The Mike Hosking Breakfast

Newstalk ZB
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Aug 5, 2025 • 1h 31min

Full Show Podcast: 06 August 2025

On the Mike Hosking Breakfast Full Show Podcast for Wednesday 6th of August, we look forward to the unemployment figures due today, and the Government pushing ahead with the foreshore and seabed law.   Mike looks at our wine industry and all the grapes going unharvested. Are the golden days of Sauvignon Blanc over?   Ginny Andersen and Mark Mitchell cover some of the major announcements of the week on Politics Wednesday.  Get the Mike Hosking Breakfast Full Show Podcast every weekday morning on iHeartRadio, or wherever you get your podcasts.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Aug 5, 2025 • 3min

Mark Smith: ASB Senior Economist on the employment rate being expected to hit 5.3%

Last year's recession is still being felt in the job market.  Stats NZ data —due out this morning— is expected to show unemployment reached a nine-year high of 5.3% in the June quarter.  The economy's been back in growth since the latter part of last year.  But ASB Senior Economist Mark Smith told Mike Hosking the economy has lost about 40,000 jobs since the late 2023 peak.  More full-time roles have been lost than part time, he explained, and the labour market is getting that much weaker.   LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Aug 5, 2025 • 3min

Pete de Wet: Triathlon NZ CEO on NZ hosting the World Triathlon Cup, partnership with World Triathlon

Triathlon New Zealand's claimed hosting rights for pinnacle events in Tauranga over the next three years.  A World Triathlon Cup will take place in the Bay of Plenty next year, before a top-level Championship Series race in 2027 and the Series' Grand Final in 2028.  Triathlon NZ chief executive Pete de Wet says they could see upwards of 3000 Kiwis racing across age groups and the all-comers race in 2028.  He told Mike Hosking there’s a big interest in the sport from an age group perspective, and it’s great for the athletes to be able to compete at home instead of having to chump on a plane.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Aug 5, 2025 • 4min

Paul Goldsmith: Treaty Negotiations Minister on the passing of the changes to the Marine and Coastal Area Act

The minister responsible for the Marine and Coastal Area Act says the Government would have passed the bill even if the Supreme Court had agreed with a lower court's ruling against it.   The Government will proceed with the bill which will tighten criteria for Māori claiming Customary Marine Titles.   Justice and Treaty Negotiations Minister Paul Goldsmith told Mike Hosking he thinks the settings will be right after the legislation's passed.   He says they want Māori to be able to apply for the titles but there has to be a high bar.  Goldsmith says they want to move on this quickly, and he’s hoping to have the legislation introduced in October.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Aug 5, 2025 • 5min

Stew Hamilton: Mercury CEO on the Huntly Power Station deal, road to renewable energy

Power companies are warning the road to fully renewable energy will be a bumpy one.   The big four power companies will co-invest in an energy stockpile which will include 600-thousand tonnes of coal.   Mercury Chief Executive Stew Hamilton says power companies have a commitment to renewables.   He told Mike Hosking Mercury has invested a billion dollars into geothermal and wind power, but there needs to be a backup.   Hamilton says when the wind isn't blowing and the sun isn't shining, there needs to be a more solid source of energy.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Aug 5, 2025 • 3min

Kathryn MacCallum: Canterbury University Associate Professor on the use of AI to mark exams

A digital education expert is cautious of blanket adoption of artificial intelligence for exam marking.   Education Minister Erica Stanford says AI is already partly used for marking and expects it could do almost all assessments by 2028.   It comes as the Government plans to scrap NCEA for an entirely new qualification.   Canterbury University Associate Professor Kathryn MacCallum told Mike Hosking AI comes with its own complexities. She says it will solve one problem, but won't address how it affects education overall.   LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Aug 4, 2025 • 6min

Rod Liddle: UK Correspondent on Nigel Farage calling for immigration statuses of those charged with crimes to be released

