New Zealand's traditional “she'll be right” optimism is no longer adequate to the challenges facing the country. This major collection brings together 21 of New Zealand's leading thinkers to examine the decades-long problems no single government can solve alone.
Edited by
Emeritus Professor Peter Davis
Forewords by
Rt Hon Helen Clark and Professor Toeolesulusulu Damon Salesa

Facing Up to Our Future: Challenges and Choices for New Zealand brings together 21 of the country's leading thinkers to confront the long-term pressures shaping the nation's next decades. Edited by Emeritus Professor Peter Davis, the collection ranges widely, covering issues as diverse as climate change and the energy transition, demographics, the cost of living, housing and home ownership, health, environmental decline, fiscal sustainability, infrastructure, transparency and democracy, race relations and the Crown–Māori relationship, and the future of Pacific communities in Aotearoa. Its central argument is that these are not passing storms to be ridden out on the country's traditional “she'll be right” optimism, but decades-long structural challenges that no single government can solve alone.
“Volatility is the new normal globally. New Zealand must navigate through that while also managing its internal challenges. Yet there are ways through. This book sets out for debate a range of ways of addressing the challenges before us. What is clear is that action should not be counterproductive or just deferred.”
— Rt Hon Helen Clark, Patron of The Helen Clark Foundation
Structured around the four themes of Economy and Wellbeing, Society and Culture, Governance and Government, and Environment and Place, the book moves beyond diagnosis to an equally broad slate of practical reforms. Its contributors propose, among much else, a cross-party housing accord, an independent fiscal watchdog, a Parliamentary Commissioner for Future Generations, a broader tax base, binding environmental limits, stronger competition and lobbying rules, a simpler welfare system, sustainable funding for public-interest journalism, and a renewed commitment to multilateralism and Pacific climate leadership. With forewords by the Rt Hon Helen Clark and Professor Toeolesulusulu Damon Salesa, it sets out the kind of evidence-based, long-term policymaking New Zealand needs — solutions built on collaboration and consensus that endure beyond any single electoral cycle.
Contributors
Matt Nolan, Toby Moore, Tim Maloney, Jon Duffy, Michael Johnston, Peter Davis, Jonathan Boston, Robin Gauld, Dylan Mordaunt, Stuart McNaughton, Peter A. Thompson, Jemaima Tiatia-Siau, Seiuli Angel Timali Tiatia-Siau, Chris Finlayson KC, Morgan Godfery, Philippa Yasbek, Lucy Cassels, Greg Severinsen, Rod Carr, Kali Mercier, and Mark Thomas
Publisher


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