Adam Thierer points to his favourite Ronald Coase quote:
With that in mind, a couple of things have been bugging me.
Item the first.
The government of New Zealand is exercised about supermarkets and supermarket competition. It simultaneously wants supermarkets to pay higher prices to their suppliers while reducing costs to consumers. It has established an entire regulatory agency whose job is to force supermarkets to pay more for inputs while reducing prices on outputs. At the same time another part of the Commerce Commission is trying to prevent Foodstuffs North Island from merging with Foodstuffs South Island on a very dubious theory of harm: the back-end efficiency benefits of merging two supermarket cooperatives that operate on different islands would be less than the harm to competition in the supplier market, which ComCom claims would wind up having longer term harm to consumers.
It is not coherent.
But it gets worse.
One coherent part of the government's approach is a desire to make it easier to import food products. It would help reduce costs to consumers directly, and indirectly by easing a barrier to entry. I support that initiative.
New Zealand has signed onto FSANZ, a joint approach to food product regulation with Australia.
Let's think this through.
A store wanting to sell grocery products from outside of Australia-NZ would have two options for each product.
It could put the product up for FSANZ assessment and put a sticker on each and every packet before putting it on the shelf.
Or it could ask suppliers to provide production runs specific to the requirements of the New Zealand market.
The former would have fairly high per-unit cost: a sticker has to get added to every product.
The latter would also be expensive. It would mean limited production runs at higher cost that also limit flexibility to shift product across different markets in response to changing circumstances.
It would disproportionately burden stores that stock foreign-sourced products - like the Asian grocers that provide fringe competition to the main supermarket chains.
And it would increase the cost of entry for any overseas supermarket that wanted to bring its supply chain with it.
One part of government wants to improve competition in supermarkets and bring costs down; another part of government wants to push up the cost of groceries while impeding competition.
Item the Second
Earlier this week, I received an email.
I'd put $200 in there mainly to test their trading interface. I love prediction markets. I missed them. New Zealand had been truly world-leading in this area, then FMA/DIA/Justice/Simon Bridges killed the sector here.
What experience we had with iPredict suggests CFTC really doesn't have anything substantial to worry about in allowing contracts on political events. If anything, they heightened voter engagement. The CE of iPredict even featured on the nightly news during the election, giving the latest on election market prices. And for that brief period, whenever blowhard partisans insisted that some outcome was going to happen, people could just point to the iPredict price on the event and ask them why they thought that price was wrong, and whether they'd actually put their money where their mouth was. It was a remarkable era. iPredict inflation forecasts (they also had markets on inflation going out several years - it was so very good) wound up being noted in our Reserve Bank's Monetary Policy Statements. I desperately miss it. I envy the opportunities Americans could have if CFTC takes a sensible approach to regulation.
And now they've taken Kalshi from me too.
Before we hit the Newsroom / DIA stuff, here's the defensible case. Or, well, defensible given the constraints.
The government auctioned off a monopoly to run sports betting in New Zealand. It is consequently obliged to protect that monopoly on behalf of the licensee. Remember that cartels and monopolies are only bad if they aren't government-authorised. In that case they are wonderful things.
Kalshi is a CFTC-regulated exchange. It trades event contracts in the same way that iPredict did. It runs AML/KYC; I had to go through it to trade there. It's safe. It's fine. But some of its contracts are on sporting events, which in the US are treated as futures derivatives rather than sports betting. That provides Kalshi with a few advantages that Matt Levine has had an awful lot of fun discussing.
And, at the same time, New Zealand Members of Parliament have become very exercised about online gambling full-stop. Their proposed solution is not very good. They want to license online gambling operators, which can be okay, but they also want to set tight limits on the number of operators. That's neither here nor there in this context, but it's part of the moral panic in the general area.
Now. If you were the regulator charged with defending the monopoly provided to the sports betting licensee and if you viewed Kalshi's sports contracts as sports betting, the obvious thing to do would be to ask them to segment their markets such that NZ-based traders could not trade on the sports contracts but could trade on other contracts.
It is entirely possible that Kalshi would prefer to close off access than so-segment its markets. But that would be a defensible position for DIA given its role as monopoly-enforcer for the company to which the New Zealand government auctioned the right to run sports betting.
Instead we get this:
Polymarket, Kalshi and similar prediction markets are illegal under New Zealand’s gambling laws, the nation’s gambling regulator has decided.
Polymarket and Kalshi are online markets where users can place bets on future outcomes, ranging from New Zealand provincial cricket results to what phrases Donald Trump will use next month.
Whether the Reserve Bank of New Zealand will increase, decrease or hold the official cash rate when it meets on Wednesday has had over $127,000 placed on it.
...
Department of Internal Affairs gambling director Vicki Scott tells Newsroom it believes they are illegal gambling platforms.
“We consider platforms such as Kalshi and Polymarket to be gambling under New Zealand law,” Scott says.
“Since they aren’t authorised operators, they are prohibited from offering their gambling products to people in this country.”
“To the extent these platforms are taking bets from New Zealand customers, they are breaching the law here and can expect to hear from us.”
The event contracts on things like the OCR are very obviously financial derivatives. iPredict offered them as an exempt futures exchange in NZ a decade ago. DIA always hated iPredict and viewed it as treading on their turf - maybe they want the whole stock exchange to come under their authority as a gambling operation.
This is not the 'online casino gambling' that is subject to the NZ gambling licensing regime. It's a CFTC-regulated futures exchange.
And this part seems particularly off:
While these websites are still technically accessible, Scott says using unlicensed sites is risky because there are no guarantees to ensure they pay out as promised or take action to minimise gambling harm.
Does DIA have any credible reason to believe that Kalshi and Polymarket welch on bets?
In a better world, DIA would have asked Kalshi to exclude Kiwis from its sports contracts (which I think is stupid, but that stupidity is imposed by Parliament) and if Kalshi either could not or would not, they would have put out a statement blocking Kalshi on that basis without insinuating that they're dodgy online casinos.
Item the Third
By some measures, teenagers’ mental health does seem to have gotten worse over the past 10 years, and this does coincide with widespread adoption of smartphones. But that is where any clear correlation between the two ends. Multiple studies have either shown that smartphone and social media use among teens has minimal effects on their mental health or none at all. As a 2024 review published by an American Psychological Association journal put it: “There is no evidence that time spent on social media is correlated with adolescent mental health problems.”
And so the government of New Zealand is rushing to have legislation on it through before the election. As it is going through as a member's bill rather than a government bill, there won't be much accompanying assessment. The Prime Minister is 'deeply supportive'.
Sigh.
There was another good line in that old Coase piece, quoting Axel Oxentierna, a 17th Century Swedish Chancellor. "You do not know, my son, with how little wisdom the world is governed."