Events

Biographical Details of Keynote Speakers 2021

NZAE Conference 2021

Marjan van den Belt, Ecological Economist

Neo-classically trained as an economist, I became an Ecological Economist after obtaining a PhD in Marine Estuarine Environmental Science. I am a ‘GDP-growth sceptic’, using systems thinking for nature-based solutions. I am fascinated by the emergence of networks for alternative economic thought and purpose-led enterprises. I serve on governance boards (Council of Lincoln University), consult/advise and am an Edmund Hillary Fellow. Previous appointments include; Member on the Reference Panel for the Review of the RMA; Director of Ecological Economics NZ and Associate Professor at Massey University; Assistant Vice-Chancellor (Sustainability) at Victoria University; Member of the Tax Working Group at Treasury; Expert Member of Intergovernmental Platform for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES); Associate Editor of Ecosystem Services Journal.

 

John Creedy, Professor Victoria University of Wellington

Professor Creedy’s main research interests are public economics, labour economics, income distribution and the history of economic analysis. Between 2011 and 2017 he was half time at VUW and half time in the Tax Strategy section of the New Zealand Treasury. Before coming to Wellington, he was the Truby Williams Professor of Economics in the University of Melbourne.

NZAE Membership

Members of the NZAE typically have a degree in economics or commerce and in the normal course of work use the tools of economic analysis as teachers, investigators or advisors on economic matters.

Benefits
  • The NZAE Conference
  • Subscription to Asymmetric Information Newsletter
  • Free access to NZAE Journal

The NZAE Conference

Held annually, with presentations provided by local and international economists.

The next conference will be in 2026

New ZealandEconomic Papers

New Zealand Economic Papers publishes research of the highest quality from leading international scholars in all areas of economics. The Journal also serves as an outlet for world class research on important economic and policy issues relevant to New Zealand, the Pacific, Australia, and Asia. The Journal covers all aspects of economics, from micro- to macrotheory and micro- to macroeconometrics.

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