none of the negative things in life. That’s what makes me sad, some people’s lives are in such a discombobulation that simple things are big things.”

Sue and Tony said they could get called at short notice to host a young person and that had been challenging because they liked to plan ahead.

But they wanted to help the teenagers who had no-one else to rely on – they said one of their sons experienced mental health issues and would unlikely have survived had it not been for their stable family home.

“It’s just tragic really, one young person said that at home they didn’t get enough food … they didn’t on the whole talk about the worst of the trauma but it is just so sad,” Sue said.

Hendry said they would like more host homes to come on board because having a stable roof, even for a few nights, gave young people a fresh perspective.

“One young person told me how she’d stayed in her room all night but she’d just stayed awake listening to the whanau laughing and having fun in the kitchen, because for her that was something she hadn’t really experienced.”

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Whatever happened to NFTs?

Source: Radio New Zealand

Bored Ape / Nike / Beeble / Cyber Cosmos

Four years ago, non-fungible tokens (NFTs) were everywhere.

The tokens, which provide digital ownership of an asset, often art, were being traded and promoted by celebrities in New Zealand and around the world.

Former All Black Dan Carter co-founded Glorious, to help artists sell their digital art in the form of NFTs. Rich-lister Craig Heatley reportedly invested.

Brooke Howard-Smith co-founded NF Labs, with a series of Fluf World NFTs, and at one point partnered with rapper Snoop Dogg.

But while it was reported that more than US$2.7 billion in NFTs was being traded at the peak of the market, it now looks like quite a different picture.

In 2023, researchers said, across 73,000 NFT collections, 95 percent were valued at zero ether – the ethereum cryptocurrency used to buy them.

The Bored Ape Yacht Club collection, which Justin Bieber is reported to have spent more than US$1m for a slice of, is estimated to be down 97 percent from its all-time high.

CryptoPunks are down 89 percent. Mutant Ape Yacht Club is down 98 percent.

Forbes said this week Bored Ape Yacht Club had a floor price of US$12,000 – down from a peak of US$394,764.

University of Otago senior lecturer Olivier Jutel said the drop had been dramatic.

“There is myriad reasons for that but essentially if I had to put it in a nutshell, people have been grasping around for some essential use chain for the blockchain. And Web3 and NFTs were the most frothy sort of future vision here.”

He said it was unlikely there would be a resurgence.

“I really don’t think so … Facebook spent $40 billion on the metaverse … but nobody wanted this.

“Essentially our economies are so bedazzled and captured by number go up, valuation, financialisation, that it’s so unmoored from the real economy.

“I know the real economy could be a problematic concept, but crypto, blockchain and Web3 are the height of this kind of complete detachment.”

But University of Auckland commercial law professor Alex Sims said the underlying technology of NFTs could still be useful, even if NFTs had been overhyped.

“[You] can make a loose analogy with NFTs and the dotcom bubble.

“Lots of enthusiasm, massive bubble but the underlying tech and infrastructure was built, as well as the beginning of a culture shift … Although, unlike the dotcom bubble it’s unlikely that many NFT projects will grow to large ones, unlike say Amazon, Google, Netflix, eBay …”

She said some NFTs still had value but many did not.

“They aren’t worth the stupid money that people were paying for them … a lot of the big name NFTs are worth a fraction of what they were bought for if people bought them at the top of the market.

“But many are still worth money, just a lot less than some people paid for them.”

She said Damien Hurst’s The Currency project and its Tender NFTs could have more lasting value than some other NFT projects because they had a famous artist behind them.

“While the Tender NFTs have fallen from around US$29,000 in February 2022 to about US$1880 each, if people bought the NFTs directly when they released for US$2000 – then they haven’t lost that much money, just over 10 percent.

“As I said quite a few times at the time of the NFT bubble. Only buy an artwork NFT if you like the artwork or you want to support the artist. Don’t buy them for speculation as you are likely to lose your money. And I’ve predictably been proven right.”

Swyftx NZ country manager Paul Quickenden said there were a few things people could think about if they were weighing up similar new investments that might pop up in future.

“I think that the key tenets are always the same … is there a good sound business case or use case for the project or whatever they’re trying to do?

“Can you identify the team and are they reputable? Does what they’re trying to do make sense?

“It’s also a question of time. In any transaction, there’s a buyer and a seller. And the seller is thinking that the time is right to get out.

“And the buyer is thinking there’s more opportunity for it to go up. And only one of those two people are going to be right.”

He said just because people were “piling in”, it did not mean it was a good time to buy.

“You have to evaluate the project, but also just what’s going on in that market? Because if it feels very frothy, then there’s a really good chance that, you know, you might be caught up in a wave that’s going to crash.”

Glorious and NF Labs have not yet responded to requests for comment.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/19/whatever-happened-to-nfts/

Novids, super-dodgers: The people who have never had Covid

Source: Radio New Zealand

Lucas Zaner, a 31-year-old from Wellington, assumed he would get Covid and get it bad. Whenever he had a cold or the flu, it tended to floor him so he was diligent with isolating, mask wearing and handwashing from the start of the pandemic in 2020.

