Source: BusinessNZ
Weather News – Tasman low brings another bout of severe weather – MetService
Covering period of Thursday 10th – Sunday 13th July 2025 – Yet again, heavy rain and severe gales are on the way.
Orange Heavy Rain Warnings have been issued for Northland, Auckland, Waikato, Taranaki, Nelson and Marlborough regions. Heavy Rain Watches are also in place for remaining parts of the upper North Island. There is a moderate to high chance that warnings for the top of the South Island could be upgraded to a Red Warning – this represents the heightened potential for rain related impacts on Friday.
An Orange Strong Wind Warning has been issued for South Taranaki for severe gale northeasterlies gusting 120 km/h in exposed places. Strong Wind Watches are also in place for Taihape, Whanganui and Banks Peninsula.
MetService Meteorologist Michael Pawley adds, “Heavy rain will be falling in areas that have seen significant rainfall recently. Parts of Nelson have already received an average years’ worth of rain since January. The risk is that already saturated soil and damaged infrastructure will struggle to cope with an additional burst of rain.”
On Saturday morning, the front pushes off to the east. Behind it, northwesterly winds drag in showers to western areas for the remainder of the weekend. The east of both islands will remain drier.
This comes at the end of the school holidays as families are returning to their hometowns. “Take it easy on the roads. Consider timing your journey for when the rain eases if you’re traveling though affected areas” advises Michael. “Keep up to date with the advice of local emergency management services and councils.”
Research – Workers look at automation as an opportunity, not a threat – Robert Half
- 68% of employees believe automation will have a positive impact on their current job and career prospects.
- 64% of employees will participate in training to reskill for a new role with their current employer if their job is partially automated, while 16% will look for a new job with a different employer.
Auckland, 10 July 2025 – As automation efforts are set to ramp up in the workplace, this continued transformation is not expected to result in widespread job losses. In fact, most workers believe automation will have a positive impact on their career, new independent research by specialised recruiter Robert Half finds.
“The broad embrace of automation in New Zealand businesses is an undeniable reality,” says Megan Alexander, Managing Director at Robert Half. “Automation is being rolled out to streamline processes, increase efficiency, and help bridge the skills gap in the current employment market. Crucially, this widespread adoption is viewed positively by Kiwi workers, who perceive automation not as a threat, but as a valuable opportunity to upskill and significantly enhance their career trajectories.”
Why workers are optimistic about automation
When employees were asked what impact they think automation would have on their job and career prospects, they were overwhelmingly positive.
More than two-thirds (68%) of workers state that automation would have a positive impact, as it would create greater demand for their skills and improve their career outlook. About a quarter (23%) believe automation would have no impact on their job or career prospects. Only 9% of workers say automation would negatively impact their career because it could make their role and skills obsolete.
Workers also expressed a willingness to adapt to the introduction of automated processes. When asked what they would do if their job became partially automated, and their employer asked them to change roles and learn new skills, workers said they would:
- Participate in training to reskill into a new role with their current employer (64%)
- Look for a different role with their current employer (13%)
- Look for a new job at a different employer (16%)
- 7% are unsure.
“Employees today are motivated to collaborate with their employers in the transition towards greater automation,” Alexander says. “With this in mind, organisations need to invest in reskilling and upskilling initiatives to ensure their workforce is equipped to thrive in an automated environment. This is a win-win for companies, who will have the skilled workers they need, and a loyal and engaged workforce.”
“Automation is about optimising resources, reducing errors, and freeing up employees to focus on more strategic and fulfilling work, not just about cost cutting,” concludes Alexander.
About the research
The study is developed by Robert Half and was conducted online in November 2024 by an independent research company among 500 full-time office workers in finance, accounting, and IT and technology. Respondents are drawn from a sample of SMEs as well as large private, publicly-listed and public sector organisations across New Zealand. This survey is part of the international workplace survey, a questionnaire about job tr
Universities – Economists moot bold income tax plan – UoA
What if your income tax didn’t go to the government but into your own savings account? A bold proposal makes the case.
New Zealand’s ageing population and ballooning welfare and health costs are piling pressure on the public purse.
In response, former Minister of Finance Sir Roger Douglas and University of Auckland economics professor Robert MacCulloch are reimagining their ambitious 2016 proposal to overhaul the country’s tax, health and welfare systems by shifting income taxation to mandatory savings.
