The New Zealand Institute

All Ownership Society Articles

Give young a stake in country’s future
18 Jan 2005 | 60 Kb PDF | Perspectives
New Zealand needs policies that assist and encourage asset ownership, particularly for the young, writes Dr David Skilling in The New Zealand Herald.

Investment, savings and growth
04 Nov 2004 | 457 Kb PDF | Essays
This essay discusses why increasing New Zealand's household savings matters for improving investment, productivity, and economic growth.

It’s not just about the money: The benefits of asset ownership
20 Oct 2004 | 565 Kb PDF | Discussion Papers
This paper outlines the powerful impact that asset ownership has on improving financial and life outcomes for individuals and also on the contribution that broadly distributed ownership has on social cohesion at a national level. The paper also argues that deliberate action may be required to assist people to accumulate assets.

The New Zealand Institute identifies a need to deliberately encourage asset ownership
20 Oct 2004 | Media Releases

Getting growth
26 Aug 2004 | 72 Kb PDF | Perspectives
New Zealanders will buy the case for economic growth if it fits their notions of fairness - and if they get a share of the upside, writes Dr David Skilling in Unlimited.

The New Zealand Institute to introduce new thinking
18 Aug 2004 | Media Releases

The wealth of a nation: the level and distribution of wealth in New Zealand
18 Aug 2004 | Media Releases

The launch of the New Zealand Institute heralds “a new generation of thinking”
26 Jul 2004 | Media Releases

The New Zealand Institute looks to help Kiwis get ahead
26 Jul 2004 | Media Releases

The wealth of a nation: The level & distribution of wealth in New Zealand
26 Jul 2004 | 638 Kb PDF | Discussion Papers
This paper describes the current level and distribution of wealth in New Zealand, compares this situation to several other countries, and considers several emerging pressures that may make it more difficult for New Zealanders - particularly young New Zealanders - to accumulate wealth over their lifetimes.



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