“I don’t want to call myself a hypochondriac, but when I get like colds or illness or anything like that, I get man flu. You know, I do get quite ill.”

He tested whenever he had symptoms, which was often. He even had his GP do some tests to check the at-home negative was correct. He got two shots of the vaccine plus at least one booster.

Researchers are looking into the people who reckon they have never had Covid.

123rf.com / Composite Image – RNZ

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/19/novids-super-dodgers-the-people-who-have-never-had-covid/

Health NZ warned financial control ‘one of the thorniest’ aspects of decentralisation

Source: Radio New Zealand

Health New Zealand (HNZ) has been warned that keeping financial control is “one of the thorniest” aspects of the government’s rapid push to devolution. RNZ

Health New Zealand (HNZ) has been warned that keeping financial control is “one of the thorniest” aspects of the government’s rapid push to devolution.

The government blamed loss of financial control when it sacked the central agency’s board two years ago.

Health Minister Simeon Brown on Tuesday promised regions and districts would get more say over budgets and hiring from 1 July so that decisions on medical care were made closer to the patient.

Late last year he ordered HNZ to decentralise rapidly, and this week he said, “This is the most significant structural change our government is making to improve how the health system operates.”

But the latest HNZ internal report on devolution said “people capability is an extreme risk” in the finance and operations area, with centralisation diverting resources.

“Many local teams are under-resourced in financial management,” said the report done in January for a new devolution committee.

Brown on Wednesday said there was a “huge” amount of work underway to build back the local leadership disempowered by over-centralisation.

“We are making sure we’ve got the capability around operations, around finance, human resources, all of those things are being looked at.”

The January report by consultants Deloitte laid that out, he said.

The report has not been publicly released though RNZ has seen parts of it.

‘Clearly underpowered’

Former HNZ Te Whatu Ora board chair Rob Campbell expressed serious misgivings.

“They quickly need to get some financial resources into those regions and districts which are clearly underpowered in this respect,” Campbell said on Wednesday. “That’s the first thing they have to do.”

Former HNZ Te Whatu Ora board chair Rob Campbell. Te Whatu Ora

The devolution plan puts executive regional directors in charge of rebuilding the capability but at a time when money was exceedingly tight said the report.

“The financial challenges are going to increase in 2026/27, meaning there will be even more pressure on financial controls to reduce the deficit …. from $200m to breakeven.

“Currently there will be little to no capacity remaining within the baseline next year without significant productivity improvements and prioritisation decisions,” it said.

Campbell said it was an unenviable task.

“They’re being told they’re getting more autonomy. The truth is they’re really not, and they don’t have the money to do that anyway.”

‘Fully coming into effect’ on 1 July

The devolution report contains self-assessments by Health NZ’s various business units showing some progress, and a lot of risks, around devolving key clinical and service decisions back to the four health regions and 20 districts.

One section on “reduced financial visibility” said, “One of the thorniest aspects of devolution is financial control – ‘who holds the purse strings’ and how to prevent overspending or inequities.”

Financial visibility was fragmented across 20 health boards before 2022’s centralisation, then smeared after it by “confusion … and weak controls” at Health NZ Te Whatu Ora. It then began its nosedive towards a forecast billion-dollar-plus deficit.

The centralisation also pulled experience and skills into the centre in Wellington, the report said.

This was compounded by hundreds of cuts to support jobs since 2024 in a savings drive.

The January report outlined “critical” current gaps and “staff churn” in the workforce, such as in data and digital, analysis and finance, that supports the frontline doctors and nurses.

Under a heading ‘Options to accelerate devolution’ it said, “There is a risk of not understanding cost structures or nuances between districts, further compounding the risk that pushing the funding allocation and management of each region and district to the lower levels quickly may result in loss of financial visibility across the sector again.”

It said some fixes might take 18 months to three years.

However, Brown said on Tuesday the changes underway would “ensure a nationally planned, locally and regionally delivered health system, will come into effect on 1 July”.

Hospitals would be able to recruit and deploy staff without central sign-off but with delegated budgets and responsibility to meet targets in the district or region.

Health Minister Simeon Brown. RNZ / Mark Papalii

On Wednesday Brown reiterated the 1 July delivery date.

The Deloitte report talked about the many initiatives being done by HNZ “to make sure that districts and regions are ready for 1 July when the devolved operating model … is fully coming into effect”, he said.

“Of course there’s risks in changing an operating model but at the same time the last government … left local clinicians not able to make some of the key decisions.”

Globally, health ran better when a devolved operating model split decision-making between national, regional and local levels, Brown said.

New policy on who decides what

The devolution plan depended on four executive regional directors at the top being “best placed to manage performance and build capability, which can vary significantly between districts”.

Already, a new policy on who gets to decide on hiring and firing, and on spending, was being rolled out.

Papers RNZ has seen showed the policy was approved by the board in December.

They showed there must be consultation with the regional or national head of human resources for all hires, or for creating new positions within budget; and to create any new positions outside budget needed “consultation/approval” from either of these heads or from the executive leadership team.

Campbell said, “You start off looking like they’ve got a lot of power, and then when you really read through it, they don’t.

