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- The Internet Archive will help improve access to a lot of books currently held by the National Library. Naturally, this upsets some people.
- Mike Joy wins a battle over what "natural levels" of nitrate in aquifers might mean.
- Places where the local schools are funded by higher levels of government wind up trying to privatize the public schools through zoning. Everything's tradeoffs though, eh? If schools are funded by the local communities, poor places get really bad schools. It's instead a good argument against even greater anti-NIMBY vigilance.
- Potential nudges to improve compliance with scanning-in for Covid tracing. I'd add one more: put the QR codes in lots of places. Make it easy. At the entrance is great, but if your phone isn't ready and you'd be holding up a queue, maybe you won't scan and you'll forget to on the way out. Put them everywhere.
- The EMA makes a very bad argument about unemployment rates. The point of inflation targeting and increasing rates when you're hitting capacity constraints isn't to create some stupid Marxist reserve army of unemployed, which seems to be what they're arguing for. The point instead is that if a monetary push gets you past NAIRU, you just wind up back at higher unemployment rates anyway once contracts adjust AND you have higher inflation to go with it. Anyway, because either EMA put it badly or it was reported badly, a billion tweets followed claiming the Marxists were right all along.
- Heather du Plessis-Allan cites me here on Treasury's diminished capabilities. Worth noting: all of that was prior to the current Secretary's appointment. She may well have improved things since; I need to get OIAs in to check.
- Shipping is a mess.
- Remember back at the Budget Economic and Fiscal Update when Treasury put in a footnote saying they couldn't produce a structural deficit figure this time round because they couldn't tell how to place some of the Covid-spend? And it seemed odd because Covid-spend is supposed to be emergency = one-off = not-structural? Well, looks like the free school lunch programme is Covid spend. I simply do not understand how this works. Shouldn't the Auditor General be going after this kind of thing as misappropriation?
- The government isn't bothering to check on whether people got their Covid tests before travelling. Some of them get caught ex-post, with the option to go into quarantine or return to Oz, after they've been circulating in New Zealand already. If they went back to Oz and turned up positive, what hope would we have on contact tracing them? However low your expectations of government competence are, you just keep being surprised.
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