New Zealand is a country in the southwestern Pacific Ocean comprising two
large islands (the North Island and the South Island) and numerous smaller
islands, most notably Stewart Island and the Chatham Islands. In Māori,
New Zealand is also known as Aotearoa, which is usually translated into
English as the Land of the Long White Cloud.

The Realm of New
Zealand also includes the Cook Islands and Niue, which are self-governing,
but in free association; Tokelau; and the Ross Dependency (New Zealand's
territorial claim in Antarctica).
New Zealand, Hawaii and Easter Island form what is known by
anthropologists as the Polynesian Triangle.
New Zealand is notable for its geographic isolation, being separated from
Australia to the northwest by the Tasman Sea, some 2000 kilometres (1250
miles) across. Its closest neighbours to the north are New Caledonia,
Fiji, and Tonga.
The population is mostly of European descent, with the indigenous Māori
being the largest minority. Non-Māori Polynesian and Asian people are also
significant minorities, especially in the cities.
Elizabeth II, as the Queen of New Zealand, is the Head of State and is
represented, in her absence, by a non-partisan Governor-General; the Queen
'reigns but does not rule', so she has no real political influence.
Political power is held by the democratically-elected Parliament of New
Zealand under the leadership of the Prime Minister who is the Head of
Government.
New Zealand Geography
New Zealand comprises two main islands (called the North and South Islands
in English, Te-Ika-a-Maui and Te Wai Pounamu in Māori) and a number of
smaller islands, located near the center of the water hemisphere. The
total land area, 268,680 square kilometres (103,738 sq miles), is a little
less than that of Italy and Japan, and a little more than the United
Kingdom. The country extends more than 1600 kilometres (1000 miles) along
its main, north-north-east axis, with approximately 15,134 km of
coastline. The most significant of the smaller inhabited islands include
Stewart Island/Rakiura; Waiheke Island, in Auckland's Hauraki Gulf; Great
Barrier Island, east of the Hauraki Gulf; and the Chatham Islands, named
Rēkohu by Moriori. The country has extensive marine resources, with the
seventh-largest Exclusive Economic Zone in the world, covering over four
million square kilometres (1.5 million sq mi), more than 15 times its land
area.
The South Island is the largest land mass, and is divided along its length
by the Southern Alps, the highest peak of which is Aoraki/Mount Cook at
3754 metres (12,316 ft). There are 18 peaks of more than 3000 metres (9800
ft) in the South Island. The North Island is less mountainous than the
South, but is marked by volcanism. The tallest North Island mountain,
Mount Ruapehu (2797 m / 9176 ft), is an active cone volcano. The dramatic
and varied landscape of New Zealand has made it a popular location for the
production of television programmes and films, including the Lord of the
Rings trilogy, and the Last Samurai.
The climate throughout the country is mild, mostly cool temperate to warm
temperate, with temperatures rarely falling below 0°C (32°F) or rising
above 30°C (86°F). Conditions vary from wet and cold on the West Coast of
the South Island to dry and continental in the Mackenzie Basin of inland
Canterbury and almost subtropical in Northland. Of the main cities,
Christchurch is the driest, receiving only some 640 mm (25 in) of rain per
year. Auckland, the wettest, receives almost twice that amount.
New Zealand is part of Zealandia, a continent that is 93% submerged.
Zealandia is almost half the size of Australia and is unusually long and
narrow. About 25 million years ago, a shift in plate tectonic movements
began to pull Zealandia apart forcefully. The submerged parts of Zealandia
are the Lord Howe Rise, Challenger Plateau, Campbell Plateau, Norfolk
Ridge and the Chatham Rise.
New Zealand Flora and Fauna
Because of its long isolation from the rest of the world and its island
biogeography, New Zealand has extraordinary flora and fauna. About 80% of
the New Zealand flora occurs only in New Zealand, including more than 40
endemic genera. The two main types of forest have been dominated by
podocarps including the giant kauri and southern beech. The remaining
vegetation types in New Zealand are grasslands of tussock and other
grasses, usually in sub-alpine areas, and the low shrublands between
grasslands and forests.