“Even on items that are within budget and full-time equivalent allocations, there is a need for … consultation, and in a hierarchical organisation like this consultation means getting approval.”

The biggest difference was a bigger regional element compared to what HNZ was building at the time he was sacked in 2023 for a political attack on National’s water infrastructure policy.

Yet it was “still very tightly controlled” and regional and district managers were “in a no-win situation”, Campbell said.

‘Divergent approaches’

In addition to lack of finance staff, the January report added “fragmentation” to the hurdles for devolution.

“Without strong governance structures and clear national guardrails, regions and districts risk adopting divergent approaches, weakening system-wide alignment and equity in service delivery,” it said.

Those governance structures were still being set up.

Campbell said good governance meant having a business model everyone grasped. “People throughout the organisation still find it very hard to understand what the responsibility for particular issues is.”

An overview of Health New Zealand’s devolved operating model. Supplied

The report said Health NZ had had to build national financial guardrails after its lurch towards a big deficit.

“If HNZ devolves too quickly or carelessly, they risk losing the opportunity to use its current … structure and scale” to address system problems, it said.

On the plus side, devolution could help districts take more responsibility for day-to-day spending and not expect topdown bailouts, citing how Australian state hospitals used to have a “rollercoaster of budget blowouts and rescues”.

Brown’s plan retained the Wellington-based bureaucracy for strategy, planning, policies, standards and system integration.

However, the report said many of the national plans existed in name but “have not yet been developed or published, and the decision-making framework to support accountability is still developing”.

Building districts’ financial capability an ongoing focus – HNZ

Late on Wednesday Health New Zealand told RNZ that according to the Deloitte report the agency’s budgeting, planning, reporting, and performance management disciplines had been strengthened since a review of financial management at the end of 2024.

“These improvements have ‘reduced the risk of a loss of financial control levers’,” it quoted.

Building financial capability of districts and regions was an ongoing focus, said executive national director of strategy performance improvement, Jess Smaling.

“Regions and districts will have clear budgets, and delegated authority to make decisions based on the unique local needs,” she said in a statement.

“Budgets will be based on expected activity to meet those local needs, within the resources available to Health New Zealand.”

A national funding board and human resources oversight committee had been replaced by four regional investment committees and “people and culture committees”, along with a national version of that to consider human resource policies so there was national consistency.

A new national investment committee would make funding decisions above the authority of the four executive regional directors.

“Hiring decisions will be made in the regions and districts, within available budgets,” said Smaling.

Those within existing FTE and budget would only require the approval of the hiring manager’s immediate manager.

Decision-makers using delegated authority had to stay within approved budgets and limits, and comply with Health NZ policies and legislation, she added.

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Immigration adviser struck off register after selling two scam jobs to migrant

Source: Radio New Zealand

Liberty Consulting Group Limited in Rosedale, Auckland. RNZ / Gill Bonnett

An immigration adviser caught selling a fake job at her husband’s company in taped phone conversations – after he lost his first fake job there – has lost her licence.

Heidi Castelucci, also known as Qian Yu, coached a migrant in how the $70,000 scam would work and how to hide it from authorities, the immigration advisers’ complaints and disciplinary tribunal ruled. Five other complaints from visa applicants against her have also been upheld by the tribunal, which described it as a “concerning pattern of behaviour”.

She worked at Auckland firm Liberty Consulting, trading as Liberty Immigration, but the Chinese migrant’s job was a visa facade and was terminated.

“Ms Yu then persuaded the complainant to resign on the basis he would be re-employed as a manager at twice the salary. This role also did not exist. He had to pay an unlawful premium for the position. He would pay his own salary and tax. He would have to find other employment to support himself and his family, as well as fund the premium (the Tribunal assuming he would be repaid his salary).

“Ms Yu coached him regarding this arrangement, including advice to hide it. All of this was unlawful, as she well knew. The gravity of the misconduct here is at the upper end of serious. The integrity of the immigration system is compromised by fake jobs. They strike at the heart of the system and public trust in it. The involvement of a licensed adviser in creating such a scam is to be condemned.”

The man signed a new employment contract with the agency, whose owner also runs the New Zealand Language Institute and Foreign Exchange Program, as a $100,000-a-year business development manager, being told he would pay $70,000 for the company to support his residence visa – that he could fund through cash-in-hand jobs elsewhere.

He paid one $7500 instalment for the non-existent job before raising the alarm and leaving New Zealand with his children. The tribunal said a fee of $2000-$4000 would have been reasonable for immigration advice for his work visas, but in all he paid $25,588.

Qian Yu/Heidi Castelucci. Immigration Advisers Authority

Castelucci/Yu had not responded to any of the allegations, but when the tribunal turned to considering penalties she expressed deep remorse, and pointed to “a concentrated period of profound personal, medical and psychological collapse”.

“The extenuating circumstances advanced appear to have occurred after she set up the scam with the fake job,” the tribunal concluded.

“The public need to be protected from advisers who conceive arrangements themselves to exploit clients and the immigration system. Her dishonesty here warrants cancellation of her licence on its own. Despite one belated letter acknowledging her wrongdoing and expressing remorse, the tribunal is not persuaded she has ‘turned a leaf’.”

