Reserve bank museum, New Zealand
Reserve bank museum, New Zealand
It was our last day in Wellington, before we took the bus at 10:30am, we got up early and visited Reserve bank museum. The museum opens at 9:30, but the security officer was very friendly and allowed us to inside. it is a great place to know how Reserve bank plays role in NZ economy.
The information below is from the website
The Reserve Bank Museum is the only specialist economic and central banking museum in New Zealand, designed to educate and inform, highlighting and celebrating New Zealand’s wider economic and banking history, as well as the origins and role of the Reserve Bank.
The decision to establish a banking and economic museum in the Reserve Bank of New Zealand was taken during 2003-04, following the development of similar museums by central banks overseas, and the introduction of museums by government departments such as Parliamentary Services.
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Travels With Phillip
Auckland New Zealand
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Reserve Bank of New Zealand: Past, Present, Future
An introduction to the history and role of the Reserve Bank of New Zealand as revealed in the displays in the Reserve Bank Museum & Education Centre, Wellington, New Zealand.
For information on visiting the Museum please see
Making Money Flow: The MONIAC
Introducing Bill Phillips' amazing hydro-mechanical economic computer. A live demonstration of the only working MONIAC in the Southern Hemisphere. This is located in the Reserve Bank Museum & Education Centre, Wellington, New Zealand.
Directions to the Museum:
To try a virtual MONIAC, visit
For directions and Museum hours see
Finding your place - Reserve Bank of New Zealand
added 17 October 2013
ASMR Reserve Bank Of New Zealand Museum Tour**Tingles**
Interactive exhibits and wall panels illustrate and explain the origins and workings of New Zealand's economy.
An extensive range of memorabilia and artefacts are also on display along with an extensive array of rare notes and coins from the Bank's numismatic collection; and the only working example of a Moniac economic modelling computer in New Zealand.
Reserve Bank Museum
2 The Terrace
Wellington
A Tour of the Air Force Museum of New Zealand
A tour of the Air Force Museum of New Zealand in Christchurch.
Full On by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (
Source:
Artist:
Adrian Orr, Governor, Reserve Bank of New Zealand - View from IMF 2018
The governor of New Zealand’s Reserve Bank Adrian Orr talks about the debate on lowering the country’s historically low interest rates.
2012 RBNZ MPC 3rd place presentation - Waikato Diocesan School for Girls
Watch the presentation awarded third place at the August 2012 national final of the Reserve Bank of New Zealand Monetary Policy Challenge (MPC). Presenters: Waikato Diocesan School for Girls
Bill Phillips Lecture by Alan Bollard, 16th July 2008
How a unique man built a machine, drew a curve and helped world economics advance.
Matt Butler ANZ Bank NZ
Matt Butler, Senior Channel Development Manager within ANZ NZ, speaks about using Nuance's natural language IVR and voice biometrics solutions to improve customer experience.
Tangiwai Railway Disaster Memorial Unveiled 1989
(New Zealand) This story is taken from TVNZ's 'Holmes Show' and is about the dedication of a new memorial at the Tangiwai disaster site some 35 years after the 1953 tragedy. The reporter is John Hudson.
The official Tangiwai National Memorial, was unveiled at Karori Cemetery (Wellington) on 26 March 1957. Here, are buried the bodies of 16 people, including eight whose remains were never identified.
Over the years it was felt by many, that as time moved on, the disaster that took 151 lives was being forgotten. These concerns were eventually addressed with the dedication of a memorial at the actual disaster site in June 1989.
This memorial forms the centre piece of a popular motorists 'rest area' alongside Highway 49. This rest area became a major focal point after the 2007 lahar which brought the1953 event into the public mind again.
With 22 people who's bodies were never recovered, the disaster site deserves the same respect as a burial ground.
The 1953 Tangiwai disaster stands as New Zealand's worst rail accident. It occurred at 22:21 on 24 December 1953 after the rim of Mt Ruapehu's crater lake had collapsed, sending lahar (or flash flood) of ice and mud down the Whangaehu River and damaging the railway bridge at Tangiwai in the central North Island of New Zealand.
It is believed the lahar arrived at the bridge only minutes before 'train 626', a Wellington to Auckland overnight express, was approaching the river. The locomotive, Ka949 and first six carriages flew into the river, ultimately killing 151 people.
The New Zealand Money System De-Fib Documentary - Giving a jolt to the heart of an ailing democracy.
August 2015 - The New Zealand economy is facing a seemingly impossible funding puzzle.
In which ever increasing numbers of citizens are finding it harder maintaining dignified access to even the non consumer choice base essentials of life. Despite doing everything asked of them by their various elected governments, over many decades.
I contest that the commentary from New Zealand political & media social protection agencies, despite being promoted as highly verified, is more often than not very misleading.