Until the arrival of humans, 80% of the land was forested. Until 2006, it
was thought, barring three species of bat (one now extinct), there were no
non-marine native mammals. However, in 2006, scientists discovered bones
that belonged to a long-extinct, unique, mouse-sized land animal in the
Otago region of the South Island. New Zealand's forests were inhabited by
a diverse range of birds including the flightless moa (now extinct), and
the kiwi, kakapo, and takahē, all endangered by human actions. Unique
birds capable of flight include the Haast's eagle, which was the world's
largest bird of prey (now extinct), and the large kākā and kea parrots.
Reptiles present in New Zealand include skinks, geckos and tuatara. There
are four endemic species of primitive frogs. There are no snakes and there
is only one venomous spider, the katipo, which is rare and restricted to
coastal regions. However, there are many endemic species of insects,
including the weta, one species of which may grow as large as a house
mouse and is the heaviest insect in the world.
New Zealand has led the world in clearing offshore islands of introduced
mammalian pests and reintroducing rare native species to ensure their
survival. A more recent development is the mainland ecological island.
History of New Zealand
New Zealand is one of the most recently settled major land masses.
Polynesian settlers arrived in their waka some time between the 11th
century and the 13th century to establish the indigenous Māori culture.
New Zealand's Māori name, Aotearoa, is usually translated as "Land of the
long white cloud", reputedly referring to the cloud the explorers saw on
the horizon as they approached. Settlement of the Chatham Islands to the
east of the mainland produced the Moriori people; linguistic evidence, in
particular the innovations uniquely shared by the Moriori and Māori
languages, indicates that they moved there from New Zealand. Most of New
Zealand was divided into tribal territories called rohe, resources within
which were controlled by hapū ('subtribes'). Māori adapted their
tropically-based culture to eating the local marine resources, flora and
fauna for food. They also hunted the giant flightless moa (which soon
became extinct). They showed great ingenuity in adapting their tropical
agricultural technology to a temperate climate, successfully cultivating
taro, gourds, kumara (sweet potato), and other plants which they
introduced from Polynesia; it is thought that kūmara were grown as far
south as Banks Peninsula in the middle of the South Island. While it was
fairly easy to grow these crops in the north, these warm-climate crops
were impractical in the south of the South Island. However, inter-regional
trade and the exploitation of the few food plants of the local flora made
up the difference. They also introduced other plants such as the paper
mulberry or 'aute', used to make barkcloth for kites and for personal
adornment.
The first Europeans known to have reached New Zealand were led by Abel
Janszoon Tasman, who sailed up the west coasts of the South and North
Islands in 1642. He named it Staten Landt, believing it to be part of the
land Jacob Le Maire had seen in 1616 off the coast of Chile. Staten Landt
appeared on Tasman's first maps of New Zealand, but this was changed by
Dutch cartographers to Nova Zeelandia, after the Dutch province of
Zeeland, some time after Hendrik Brouwer proved the supposedly South
American land to be an island in 1643. The Latin Nova Zeelandia became
Nieuw Zeeland in Dutch. Captain James Cook subsequently called the
archipelago New Zealand (a slight corruption, as Zealand is not an
alternative spelling of Zeeland, a province in the Netherlands, but of
Sjælland, the island in Denmark that includes Copenhagen), although the
Māori names he recorded for the North and South Islands (as Aehei No Mouwe
and Tovy Poenammu respectively) were rejected, and the main three islands
became known as North, Middle and South, with the Middle Island being
later called the South Island, and the earlier South Island becoming
Stewart Island. Cook began extensive surveys of the islands in 1769,
leading to European whaling expeditions and eventually significant
European colonisation. From as early as the 1780s, Māori had encounters
with European sealers and whalers. Acquisition of muskets by those iwi in
close contact with European visitors destabilised the existing balance of
power between Māori tribes and there was a temporary but intense period of
bloody inter-tribal warfare, known as the Musket Wars, which ceased only
when all iwi were so armed.
