The New Zealand Institute

Not to be confused with the Royal Society of New Zealand, known as the New Zealand Institute until 1933.

The New Zealand Institute was a privately funded think tank based in Auckland, New Zealand, which existed from July 2004 until April 2012, until it was merged into the New Zealand Initiative.

The Institute was founded by former New Zealand Treasury researcher Dr David Skilling, with the expressed aim of "generating ideas, solutions and debate that will improve economic prosperity, social well-being, environmental quality and environmental productivity".[1]

In comparison with longer-established think-tanks such as the New Zealand Business Roundtable, it was envisaged as less doctrinaire.[2]

The address of the New Zealand Institute was Auckland 1142, PO Box 90840.[3]

Background

The New Zealand Institute described itself as: "a privately funded think-tank committed to generating ideas, debate and solutions that will improve economic prosperity, social well-being, environmental quality and environmental productivity for New Zealand and New Zealanders." [4]

One media source described the New Zealand Institute as libertarian in outlook.[5] The Institute claimed to be "committed to political neutrality and evidence-based analysis." [6]

Institute staff

The following people were involved with the Institute up to its merger:

Merger

With the departure of founding director David Skilling, the organisation attracted a lower profile, until it was announced in 2011 that it would merge with the New Zealand Business Roundtable.[7] The merger was officially completed in April 2012, with the new merged organisation known as the New Zealand Initiative.[8]

Publications

See also

References

External links

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