She received abusive and threatening messages and phone calls when the offending became public, she said, and been forced to repay fees when other migrants became aware of what she had done.

Publicity from the case had already severely damaged her professional reputation, her licence was suspended, many clients terminated retainers and she suffered substantial loss and medical fees.

The tribunal fined her $4000 and noted it could only cancel her licence for a maximum of two years, with the registrar of immigration advisers deciding if she could be relicensed.

Job tokens

The migrant’s employment advocate May Moncur said lifetime bans should be available for cases involving dishonesty. “I think if it’s a character issue, two years is too short. I would say a life ban would be more appropriate. And also that would send a message. When the deterrent is severe enough, that would deliver a strong message.”

May Moncur The Detail/Sharon Brettkelly

Jobs were still being sold via ‘tokens’ INZ gave to companies that gained accreditation to recruit migrants.

“The worst I’ve seen, you know, agents, these kind of proxies, recruited probably dozens or even a hundred workers. I don’t know what kind of penalties or sanctions they are subjected to. It’s very disappointing, actually, that they’ve made millions in illegal incomes, and New Zealand benefited nothing.

“Those migrants, they paid a huge premium to come to New Zealand, hoping to have a genuine employment but ended up with no job, no income, and not only themselves, also their family members were affected by such a scam.”

It also created a distorted economy, with tax revenue losses from workers being paid under the table.

“It really undermines the real employment opportunities, because some companies, they could make a profit out of selling job tokens, which is still going on nowadays.

“Some people may think naively this has nothing to do with them and they are not in the immigration sector. It’s not good for anyone. It’s really affecting everybody in New Zealand.”

One recent example was a woman charged almost 200,000 RMB ($49,000) for a job, she said.

“I’m still being approached by some migrant workers and I understand there are licensed immigration advisors who are actively involved in the recruitment process and outside their immigration services and all responsibility, they are acting as proxies to charge illegal premiums.”

The Registrar of Companies has initiated action to remove Liberty Consulting, an immigration firm based in the North Shore suburb of Rosedale, from its register. A new company set up by Castelucci’s husband last year, Global Pathways Consulting, operates from the same address.

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‘Buyers know they have the power’: Property market off to slow start, Cotality data shows

Source: Radio New Zealand

123RF

Housing market activity has got off to a slow start this year, Cotality says.

The property data firm said sales volumes in February were 6.8 percent lower than a year ago, after a 7.8 percent fall in January.

It was the first time in almost three years that sales had declined in two consecutive months.

Values were stable, up 0.2 percent in the month although still down 1.2 percent on a year earlier.

Cotality chief property economist Kelvin Davidson said buyers were cautious.

“December activity looked unusually strong, so some of the recent softness may reflect timing rather than a new downward trend.

“But even allowing for that, the housing market is still in a phase where buyers are taking their time.”

He said it was possible that some people brought forward property deals in December to take advantage of cashback incentives from the banks.

“I don’t necessarily think it’s the start of a downwards trend or anything, given mortgage rates are down, and the economy’s showing signs of recovering, and confidence seems to be recovering a little bit.

“But I guess just a good reminder that there’s still a bit of caution out there. Buyers are still cautious, sellers are still cautious, you know, the market’s certainly not rushing anyway.

“We’re still seeing that in property values. They’re pretty flat, even the markets that are probably more resilient are still not seeing a boom…buyers know they have the power.”

First-home buyers were still a significant force in the market, responsible for 27 percent of purchases across January and February.

Davidson said improving affordability and lower mortgage rates helped.

“KiwiSaver withdrawals continue to play a role in helping buyers assemble deposits, while the banks’ low-deposit lending allowances are also supporting access to credit.

“In some cases, mortgage repayments can now look similar, or cheaper than rents, which can encourage tenants to move from renting to buying if they’re able to save for or access a deposit.”

People moving from one owner-occupied property to another were 26 percent of purchases and investors 24 percent.

Davidson said those movers would be a segment of the market to watch this year,

“When confidence is up, when job security is up, movers tend to relocate or trade up or get that house in that better suburb or the bigger house or whatever.

“During the last couple of years, they’ve been quiet because that economic backdrop has been pretty subdued.

“If we can get a sustained recovery this year, you’d anticipate that movers would start to become a bit more active and trade up, that sort of thing.

“So that’s definitely one I’m keeping an eye on. It’s not there yet.”

Rents still soft

Rents continued to be soft, he said.

MBIE bonds data shows the median national rent fell by 0.8 percent in the three months to January compared with a year earlier.

Davidson said the combination of softer population growth and already high rent levels relative to incomes was limiting further increases.

“Rents have already risen significantly in recent years, and wage growth has eased, so there isn’t a lot of scope for further increases at the moment,” he said.

“More likely we’ll see a period of flat or only modest rental growth while the market adjusts.”

Davidson said there were a number of forces that would act on the market this year. He said war in the Middle East could affect job confidence, which might slow the market.

“It’s not difficult to imagine that things sort of trend sideways for a while.”

But he said there was also a wider mindset change happening.

