This is a study of New Zealand’s retention and entrenchment of a neoliberal policy regime, focusing on the role played by international finance. The study examines the influence that international private financial markets and institutions exerted over the macroeconomic policy formulation of New Zealand governments during the period from 1994 to 2011. It is argued that the emergence of international private financial markets and New Zealand’s subsequent integration into these markets was instrumental in successive governments retaining and entrenching all of the core features of a neoliberal macroeconomic policy nexus. This includes, most prominently: a monetary policy regime focused on maintaining low, stable inflation; an independently fl...
New Zealand as a geographically isolated country, with few natural resources, has always been highly...
Neoliberalisation in New Zealand has been driven further as a political project than in most other c...
New Zealand and Australia are highly interdependent in many ways. However, New Zealand is more relia...
This is a study of New Zealand’s retention and entrenchment of a neoliberal policy regime, focusing ...
The current structure of financial intermediation and monetary policy in New Zealand provides an int...
The idea that New Zealand should abandon its national currency in favour of the US or Australian dol...
The proposed Regulatory Responsibility Bill is part of the unfinished business of regime change (Wad...
This study examines the causes and political consequences of financial liberalization in the advance...
The theoretical framework of this research is based on a hybrid New Open Economy Macroeconomic (NOEM...
How did developing countries adapt to the collapse of the Bretton Woods system? Using new archival e...
Governments around the world are preoccupied with the confusing, uncertain and often chaotic influen...
After 1984 the New Zealand economy underwent a radical transformation, moving from, arguably, the mo...
The purpose of this study is to investigate the relative strengths of the channels through which mon...
Recent empirical research into the macroeconomic effects of fiscal policy shocks has generated a ‘pu...
The main purpose of this paper is to complement other studies of financial market liberalisation in ...
New Zealand as a geographically isolated country, with few natural resources, has always been highly...
Neoliberalisation in New Zealand has been driven further as a political project than in most other c...
New Zealand and Australia are highly interdependent in many ways. However, New Zealand is more relia...
This is a study of New Zealand’s retention and entrenchment of a neoliberal policy regime, focusing ...
The current structure of financial intermediation and monetary policy in New Zealand provides an int...
The idea that New Zealand should abandon its national currency in favour of the US or Australian dol...
The proposed Regulatory Responsibility Bill is part of the unfinished business of regime change (Wad...
This study examines the causes and political consequences of financial liberalization in the advance...
The theoretical framework of this research is based on a hybrid New Open Economy Macroeconomic (NOEM...
How did developing countries adapt to the collapse of the Bretton Woods system? Using new archival e...
Governments around the world are preoccupied with the confusing, uncertain and often chaotic influen...
After 1984 the New Zealand economy underwent a radical transformation, moving from, arguably, the mo...
The purpose of this study is to investigate the relative strengths of the channels through which mon...
Recent empirical research into the macroeconomic effects of fiscal policy shocks has generated a ‘pu...
The main purpose of this paper is to complement other studies of financial market liberalisation in ...
New Zealand as a geographically isolated country, with few natural resources, has always been highly...
Neoliberalisation in New Zealand has been driven further as a political project than in most other c...
New Zealand and Australia are highly interdependent in many ways. However, New Zealand is more relia...