Concerned about the exploitation of Māori by Europeans, the British
Colonial Office appointed James Busby as British Resident to New Zealand
in 1832. In 1834, Busby convened the United Tribes of New Zealand to
select a flag and declare their independence, which led to the Declaration
of the Independence of New Zealand. This declaration did not allay the
fears of the Church Missionary Society, who continued lobbying for British
annexation. Increasing French interest in the region led the British to
annex New Zealand by Royal Proclamation in January 1840. To legitimise the
British annexation, Lieutenant Governor William Hobson had been dispatched
in 1839; he hurriedly negotiated the Treaty of Waitangi with northern iwi
on his arrival. The Treaty was signed in February, and in recent years it
has come to be seen as the founding document of New Zealand. The Māori
translation of the treaty promised the Māori tribes "tino rangatiratanga"
would be preserved in return for ceding kawanatanga, which the English
version translates as "chieftainship" and "sovereignty"; the real meanings
are now disputed. Disputes over land sales and sovereignty caused the New
Zealand land wars, which took place between 1845 and 1872. In 1975 the
Treaty of Waitangi Act established the Waitangi Tribunal, charged with
hearing claims of Crown violations of the Treaty of Waitangi. Some Māori
tribes and the Moriori never signed the treaty.
New Zealand was initially administered as a part of the colony of
New South Wales, and it became a separate colony in November 1840. The first
capital was Okiato or old Russell in the Bay of Islands but it soon moved
to Auckland. European settlement progressed more rapidly than anyone
anticipated, and settlers soon outnumbered Māori. Self-government was
granted to the settler population in 1852. There were political concerns
following the discovery of gold in Central Otago in 1861 that the South
Island would form a separate colony, so in 1865 the capital was moved to
the more central Wellington. New Zealand was involved in a Constitutional
Convention in March 1891 in
Sydney,
New South Wales, along with the
Australian colonies. This was to consider a potential constitution for the
proposed federation between all the Australasian colonies. New Zealand
lost interest in joining Australia in a federation following this
convention.
In 1893 New Zealand became the first nation to grant women the right to
vote on the same basis as men; however, women were not eligible to stand
for parliament until 1919.
New Zealand became an independent dominion on 26 September 1907, by Royal
Proclamation. Full independence was granted by the United Kingdom
Parliament with the Statute of Westminster in 1931; it was taken up upon
the Statute's adoption by the New Zealand Parliament in 1947. Since then
New Zealand has been a sovereign constitutional monarchy within the
Commonwealth of Nations.
New Zealand was one of the first to join the Allies when it declared war
on Germany on 3 September 1939, along with France, the United Kingdom,
Australia and Canada after the invasion of Poland. New Zealand troops
fought in North Africa, Greece, Crete, Italy and in the Pacific. The navy
and airforce were also involved.
In 1951, Australia, New Zealand and the United States formally became
allies with the signing of the ANZUS Treaty. In 1985, New Zealand declared
itself a nuclear-free zone. As a result, US warships could no longer enter
New Zealand ports without declaring themselves to be free of nuclear
weapons or power. As such a declaration would be against US Government
policy, effectively the ships were banned from New Zealand. The United
States suspended its obligations to New Zealand under the ANZUS Treaty.
Government of New Zealand
New Zealand is a constitutional monarchy with a parliamentary democracy.
Under the New Zealand Royal Titles Act (1953), Queen Elizabeth II is Queen
of New Zealand and is represented as head of state by the
Governor-General, currently Anand Satyanand.
New Zealand is the only country in the world in which all the highest
offices in the land have been occupied simultaneously by women, between
March 2005 and August 2006 - The Sovereign, Queen Elizabeth II;
Governor-General Dame Silvia Cartwright; Prime Minister Helen Clark;
Speaker of the New Zealand House of Representatives Margaret Wilson; and
Chief Justice Dame Sian Elias.
The New Zealand Parliament has only one chamber, the House of
Representatives, which usually seats 120 Members of Parliament.
Parliamentary general elections are held every three years under a form of
proportional representation called Mixed Member Proportional. The 2005
General Election created an 'overhang' of one extra seat, occupied by the
Māori Party, due to that party winning more seats in electorates than the
number of seats its proportion of the party vote would have given it.