“We are going to be able to look back in hindsight and say, yep, that was the point where the market did change a little bit.

“But I detect at more and more things I go to, more and more people I talk to, audiences I hear from and talk to … just a bit of a psychology change going on.

“I think people are coming around to the idea that ever rising house prices isn’t necessarily the best thing. And maybe we’re at an interesting turning point, potentially, where people do start to question that assumption that property prices will always go up.

“I think we’ll still see property price growth, but it might be a bit lower in future than it’s been in the past.”

About 60 percent of mortgages by value will refix over the next 12 months.

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Why do we love feijoas more than anyone else in the world?

Source: Radio New Zealand

When it cools down and autumn hits in New Zealand, office kitchens and staff rooms are suddenly abundant with the sweet smell of our widely available little fruit – the feijoa.

But spare a thought for Kiwis who have made Australia home – where they don’t seem to understand our feijoa fantasy.

Feijoas comfort homesick NZders in Australia

Morning Report

Piera Maclean, who has lived in Melbourne for a decade, longs for the taste.

Some feijoas found in Melbourne by Bec Lister.

Bec Lister

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“Normally at this time of year in New Zealand everyone’s having feijoa crumble all the time and making cakes. They’ve got so many. Whereas here it’s like if you find three, you know you’re feeling very lucky and it’s the best day ever.”

Fellow Melbourne based New Zealander, Bec Lister, who has lived across the Tasman for 13 years, shares Maclean’s yearnings.

“I love autumn in Melbourne, it’s probably my favourite time of year in Melbourne, but I also know of all of the feijoas that I’m missing out on.”

Both have found ways to source the fruit in Melbourne, which occasionally means paying prices that would make many Kiwis’ eyes water.

Maclean has seen them selling on Facebook Marketplace for about AU$15 (about NZ$16.10) a kilo, but when she was hit with a feijoa craving while in a fruit shop, she paid far more.

The high cost of feijoas in Melbourne.

Piera Maclean

“I picked a few out thinking these will probably cost me but might not be too bad. When I took them over, she said, oh, that’ll be $2.49 (AUD) each. I paid $7.50 (AUD) for three medium-sized feijoas.”

New Zealander Jen Jones, who has called Melbourne home for 13 years, has seen some other novel ways new Zealanders source feijoas.

“There’s the Facebook good karma networks and things where people would say, ‘hey, I’m here from New Zealand, I’m craving for feijoas. Does anyone have any?’”

But Jones enjoys foraging for the fruit in her local neighbourhood.

“We ride our bikes down the laneways and just collect feijoas, and sometimes we even go up to a door and say, ‘hey, we’ve noticed you’ve got all this fruit on the ground, do you mind if we collect them?’”

Jones says finding a good tree is a year-round mission.

“Through the year, you drive around and feijoa trees are on the radar. You kind of just log it in your mind and know that when Autumn comes around, you might just drop by and see how it’s going.”

For Lister, a generous workmate has provided her a steady supply this season. She sits with another New Zealander in the staff room at the school where they work spooning out the juicy flesh.

“There was a massive bowl of feijoa skins just on our desk … all of our workmates were just like sitting around, being like, ‘what the hell is going on? What are these things?’”

Mark O’Connor, an Australian poet and self-proclaimed “feijoa expert”, explains why the feijoa has “not been taken all that seriously as a fruit” outside of New Zealand.

“When they were setting up the city of Canberra, which was an artificial city set up as a capital, when you arrived you had a right to get something like six free trees from the government nursery and 40 free shrubs.”

Feijoas were counted as a shrub and were recommended due to their ability to tolerate the soil and climate of Canberra. But they were never prioritised for eating.

“All over Australia, almost any nursery will have feijoas in it for sale at any time. But they will not be selected for fruit.”

O’Connor explains this has led to a low opinion of feijoas as fruit, and many people consider them as similar to a loquat and other trees where the fruit is “not taken seriously” and considered only good for jam.

O’Connor grows feijoas in his Canberra backyard and is often giving them away – there are no surprises who his main beneficiaries are.

“I certainly give them away in bucket loads, especially to people from New Zealand.”

O’Connor is interested in cultivating the fruit, and is in awe of the state of play in New Zealand.

“You don’t know how lucky you are in New Zealand that you can go to Bunnings and find half a dozen of the very best varieties on sale for really the price of seedlings.”

While Australian-based New Zealanders may be misunderstood for devouring feijoas, Lister describes it as something of a comfort.

“You do get homesick. I guess that’s one thing that can kind of comfort you is having that love for feijoas.”

Which is something echoed by Jones.

“There’s a bit of a homesickness that comes with it, and you end up more keen for them than you probably would if you were back home. It’s more than just eating the fruit, it’s a bit of nostalgia. It’s a taste of home.”

Lister also has some advice for Australians.

“You can treat Kiwis like shit all year round, but if you bring them feijoas on one day they will love you for life.”

Australian poet and “feijoa expert” Mark O’Connor.

