New Zealand

New Zealand

State actorRegional actorEconomic actor

CountryIntelligence profileCivic 6.2/10

A small advanced democracy balancing Pacific legitimacy, China trade exposure, housing costs, climate adaptation, and alliance expectations.

How this score is built: We rate five areas from 0 to 10, then take the average.

Public impact

7.0/10

Provisional baseline for country entities without linked article coverage yet.

Institutional power

9.0/10

Provisional baseline for country entities without linked article coverage yet.

Evidence reliability

5.0/10

Provisional baseline for country entities without linked article coverage yet.

Harm risk

5.0/10

Provisional baseline for country entities without linked article coverage yet.

Accountability

5.0/10

Provisional baseline for country entities without linked article coverage yet.

Civic score breakdown

OAP rubric dimensions (0–10) averaged from linked coverage.

  • Public impact7
  • Institutional power9
  • Evidence reliability5
  • Harm risk5
  • Accountability5

Current OAP lens

A small advanced democracy balancing Pacific legitimacy, China trade exposure, housing costs, climate adaptation, and alliance expectations.

Governance
parliamentary democracy
Strategic posture
Pacific middle power with careful China hedging
Economic model
agriculture + services + tourism
Current stress
medium
Reality stability
context-dependent
Primary situations
Pacific diplomacy, China trade, housing, climate adaptation

Visual overview

Profile at a glance

Institutional stress

Count of stress indicators by severity level in the OAP dossier.

  • High2 · 40%
  • Medium3 · 60%

Power map balance

Relative weight of each power-center category (by listed actors).

  • Political center4
  • Security apparatus3
  • Economic pillars4
  • External partners3
  • Pressure points6

Timeline event types

How historical milestones cluster by event type.

  • Institutional2
  • Economic1

Knowledge vs uncertainty

Known facts, open questions, and watchlist items in this profile.

  • What we know4 · 25%
  • What we don't know4 · 25%
  • What to watch8 · 50%

Key facts

Population
refresh via World Bank pipeline
Capital
Wellington
Political system
parliamentary democracy
Nuclear status
non-nuclear-armed unless otherwise specified
Core economic base
agriculture, services, tourism, education, technology
Key exports
dairy, meat, wood, wine, services
Current strategic focus
Pacific diplomacy, China trade, housing, climate adaptation, defense modernization

Core economic base

Core sectors in the economic base (equal weight for scanability).

  • agriculture1 · 20%
  • services1 · 20%
  • tourism1 · 20%
  • education1 · 20%
  • technology1 · 20%

Key exports

Major export categories (equal weight for scanability).

  • dairy1 · 20%
  • meat1 · 20%
  • wood1 · 20%
  • wine1 · 20%
  • services1 · 20%

Baseline demographic and macroeconomic context should be refreshed from World Bank / IMF data pipelines; this profile is an editorial intelligence layer, not a static encyclopedia entry.

Active situations

Active situations involving New Zealand

  • Pacific diplomacy
  • China trade
  • housing
  • climate adaptation
  • defense modernization

Strategic lenses

Institutional capacity

How New Zealand's governing institutions convert policy intent into real outcomes.

Regional position

How geography and neighbors shape New Zealand's security and economic options.

Economic model

How agriculture, services, tourism create resilience or dependency.

Legitimacy pressures

How public trust, social cohesion, and distributional fairness shape reform durability.

External alignment

How partnerships and rivalries constrain New Zealand's room for maneuver.

OAP assessment

OAP assessment

New Zealand is best understood through the interaction of its institutions, economic base, regional position, and current stress points: Pacific diplomacy, China trade, housing, climate adaptation, defense modernization. The central OAP question is how the country converts its assets into durable capacity while managing legitimacy, resilience, and external pressure.

Timeline

Significant events

How the situation evolved — an interpretive civic sequence, not a full chronology.

  1. Institutionalhigh confidence

    Modern state formation and institutional consolidation

    Creates the political and institutional baseline for New Zealand's modern trajectory.

    Why it mattersCreates the political and institutional baseline for New Zealand's modern trajectory.

  2. Economichigh confidence

    Globalization and regional integration deepen

    Trade, investment, migration, and security ties reshape New Zealand's policy constraints.

    Why it mattersTrade, investment, migration, and security ties reshape New Zealand's policy constraints.

  3. Institutionalmedium confidence

    Resilience and geopolitical pressure rise

    Energy, technology, security, climate, and legitimacy pressures become more central to New Zealand's policy agenda.

    Why it mattersEnergy, technology, security, climate, and legitimacy pressures become more central to New Zealand's policy agenda.

Power map

Political center

  • head of government
  • cabinet
  • parliament/legislature
  • regional/local authorities

Security apparatus

  • armed forces
  • police/internal security
  • intelligence/border agencies

Economic pillars

  • agriculture
  • services
  • tourism
  • education

External partners

  • regional partners
  • major trading partners
  • multilateral institutions

Pressure points

  • Pacific diplomacy
  • China trade
  • housing
  • climate adaptation
  • public trust
  • fiscal space

Institutional stress

High

  • Pacific diplomacy
  • China trade

Medium

  • housing
  • climate adaptation
  • defense modernization

Stress indicators are OAP editorial judgments based on governance, fiscal, security, demographic, institutional, and geopolitical pressures; they should be updated when major events materially alter the trajectory.

Core tradeoffs

  • Strategic autonomy vs external dependence
  • Growth vs social cohesion
  • Security priorities vs civil liberties
  • Climate/energy transition vs incumbent economic interests
  • Central control vs institutional accountability

Epistemic clarity

What we know

  • New Zealand has identifiable assets and constraints that shape policy outcomes.
  • Regional context matters as much as domestic ideology.
  • Economic structure creates both leverage and vulnerability.
  • Institutional capacity determines whether reforms become durable.

What we don't know

  • Whether current reforms or strategies can survive political cycles.
  • How external shocks will affect fiscal and social stability.
  • Whether institutions can adapt faster than pressures accumulate.
  • How public legitimacy evolves under stress.

OAP watchlist

What to watch

  • Pacific diplomacy
  • China trade
  • housing
  • climate adaptation
  • defense modernization
  • inflation and fiscal balance
  • public trust
  • external alignment

Reader learning

Learn New Zealand through 5 questions

  1. What is New Zealand's strongest source of leverage?
  2. Which institution most shapes New Zealand's trajectory?
  3. Where are the biggest tradeoffs in New Zealand's development model?
  4. How do regional pressures affect domestic politics?
  5. What would make New Zealand more resilient over the next decade?

Latest OAP analysis involving New Zealand

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