There is no written constitution: the Constitution Act 1986 is the
principal formal statement of New Zealand's constitutional structure. The
Governor-General has the power to appoint and dismiss Prime Ministers and
to dissolve Parliament. The Governor-General also chairs the Executive
Council, which is a formal committee consisting of all ministers of the
Crown. Members of the Executive Council are required to be Members of
Parliament, and most are also in Cabinet. Cabinet is the most senior
policy-making body and is led by the Prime Minister, who is also, by
convention, the Parliamentary leader of the governing party or coalition.
The current Prime Minister is Helen Clark, leader of the Labour Party. She
is serving her third term as Prime Minister. On 17 October 2005 she
announced that she had come to a complex arrangement that guaranteed the
support of enough parties for her Labour-led coalition to govern. The
formal coalition consists of the Labour Party and Jim Anderton, the
Progressive Party's only MP. In addition to the parties in formal
coalition, New Zealand First and United Future provide confidence and
supply in return for their leaders being ministers outside cabinet. A
further arrangement has been made with the Green Party, which has given a
commitment not to vote against the government on confidence and supply.
This commitment assures the government of a majority of seven MPs on
confidence.
The Leader of the Opposition, is National Party leader John Key. The ACT
party and the Māori Party are both also in opposition. The Greens, New
Zealand First and United Future all vote against the government on some
legislation.
Major political parties:
Labour Party (50 seats)
National Party (48 seats)
Minor political parties (in Parliament):
ACT New Zealand (2 seats)
Green Party (6 seats)
Jim Anderton's Progressive Party (1 seat)
Māori Party (4 seats)
New Zealand First (7 seats)
United Future (3 seats)
The highest court in New Zealand is the Supreme Court of New Zealand,
which was established in 2004 following the passage of the Supreme Court
Act 2003. The Act abolished the option to appeal Court of Appeal rulings
to the Privy Council in London. The current Chief Justice is Dame Sian
Elias. New Zealand's judiciary also includes the High Court, which deals
with serious criminal offences and civil matters, and the Court of Appeal,
and subordinate courts.
Foreign Relations and the Military of New Zealand
New Zealand maintains a strong profile on environmental protection, human
rights and free trade, particularly in agriculture.
New Zealand is a member of the following geo-political organisations:
APEC, East Asia Summit, Commonwealth of Nations, OECD and the United
Nations. It has signed up to a number of free trade agreements, of which
the most important is Closer Economic Relations with Australia.
For its first hundred years, New Zealand followed the United Kingdom's
lead on foreign policy. "Where she goes, we go; where she stands, we
stand", said Prime Minister Michael Savage, in declaring war on Germany on
3 September 1939. However, New Zealand came under the influence of the
United States of America for the generation following the war (although
New Zealand does still have a good working relationship with the UK).
New Zealand has traditionally worked closely with Australia, whose foreign
policy followed a similar historical trend. In turn, many Pacific Islands
such as Western Samoa have looked to New Zealand's lead. The American
influence on New Zealand was weakened by the disappointment with the
Vietnam War, the sinking of the Rainbow Warrior by France, and by
disagreements over environmental and agricultural trade issues and New
Zealand's nuclear-free policy.
New Zealand is a party to the ANZUS security treaty between Australia, New
Zealand and the United States. In February 1985 New Zealand refused
nuclear-powered or nuclear-armed ships access to its ports. In 1986 the
United States announced that it was suspending its treaty security
obligations to New Zealand pending the restoration of port access. The New
Zealand Nuclear Free Zone, Disarmament, and Arms Control Act 1987
prohibits the stationing of nuclear weapons on the territory of New
Zealand and the entry into New Zealand waters of nuclear armed or
propelled ships. This legislation remains a source of contention and the
basis for the United States' continued suspension of treaty obligations to
New Zealand.