Mark O’Connor

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Make stupid rules, win stupid prizes

Source: Radio New Zealand

Natasha Hamilton-Hart’s new book: Stupid Rules: Reducing Red Tape and Making Organisations More Effective and Accountable  Supplied

Too many rules, too little judgement – why one Kiwi professor says the country is strangling itself with red tape.

Professor Natasha Hamilton-Hart has a simple rule for stupid rules: get rid of them.

She says the country’s love for red tape is making life harder and society less effective.

So, she’s written a book about it.

It’s aptly called Stupid Rules: Reducing Red Tape and Making Organisations More Effective and Accountable.

She tells The Detail that modern workplaces are trapped in a culture of compliance that replaces judgement with bureaucracy.

“We have too many stupid rules, which are the rules that regulate when we really should delegate authority, and if we actually ceded a little discretion to authority, we would paradoxically have more freedom, and we would get more of what we want,” she says.

In this episode, Hamilton-Hart, who is a professor in management and international business at the University of Auckland, gives examples of both personal and professional experiences.

The personal: volunteering with a conservation group, helping teams to get rid of pest plants in urban areas.

“The first time I did this, headquarters sent us this health and safety form which had a matrix on it, and you were supposed to list every conceivable adverse event, and then you were supposed to attach a probability of it happening and how serious it would be if it did happen.

“And when you start thinking about it, well, actually, people could injure themselves pretty badly if you take them gardening, they might even have a heart attack.

“The point was, if you took it literally, and go, ‘we are not taking a defibrillator out with us on our weeding expedition, so if someone had a heart attack, actually they would probably die,’ we wouldn’t have been able to do it at all.

“So obviously I was supposed to lie when I filled out this paperwork,” she says. “But that’s kinda ridiculous, that has gone overboard.”

Changing a hyphen

Her professional experience included a hyphen in a name on a university website, which was wrong.

“I thought, ‘no problem,’ I got my office manager to send the web people a note and say, ‘can you take the hyphen out?’.

“This had to get escalated to the head of administration in my faculty, because I was told that the rule book said the hyphen had to be in there.

“I’m pretty sure the rule book doesn’t have naming rights over study centres.”

She says rule books can become shorter and more effective if companies, sectors, governments, and organisations cede authority to people in a hierarchy or empower them to decide what is appropriate.

She points to General Motors, which once had a clunky employee dress code that grew to 10 pages long.

But when Mary Barra became vice president of global human resources in 2009, she replaced the whole thing with two words: “dress appropriately”.

Hamilton-Hart says this sort of change achieves two things: it makes common sense and requires authority.

Employees gain more discretion, but managers will have to step in when someone gets the dress code wrong.

And this is what the book is about.

“What inspired me, if inspired is the right word, was actually coming back to New Zealand after many, many years away, and mostly working in Southeast Asia, where, whatever else they suffer from, tends not to be stupid rules. And coming to New Zealand and thinking, why can’t we get things done?

“Why can’t we build buildings that don’t leak? Why can’t we have finance companies that don’t go bankrupt? Why is it so hard to actually deliver the stuff that people want delivered?

“There is no disagreement – we want better hospitals, we want better schools, we want to raise literacy rates, but we don’t seem to be able to do it.

“And I know there will never be just one reason, but I sort of got curious about what stops organisations delivering on their purpose.”

She says she discovered a “flight from authority” in recent decades, which has stripped organisations of command capacity and resulted in workplaces where employees tick boxes rather than exercise initiative.

She says the answer isn’t to abandon rules altogether – but to rethink how organisations govern themselves.

That means trusting expertise, strengthening leadership authority, and holding people responsible for outcomes rather than compliance.

In other words, fewer rules – but clearer responsibility.

She says if nothing changes, the country could be left with more bureaucracy, less effectiveness, and a system where everyone follows the rules, but nothing works quite as it should.

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Relief for parents and students as Ministry of Education pauses school bus reviews

Source: Radio New Zealand

Toby Williams

  • Ministry of Education pauses reviews and changes to rural school bus routes.
  • Officials to review policy and consult with schools and communities.
  • Changes already brought in won’t be reversed.

Rural families worried about whether their children are still eligible for government-funded buses to school can for now breathe a sigh of relief.

The Ministry of Education confirmed it’s pushed pause on reviews into compliance with rules such as attending the closest high school while it reviews its transport assistance policy.

It’s a welcome decision for regions where changes were due to soon take hold, but has left those already affected feeling frustrated.

Grateful for pause

Tairāwhiti farmer Toby Williams’ two sons attend Gisborne Boys’ High School.

Changes to take effect in the Gisborne region from the second term of the school year are now on hold.

But before the ministry backdown this week, Williams was worried about how his boys and dozens of other teens in the area would get to school from next term. They were ruled ineligible for ministry-funded services to Boys’ High.

Tairāwhiti farmer Toby Williams. RNZ / Jimmy Ellingham

“We’re really grateful to the ministry for pausing these changes for us and giving us that bit of extra time to work with them and the schools and the transport providers to be able to provide some routes that work for the community, but also work in terms of being cost efficient and affordable for the government.”

Williams’ 17-year-old son Tristin was stressed about passing his driving test, in case he had to get himself and younger brother Jackson into town, 30 minutes away, each day for class.