I allege this is due to the single most impacting variant of the economic equation being deliberately omitted from calculations or simply not known by those who, if it is the case, should be putting more effort into knowing more, given the positions within the political & media social agencies of New Zealand that they hold.
This documentary is a compilation of hard evidence from the very mouths of the senior most players, that I contest, proves beyond any reasonable doubt that the nation continues to be taken down an outdated crazy colonial era economic path that means a rising lack of equal economic opportunity for the most of its citizens.
If the knowledge contained in this documentary does not again become more widely known the working class of New Zealand are at risk of becoming old world peasant tenants lorded over by a monopolist land controlling aristocratic few.
Which is, I contest, exactly what most the ancestors of all of us that presently inhabit New Zealand, had hoped that it would be very different from.
More importantly this documentary contains information of economic model alternatives that have recorded historic precedence of delivering greater equal economic opportunity success.
This is over ten years of research of money system structures and the history of the economic development of New Zealand that I gift to the nation in hope it will be spread as far & wide as possible.
Yours
Iain Parker
Announcement of 2019 Monetary Policy Challenge winners
Exploring Wellington Capital city. New Zealand-Backpacker
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06.April.19-09.April.19
【New Zealand Internship ????????】
????Wellington is the capital city and second most populous urban area of New Zealand, with 418,500 residents. It sits near the North Island’s southernmost point on the Cook Strait. A compact city, it encompasses a waterfront promenade, sandy beaches, a working harbour and colourful timber houses on surrounding hills.
????Record those attractions and feel this busy capital city. Totally different with South Island but it is more convenient in transportation.
????If you would like to travel North Island.
Met-link is the best useful website which I recommend as it has the fully guideline and lead you to the place that you want!
✨Te Papa Museums✨City Galleries
✨St. Paul Church ✨Wellington Soo
✨Mount Victoria✨Botanic Garden
✨New Zealandia✨Beehive ✨Basin Reserve
✨Weta Cave ✨Wellington Cable Car
✨Wellington Old Bank✨Cuba Street
✨Bays & Massey Memorial
the flat in auckland is real
because friend of the month, josh, said he wouldn't talk to me anymore.
--
all rights reserved // (C) 2017 // Corey Fuimaono
New Zealand slashes rates
New Zealand slashes rates
New Zealands central bank has slashed interest rates to a record low, signaling dramatic moves in the future putting its hopes on draft global packages to help revive the economy facing the worst recession on record. New Zealands reserve bank cut its benchmark rates by 150 basis pts to 3.5%, further cuts will depend on the health of the economy. New Zealand dollar lost 2% on the move.
We're going to stick with the plan we've got
John Key speaks to media about immigration and the recent comments made by the Reserve Bank.
Wairau Lagoons Track and SS Waverley
Wairau lagoons and boulder bank
Also known as the Vernon lagoons, the result of sea currents forming a boulder bank. Māori trapped eels and birds, and may have narrowed existing water courses to make it easier to trap fish.
A three-hour walking track leads around the lagoons. The wreck of the SS Waverley was to be sunk at the mouth of the Wairau River to form a breakwater, but floodwaters swept it into the lagoons instead, where it is still visible.
In 1942 early Polynesian human remains and artefacts were uncovered at the northern end of the boulder bank. In 2009, after representations by Wairau Māori, the remains, which had been stored at Canterbury Museum in Christchurch, were reburied at Wairau Bar. They are located on a reserve closed to the public.
From
New RBNZ Governor named
Finance Minister Bill English appoints Graeme Wheeler as new Reserve Bank Governor, to replace Alan Bollard on September 25, 2012.
Drivers of urban change: Wellington Region - Arthur Grimes
How can our cities provide a desirable, prosperous, socially inclusive, healthy and environmentally sustainable way of life? This report brings together the views of key decision-makers and cutting-edge research, exploring the issues of compact vs. dispersed urban development, infrastructure renewal, resilient transport patterns and healthy, affordable housing. The authors draw upon interviews with over 90 stakeholders in the policy-making process and a nationwide opinion poll to delve behind the scenes.
Arthur Grimes completed his PhD in Economics at the London School of Economics in 1987 following his BSocSc(Hons) at University of Waikato. He is a Senior Fellow at Motu Research, an Adjunct Professor of Economics at Victoria University of Wellington, Board Member of the Financial Markets Authority, and chairs the Hugo Group. He was Reserve Bank of New Zealand Chair from 2003–2013. Prior to his time at Motu, Arthur was Director of the Institute of Policy Studies (Victoria University of Wellington), Chief Executive of Southpac, and Chief Economist at both the Reserve Bank of New Zealand and the National Bank of New Zealand. In 2005, Arthur was awarded the NZIER Economics Award recognising excellence in economics related to New Zealand’s economic welfare. His current research centres on urban economics, the economics of wellbeing, and aspects of central banking (including exchange rates and currency union).