The leader of the Reform UK Party has called for police to release more information about those charged with crimes.  Nigel Farage believes details such as immigration status should be made public, saying it’s not in contempt of court for the British public to know the identity of those who have allegedly committed serious crimes.  UK Correspondent Rod Liddle told Mike Hosking it comes after the arrest of two men in connection with the alleged rape of a 12-year-old girl in Warwickshire.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Aug 4, 2025 • 2min

Mike's Minute: My thoughts on the NCEA changes

Several interesting bits out of the NCEA changes for me.  Firstly, the "New Zealand Certificate of Education” actually sounds like something, doesn’t it? The same way an “A” tells you something.  The New Zealand Certificate or Advanced Certificate of Education is a “thing” you can get your head around, as in do you have one, or do you not?  NCEA is an acronym.  Under the changes you need to pass things. How wonderfully old-fashioned.  If you don’t pass you don’t advance, therefore when you do pass it actually counts. It means something and you have achieved something.  Having watched NCEA in action with five kids, it has been shocking. Virtually anyone could get it and that was, and is, never a good thing.  Under the new regime you take five subjects, and you need to pass four. There's nothing too complicated about that.  The compulsion around maths and language I am, in a way, sad about.  Choice is good and freedom is good, if you know what you are doing. If you're aiming somewhere specific a tailored approach is vastly more appealing.  But in a mass system you are vulnerable to chancers and the weakest links, and they were always going to take the joke subjects, the easy gets. And as such, wreck any reputation you might have hoped for around your qualification.  The vocational aspect is years overdue. Gateway and versions like it sort of touched on the trades and specific careers or jobs. But this fascination, if not obsession, we seemed to have had with university has been ruinous for too many.  Being a tradie is actually to be admired. It is not second place. The snobbishness around a university degree has got so absurd, you’ve ended up with any number of bewildered teenagers chasing arts degrees and Bachelors of Communication for no discernible reason other than that’s what they thought they should do.  I'm dreadfully sad though for the thousands of kids who have been messed around with NCEA. What's its value? What weight does a generation of kids place on a thing that’s been binned?  For some they got locked down in Covid and given a crap qualification, thanks for coming.  But onwards and upwards. It's a little bit back to the future.  But along with the mad open classrooms, isn't it fascinating how forward the old days appear now to be? See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Aug 4, 2025 • 10min

Rianna O'Meara-Hunt: Kiwi endurance driver talks racing, aim to join the F1 Academy

Another Kiwi is plying their trade overseas, aiming to make it into top level racing.  Rianna O’Meara-Hunt grew up karting alongside the likes of Liam Lawson and Matt Payne, winning her titles before deciding to focus on endurance racing.   She was the first junior female to become an Australian State Karting Champion, the first female winner of the Rotax Max Challenge Rounds in NZ, and has won the NZ Super Kart Grand Prix multiple times.  After competing for Aston Martin in GT4 and racing in their academy, O’Meara-Hunt has set her sights on the F1 Academy.  She told Mike Hosking she backs her ability to get into the academy, and is really looking forward to being able to prove her adaptability and skill on the track.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Aug 4, 2025 • 4min

Scott Robertson: All Blacks Coach on the squad naming for the clash against Argentina

A glass half-full mindset for All Blacks coach Scott Robertson after naming a group of six players as injury cover for the start of their Rugby Championship campaign.  Uncapped trio Kyle Preston, Leroy Carter, and Tevita Mafileo, along with Finlay Christie, George Bower, and Josh Lord comprise the back-up unit in the 42-strong wider squad.  Ahead of their tournament opener in Argentina next weekend, Robertson says injuries are a reality of the game.  He told Mike Hosking you never know how things will play out – you could get two or three years with a player, and then two or three injuries in a row.  Robertson says that when you get a double break in one position, it provides an opportunity for a less experienced player.   He says that you always want your best players, but sometimes it doesn’t happen.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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