In addition to the various wars between iwi, and between the British
settlers and iwi, New Zealand has fought in the Second Boer War, World War
I, World War II, the Korean War, the Malayan Emergency (and committed
troops, fighters and bombers to the subsequent confrontation with
Indonesia), the Vietnam War, the Gulf War and the Afghanistan War, and
briefly sent a unit of army engineers to help with rebuilding Iraqi
infrastructure.
The New Zealand military has three branches: the New Zealand Army, the
Royal New Zealand Navy, and the Royal New Zealand Air Force. New Zealand
considers its own national defence needs to be modest; it dismantled its
air combat capability in 2001. New Zealand has contributed forces to
recent regional and global peacekeeping missions, including those in
Cyprus, Somalia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, the Sinai, Angola, Cambodia, the
Iran/Iraq border, Bougainville and East Timor.
Local Government and External Territories of New Zealand
The early European settlers divided New Zealand into provinces. These were
abolished in 1876 so that government could be centralised, for financial
reasons. As a result, New Zealand has no separately represented
subnational entities such as provinces, states or territories, apart from
its local government. The spirit of the provinces however still lives on,
and there is fierce rivalry exhibited in sporting and cultural events.
Since 1876, local government has administered the various regions of New
Zealand. In 1989, the government completely reorganised local government,
implementing the current two-tier structure of regional councils and
territorial authorities.
Today New Zealand has 12 regional councils for the administration of
environmental and transport matters and 74 territorial authorities that
administer roading, sewerage, building consents, and other local matters.
The territorial authorities are 16 city councils, 57 district councils,
and the Chatham Islands County Council. Four of the territorial councils
(one city and three districts) and the Chatham Islands County Council also
perform the functions of a regional council and thus are known as unitary
authorities. Territorial authority districts are not subdivisions of
regional council districts, and a few of them straddle regional council
boundaries.
Regions are (asterisks denote unitary authorities): Northland, Auckland,
Waikato, Bay of Plenty, Gisborne*, Hawke's Bay, Taranaki,
Manawatu-Wanganui, Wellington, Marlborough*, Nelson*, Tasman*, West Coast,
Canterbury, Otago, Southland, Chatham Islands*.
As a major South Pacific nation, New Zealand has a close working
relationship with many Pacific Island nations, and continues a political
association with the Cook Islands, Niue, and Tokelau. New Zealand operates
Scott Base in its Antarctic territory, the Ross Dependency. Other
countries also use Christchurch to support their Antarctic bases and the
city is sometimes known as the "Gateway to Antarctica".
New Zealand Economy
The country has a high standard of living with GDP per capita estimated at
$26,400 (comparative figures are Australia $31,900 and United States
$41,800). The standard of living has also been measured in other forms,
including being ranked 19th on the 2005 Human Development Index and 15th
in The Economist's 2005 world-wide quality-of-life index.
The tertiary sector is the largest sector in the economy and constitutes
67.6% of GDP, followed by the secondary sector on 27.8% and the primary
sector on 4.7% (2005 estimate).
New Zealand is a country heavily dependent on trade, particularly in
agricultural products, as almost 20% of the country's output is exported
(by comparison it is 21% for the United Kingdom, 49% for Finland and 83%
for Belgium). This leaves New Zealand particularly vulnerable to slumps in
commodity prices and global economic slowdowns. Its principal export
industries are agriculture, horticulture, fishing and forestry making up
about half of the country's exports. Its major export partners are
Australia 22.4%, US 11.3%, Japan 11.2%, China 9.7%, Germany 5.2% (2004).
This is a dramatic change from 1965, when the United Kingdom received over
half of New Zealand’s exports.
Traditionally, New Zealand enjoyed a high standard of living with stable
commodity exports, based not least on a strong relationship with the
United Kingdom. In 1973 the United Kingdom joined the European Community
and began to adhere to its trade policy and at the same time other factors
such as the oil crises undermined the viability of the New Zealand
economy. This lead to a protracted and very severe economic crisis, during
which living standards in New Zealand fell behind those of Australia and
Western Europe.