In their research article, the pair argue that income tax on earnings up to $60,000 should be redirected into individual savings accounts. These accounts would fund each person’s healthcare, pension and risk cover, replacing much of the current public system with private provision.
By 2060, 26 percent of New Zealanders will be over 65, up from 16 percent in 2021, which will intensify the strain on superannuation and healthcare.
“We need to change the way we’re doing things so government costs can be reduced, quality of outcomes increased, and the plight of low earners, who are most vulnerable to public cuts, improved,” say Douglas and MacCulloch in their paper How to change the welfare state from a taxation to a savings-based model.
The economists attempt a politically feasible plan that maintains total welfare funding from both public and private sources, while opening up more choice and competition in the supply of healthcare services.
“We need to adjust the tax system so the vast majority of New Zealanders of working age can provide for themselves,” says MacCulloch. “The first step is to build mandatory savings accounts for health, pensions and risk cover via the transfer into them of current taxes paid on income up to $60,000.”
According to their model, an individual could save around $21,000 annually: $9,450 into a health account, $7,350 for superannuation, and $4,200 for risk cover.
A drop in corporate taxes would help fund employer contributions, and the government would retain sufficient tax revenues so it could act as ‘insurer of last resort’, paying for people who can’t meet their welfare costs out of their savings accounts.
“Our savings-not-taxation reform offers scope for efficiency gains in healthcare. It does so by opening up choice for individuals,” says MacCulloch.
“Rather than the government dictating where to go, people can choose their preferred public or private supplier.”
The researchers point to Singapore, which employs mandatory savings accounts and has one of the highest-quality healthcare systems in the world, yet spent 5.6 percent of its GDP on healthcare in 2021 (including both public and private sectors), compared to New Zealand’s 10.1 percent.
“Our reform keeps the pension but would raise the retirement age gradually from 65 to 70 years old over a 20-year period,” says MacCulloch.
The authors would do away with fee subsidies and interest-free loans for tertiary students from well-off families. Instead, a means test would see only students from low-income, low-capital families receive aid.
They would scrap grants to the movie industry, winter energy subsidies to wealthy households, favourable tax treatment for owners of rental housing, and allowances to sectors such as forestry, fishing, and bloodstock.
The money saved from these changes would be directed towards helping low earners build savings and cover the welfare needs of those who are chronically unwell.
“Perhaps more than any other feature of our reform, it’s the ‘miracle of compound interest’ that governments like New Zealand’s are not taking proper advantage of,” says MacCulloch. “If we can do this, it’ll help our financial situation.”
MacCulloch notes that the proposal isn’t without flaws, but says bold change and ideas are needed, and fast, if Aotearoa New Zealand is to create a resilient economy in the face of an ageing population.
Stats NZ information release: International travel: May 2025

International travel: May 2025 – information release
10 July 2025
International travel covers the number and characteristics of overseas visitors and New Zealand resident travellers (short-term movements) entering or leaving New Zealand.
Key facts
Monthly arrivals – overseas visitors
Overseas visitor arrivals were 190,600 in May 2025, an increase of 10,900 from May 2024. The biggest changes were in arrivals from:
- Australia (up 4,200)
- China (up 2,300)
- United States (up 1,300).
The total number of overseas visitor arrivals in May 2025 was 87 percent of the 219,300 in May 2019 (before the COVID-19 pandemic).
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Net migration loss to Australia in 2024 – Stats NZ media and information release: International migration: May 2025

Net migration loss to Australia in 2024 – media release
10 July 2025
There was a net migration loss of 30,000 people from New Zealand to Australia in the December 2024 year, according to provisional estimates released by Stats NZ today.
“The net migration loss from New Zealand to Australia in 2024 was similar to the loss of 29,400 in 2023,” international migration statistics spokesperson Sarah Drake said.
“The loss in 2024 is the largest for a calendar year since 2012, but below the record loss of 43,700 in the March 2012 year.”
Traditionally, there has been a net migration loss from New Zealand to Australia. This averaged about 30,000 a year during 2004 to 2013, and 3,000 a year during 2014 to 2019.
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Analysis – OCR on hold, probably only temporarily – Cotality
As widely expected, the Reserve Bank’s Monetary Policy Committee voted unanimously to keep the official cash rate unchanged today at 3.25%, the first ‘hold decision’ after six consecutive cuts. In its short commentary alongside the decision, the Committee noted a concern about lurking, near-term inflationary pressures and the need to keep monitoring those factors before any further moves are made.