Williams wonders why rules most people didn’t know about were suddenly being enforced after being overlooked for so long.

“This bus has run for 40 years and must have been through multiple iterations of reviews. There were 50 kids on the bus.

“It was funny how the bus suddenly needed such drastic changes in our region. Parents were left a bit dumbfounded by the whole thing.”

Changes won’t be reversed

The ministry reviewed more than 250 routes, out of about 1400, throughout the country.

Although it’s paused making new changes, it won’t undo those it’s already made, it confirmed to RNZ on Wednesday.

In Manawatū, Nikita Walker helped organise a user-pays service for children from the towns of Rongotea and Tangimoana to get to school in Palmerston North.

The ministry said a school in Foxton is closer, so it will only put on buses there despite previously funding students on the Palmerston North service for decades.

Nikita Walker, pictured with her daughter Jasmine, says parents are finding a user-pays bus service tough to fund. RNZ/Jimmy Ellingham

“It’s just hugely disappointing. There are a lot of us who are really in hard times, financially, and we’re all struggling to be able to afford these term passes.”

The user-pays service cost more than $500 a term, she said.

“There has been a drop off in numbers due to the prices. Some people were able to just manage to get by with doing a few concession cards to get on the bus, however, long term it’s just not doable.”

Becs Barr’s petrol bill has tripled to more than $300 a week this year now she has to drive her son Murphy to and from school in Palmerston North from their Horowhenua home.

She’s also unhappy changes already implemented will stay.

“I find that quite bizarre. It should be the same for everybody. All our children should get to school.

“It seems crazy that there are decisions they’ve made for term two that they’re going to put a hold on, but they can’t reverse decisions for term one.”

Becs Barr says all children should be treated equally, so changes already made should be reversed. Becs Barr

Thorough review needed – principal

The ministry has said reviews were a routine, ongoing part of its work, but now said it was reviewing its transport assistance policy so changes were “lasting and reflect up to date policy settings”.

“Education minister Erica Stanford has been discussing current transport settings with the ministry for some time and, based on our advice, agreed last week to initiate a policy review,” said James Meffan, the ministry’s group manager for school transport.

“We’ll work with schools, communities and transport providers, and we’ll keep people updated on next steps.”

Gisborne Boys’ High School headmaster Tom Cairns said the ministry needed to come up with something that worked in the regions.

“I think the policy certainly needs to be reviewed and I think it needs to be far more comprehensive than the current review, which was, ‘We’ve got a policy from 1908. We have to enact it.’

“There needs to be some community consultation for it to be purposeful and there was none of that.”

He said schools were just told what was happening for the now-paused changes to the Gisborne region, with no chance to have a say.

“I believe there needs to be a thorough look at it. The untidy bits based around arbitrary geographic locations of schools need to be done away with.”

About 300 students at Palmerston North Boys’ High School are affected by bus eligibility changes brought in this term.

Rector David Bovey said some were finding it hard to get to school.

“The fact that they’ve stopped to have a look at it now is possible, of course, but I’m hoping that will be expanded to looking at the areas where the changes have already been made.”

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/18/relief-for-parents-and-students-as-ministry-of-education-pauses-school-bus-reviews/

Nationwide outage hit 2degrees mobile customers

Source: Radio New Zealand

It is not known how many customers were impacted. RNZ / Nate McKinnon

The nationwide outage that affected some 2degrees mobile customers, preventing them from making or receiving calls, has been resolved.

The company confirmed the outage in a network status update on its website at 3.12pm on Wednesday.

A few hours later, 2degrees said mobile calling, SMS, and data services had been restored and were operating as normal.

“A small number of customers may continue to see issues with the data clock or the 2degrees mobile app, which our teams are actively investigating.

“We apologise for any inconvenience caused and thank you for your patience.”

It is not known how many customers were impacted.

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/18/nationwide-outage-hit-2degrees-mobile-customers/

Biggest bank raises interest rates

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

ANZ is the latest bank to increase interest rates.

It is increasing its 18-month to five-year rates by 20 basis points, and its one-year rate by 10 basis points.

Its six-month special rate remains at 4.49 percent.

It is also increasing the rates it pays on term deposits by between 15 basis points and 40 basis points.

The three-year rate is now 4.4 percent, which the bank said was an 18-month high.

ANZ managing director for personal banking Grant Knuckey said it was a response to rising wholesale interest rates.

“Since the fixed rate changes we made in February, wholesale rates have continued to rise across all terms.”

Knuckey said customers were still seeing the benefit of earlier cuts to interest rates.

“Seventy-eight percent of ANZ’s fixed home loans are now on rates below 5 percent, a significant shift from the end of 2024 when fewer than 10 percent of loans were on rates below 5 percent.”

Economists and forecasters have been split on the likely outlook for rates.

While tension in the Middle East is likely to be a damper on the economy, it is also expected to fuel inflation.

Earlier, Squirrel chief executive David Cunningham said there could be merit in fixing for six months, on the assumption that the economy would be weak enough that the official cash rate was unlikely to rise in that time.

But Infometrics chief forecaster Gareth Kiernan said two-year rates were offering good levels of certainty at reasonable prices.

