Early Edition with Ryan Bridge

A fresh and intelligent start to your day - catch the very latest international and domestic news developments, sport, entertainment and business on Early Edition with Ryan Bridge, on Newstalk ZB.

  1. 1 day ago

    Ryan Bridge: Banning and taxing won't solve the problem

    This week the Tony Blair Institute warned Andy Burnham that you can't tax your way to prosperity. Some of our politicians could use a similar lecture. We have parties wanting new taxes to fund what is basically a Universal Basic Income, even though AI hasn't yet stolen the number of jobs they claimed it would. A Wall Street Journal piece this morning talks about exactly this point – even big tech seems to be u-turning on the job doomsday scenario. We had the Greens yesterday come out with a policy that was not serious, but potentially destructive to our standard of living. You can read it on their website. It's four pages long. Two of the pages are pictures and photos. Fewer cows. Synthetic nitrate fertiliser should be phased out. But zero detail on when, how, and the economic impact of doing so. Same goes for bottom trawling. 70% of our fishing industry by volume is caught by trawling within a metre of the sea floor. The industry's worth $5 billion a year. 16,000+ jobs. Dairy's our biggest exporter. $16 billion a year. To try and take them down is to launch an assault on our standard of living akin to the doomsday AI job wipe-out that was once predicted to happen, but hasn't yet eventuated. On top of this, there's a plan for more taxes, which, remember, even Tony Blair admits is no plan for prosperity. The thing about the Greens' rivers plan is that they're partly right. Agricultural run-off has made many rivers un-swimmable. But simply banning and taxing things does not solve problems. It creates new ones. Like how we're going to feed the kids, create jobs, and stay in the OECD. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    2 min
  2. 1 day ago

    Ryan Bridge: Democracy is a privilege billions still don't have

    It was a weekend of big events. A wedding, a funeral, and a milestone birthday. Congratulations, in that order, to America on its 250th anniversary, to Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce on their wedding, to those Iranians who suffered under the Ayatollah's rule, and to the All Blacks for beating France. America's birthday is worth pausing on. If you take 1840 as the beginning of New Zealand's democracy, and many do, then the United States isn't actually that much older than we are. Donald Trump, in typical fashion, declared the Declaration of Independence the greatest achievement in human history. That's probably overstating it. But it doesn't mean the occasion itself should be dismissed. For 250 years, despite civil war, political upheaval and countless crises, the United States has remained a democracy. It hasn't been perfect, no country is, but it has protected freedoms that much of the world still lacks. The freedoms to vote, to protest, to assemble and to speak your mind are things many of us take for granted. They're tested from time to time, but they endure. America remains one of the freest and most open societies in the world. That's worth remembering because most people don't live that way. According to Freedom House, only about one in five people worldwide live in a genuinely free society. And that number has been falling for years as military coups, wars and authoritarian governments spread. Since 2019 alone, nine African nations have experienced successful military coups. Freedom is easy to overlook when you've always had it. You only realise its value when it's threatened or taken away. That's why 250 years of democratic government deserves recognition, even while acknowledging America's flaws.The contrast was on display over the weekend. In America, people celebrated a national milestone. Here in New Zealand, we celebrated an All Blacks win. And in Iran, crowds gathered to mourn the Ayatollah. But perspective matters. For many Iranians, particularly those forced into exile or persecuted by the regime, his funeral wasn't a moment of grief. It was a moment of relief, even celebration. Democracy gives us the freedom to see those differences clearly. It's a privilege billions of people still don't have. LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    2 min

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A fresh and intelligent start to your day - catch the very latest international and domestic news developments, sport, entertainment and business on Early Edition with Ryan Bridge, on Newstalk ZB.

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