Pitch Engine
The Times


.

Why the NZ government is right to rule out rent controls as a housing crisis solution

  • Written by James Graham, Lecturer in Economics, University of Sydney
Why the NZ government is right to rule out rent controls as a housing crisis solutionShutterstock

Having floated the prospect of introducing rent controls just last week, it seems the government has already ditched the proposal.

In tentatively raising the idea, Associate Minister for Housing Poto Williams pointed out the need for policy solutions to the problem of rapidly rising housing costs. However, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern...

Read more: Why the NZ government is right to rule out rent controls as a housing crisis solution

More Articles ...

  1. An investment in clean indoor air would do more than help us fight COVID – it would help us concentrate, with lasting benefits
  2. How to camouflage $150 billion in government spending? Call it 'tax expenditure'
  3. Dissatisfied plastic surgery clients show the downsides of online research
  4. News Corp's deal with Google and the Melbourne Business School questioned by journalism academics
  5. What's wrong with Australian mortgages? They're fixed for shareholders, not home owners
  6. Building back better: how RBA Governor Philip Lowe sees the year ahead
  7. Unemployment below 3% is possible for the first time in 50 years – if Australia budgets for it
  8. Inflation is raising prices and reducing real wages – what should be done to support NZ’s low-income households?
  9. Omicron will only add to looming workforce shortages already faced by key New Zealand industries
  10. Would you pass this financial literacy quiz? Many won't – and it's affecting expensive aged care decisions
  11. Things look worse for casual workers than at any time during the pandemic
  12. Top economists expect RBA to hold interest rates low in 2022, as real wages fall
  13. Vital Signs: it's too early for the RBA to pull the trigger on interest rates
  14. An unemployment rate below 4% is possible. But for how long?
  15. Inflation hits 3.5%, but one high number won't budge the Reserve Bank on interest rates
  16. Where's the meat? Employers and governments should have seen this supply crisis coming, and done something
  17. Vital Signs: disclosure please, we shouldn't be playing bingo with COVID statistics
  18. The Singapore-inspired idea for using super for housing that could cut costs 50%
  19. The 3 problems with fines for not reporting positive COVID tests
  20. NFTs, an overblown speculative bubble inflated by pop culture and crypto mania
  21. Relax, Australia does not have (and is not likely to have) a shortage of food
  22. Healthy humans drive the economy: we're now witnessing one of the worst public policy failures in Australia's history
  23. Labor's proposed $10 billion social housing fund isn't big as it seems, but it could work
  24. Post-pandemic, ‘small business fetishism’ could cost us jobs
  25. Vital Signs: Sydney to Newcastle fast rail makes sense. Making trains locally does not
  26. Don't look Up! has a surprising amount to tell us about economics, much of it useful
  27. A simple calculation can stop artificial intelligence sending you broke
  28. How COVID-19 changed the way we shop – and what to expect in 2022 and beyond
  29. How Australia’s biggest wine-growing region came to pioneer alcohol control
  30. Why COVID-19 means the era of ever cheaper air travel could be over
  31. Explainer: what is corporate social responsibility or CSR – and what do investors need to know?
  32. Triumph of the mall: how Victor Gruen’s grand urban vision became our suburban shopping reality
  33. Remembering Geoffrey Giudice, the 'bosses man' who helped make Australia's Fair Work Commission fair
  34. Like songs, the best graphs tell stories. Here are my 10 favourites from 2021
  35. Should I pay off the mortgage ASAP or top up my superannuation? 4 questions to ask yourself
  36. Would Keynes have bought Bitcoin?
  37. Extraordinarily, the effects of the Spanish Inquisition linger to this day
  38. Are you a more holistic or analytic thinker? Take this quiz to find out
  39. Vital Signs. No return to austerity as Team Frydenberg prevails over the budget hawks
  40. $16 billion of the MYEFO budget update is 'decisions taken but not yet announced'. Why budget for the unannounced?
  41. Allan Fels: As ACCC chair, Gina Cass-Gottlieb will put the public interest first, despite years of fighting for business
  42. That reverse mortgage scheme the government is about to re-announce, how does it work?
  43. Forget calls for a royal commission into Australia's big media players – this is the inquiry we really need
  44. 'Sorry, I don’t understand that' – the trouble with chatbots and how to use them better
  45. Why 'buy now, pay later' stocks fell in 2021, and what's in store
  46. Over 300,000 New Zealanders owe more than they own – is this a problem?
  47. Rugby player Dennis Tutty went to the High Court and changed Australian sport – but there's still a tough issue left to tackle
  48. Australia's shortage of diesel additive Adblue is serious, but we can stop it going critical
  49. Vital Signs: the case against death duties just got stronger
  50. Content from confrontation: how the attention economy helps stoke aggression towards retail workers
hacklink hack forum hacklink film izle hacklink z lib.idDeneme bonusu veren siteler 2026Meritbetjojobet girişbahiscasinobetparkaresbetmarsbahisbahiscasinomeritbetjojobetgrandpashabetjojobetjojobetjojobet