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/18/biggest-bank-raises-interest-rates/

‘I wouldn’t even know where to go’ – former US marine facing deportation to NZ

Source: Radio New Zealand

Paul Canton. Supplied

A NZ-born man who is facing deportation from the US – after living there for more than half his life and serving in the US Marine Corps – says he has no links to New Zealand and “no connection to that way of life”.

Paul Canton was a Marine for seven years and has built a life in Florida, where his children have grown up.

But after 36 years living in the US, a judge has denied his bid to stay – because he has never had US citizenship.

Born in New Zealand and raised in Australia, he first visited the US as an exchange student and enlisted in the Marines in the early 1990s.

“I feel like I’m fully bonded to it, I mean I love this country. It’s a way of life that is so unique and so beautiful,” he said.

“When I joined the military, to me that was one of the best times. Everyone who was serving with us, we all loved the country.”

Canton was born in a decade that automatically means he has birthright citizenship in New Zealand. He is in his 50s and that applies to anyone born in Aotearoa before 2006.

His Australian citizenship was revoked when he joined the US marines. At the time military service did not require recruits to be permanent residents.

Paul Canton during his service in the US Marine Corp. Military.com/Facebook/Supplied

Canton said he was promised US citizenship if he served and was discharged honourably, which he did in 1998.

It was only when renewing his drivers licence years later that he discovered that had not happened.

“The first time I found out I figured somebody failed to do the paperwork so I just [thought] okay I’ll just go down and fill out a few forms and we’ll be done.”

That was about a decade ago, and Canton soon found out it was not that straightforward to fix, despite being married to an American citizen – his wife passed away three years ago.

He then hired a lawyer and spent years trying to navigate the immigration system. In February after many lost appeals, a judge denied citizenship.

Canton said he has no links to New Zealand – his family moved to Australia about 50 years ago, when he was five years old.

“I have no connection to that way of life, I wouldn’t even know where to go or what to do and it’s so unique to live here in America. It’s a wonderful place to raise your kids.”

Attorney Elizabeth Ricci has represented him pro-bono for six years and said it was a complicated case.

Canton had voted, believing he was a US citizen, and that was now a barrier to citizenship.

“He was honourably discharged, he did four years active, four years reserve, believed himself to be a US citizen so he registered to vote and voted,” Ricci said.

“The rule about voting [and citizenship] changed in 1996 and if you voted or registered to vote after that rule changed, there’s now no waiver available for you to be eligible for you to naturalise, ever.”

Canton’s eligibility to gain US citizenship through the marines was linked to when he served. He had enlisted in 1991 just weeks before the Persian Gulf conflict ended.

Ricci said because his active service began after the conflict had ended, he was denied citizenship based on his military experience.

“The rule is that if you served during that period you could go from undocumented to citizen, so clearly enough people were serving in our military undocumented that they had to even make that rule. But the rule only applied for active duty.”

Ricci said they were now hoping for political intervention.

“We now need a special Bill through Congress or for the President to do something. He [Canton] has written several letters to both [then president Joe] Biden and [President Donald] Trump asking for intervention and has gotten no response.”

Ricci said he could be served with a notice to appear at Immigration Court in Orlando with a hearing weeks, months or years away, due to millions of backlogged cases.

The Department of Internal Affairs confirmed anyone born in New Zealand before the start of 2006 automatically is a New Zealand citizen.

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/18/i-wouldnt-even-know-where-to-go-former-us-marine-facing-deportation-to-nz/

Police seek help solving violent Wellington robbery

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Patrice Allen

Police are asking for the public’s help identifying two men who seriously assaulted a person during a robbery in Brooklyn, Wellington on Tuesday afternoon.

The victim was hospitalised with multiple injuries during the attack, on Ohiro Road around 5.40pm.

The men also stole the victim’s phone.

Police asked anyone with information to come forward.

You can call 105 or use the police website to report information, or provide anonymous tips to Crime Stoppers on 0800 555 111.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/18/police-seek-help-solving-violent-wellington-robbery/

Checkpoint live: Promoters accused of holding government to ransom over big events

Source: Radio New Zealand

Robbie Williams Tim Kildeborg Jensen / Ritzau Scanpix / AFP

There are allegations of corporate concert welfare and promoters holding the government to ransom over funding for big events while home grown talent is left out.

Some promoters are not in tune with the government helping fund pop star Robbie Williams’ tour to New Zealand.

The money came out of its Major Events and Tourism package, a $70 million fund aimed at stimulating economic activity around entertainment events.

$40 million of that money is to secure large-scale international events.

But how much it paid to get Robbie Williams to New Zealand for two shows – one in Auckland the other in Christchurch – is being kept secret.

The government says its commercially sensitive.

It also contributed undisclosed amounts to other gigs including Linkin Park and Wellington’s Ultra music festival – that includes major international DJ’s.

One promoter has told Checkpoint the government is being taken for a ride by big players.

Meanwhile Splore Festival producer Fred Kublikowski applied for event funding, but was declined.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/18/checkpoint-live-promoters-accused-of-holding-government-to-ransom-over-big-events/