Since 1984, successive governments have engaged in major macroeconomic
restructuring, transforming New Zealand from a highly protectionist and
regulated economy to a liberalised free-trade economy. Pursuant to this
policy, during the late 1980s and early 1990s the New Zealand Government
sold a number of former government-owned enterprises including its
telecommunications company, railway network, a number of radio stations,
and two financial institutions. However, the government continues to own a
number of significant businesses, collectively known as State-Owned
Enterprises (SOEs). These SOEs are operated through arms-length
shareholding arrangements and are required to operate profitably, just
like privately-owned enterprises.
The current government's economic objectives are centred on pursuing
free-trade agreements and building a "knowledge economy". In 2004 the
government began discussing a free trade agreement with the People's
Republic of China, one of the first countries to do so.
In recent years, New Zealand has been perceived as a vigorous economy and
attracted international attention. After the economic restructuring of the
1980s, the New Zealand economy sank into a recession starting with the
sharemarket crash in October 1987. The recession deepened in the early
1990s when unemployment topped 10%. However in 1993 the economy rebounded
smartly and apart from a smaller recession in the late 1990s, New Zealand
enjoyed a substantial economic boom up until 2005. New Zealand’s
unemployment rate is now the second lowest of the 27 OECD nations with
comparable data.
Ongoing economic challenges for New Zealand include a current account
deficit of 9% of GDP), a net export of educated youth, slow development of
non-commodity exports, tepid growth of labour productivity, and an
unofficial poverty rate of about twenty percent.
New Zealand Demographics
New Zealand has a population of about 4.1 million. About 80% of the
population are of European descent. New Zealanders of European descent are
collectively known as Pākehā - this term is used variously and some Māori
use it to refer to all non-Māori New Zealanders. Most European New
Zealanders are of British and Irish ancestry with smaller percentages of
Dutch, South Slav, and/or Italian ancestry.
Indigenous Māori people are the largest non-European ethnic group (the
percentage of the population of full or part-Māori ancestry is 14.7%;
those who checked Māori only are 7.9%). Between the 1996 and 2001 census,
the number of people of Asian origin (6.6%) overtook the number of people
of Pacific Island origin (6.5%) (note that the census allowed multiple
ethnic affiliations). New Zealand has relatively open immigration
policies; its government is committed to increasing its population by
about 1% annually. At present, immigrants from the United Kingdom
constitute the largest single group (30%) but immigrants are drawn from
many nations, and increasingly from East Asia (Chinese, Japanese and
Korean are the most numerous of this group, but includes Southeast Asian
and Indian peoples).
According to the 2001 census Christianity is the predominant religion with
around 60% identification. Around 30% identified that they were
'non-religious', and 6% objected to answering, leaving only 4% for other
religions. The main Christian denominations are Anglicanism, Roman
Catholicism, Presbyterianism and Methodism. There are also significant
numbers who identify themselves with Pentecostal and Baptist churches and
with the LDS (Mormon) church. The New Zealand-based Ratana church has many
adherents among Māori. According to census figures, other significant
minority religions include Buddhism, Hinduism, Islam, and Judaism.
New Zealand Culture
Contemporary New Zealand has a diverse culture with influences from
English, Scottish, Irish, and Māori cultures, along with those of other
European cultures and – more recently – Polynesian cultures other than
that of the Māori (including Samoan, Tongan,Tokelaun Niuean, Cook Islands
Māori, Tahitian, and Hawaiian); also southern Asian (Indian), Southeast
Asian (Filipino, Malaysian, Cambodian, and Vietnamese), and east Asian
(Chinese, Korean, and Japanese) cultures. Although primary migration was
from England there were also many people from Scotland amongst the early
British settlers and elements of their culture persist; New Zealand is
said to have more pipebands than Scotland. Cultural links between New
Zealand and the United Kingdom are maintained by a common language,
sustained migration from the United Kingdom and the fact that many young
New Zealanders spend time in the United Kingdom on their "overseas
experience" (OE).
Pre-European contact Māori culture had no metal tools, relying on stone
and wood. Māori culture survives as Māori continue to support and develop
their culture on their own terms and conditions - much as any other living
and thriving culture does in the world.
Use of the Māori language (Te Reo Māori) as a living, community language
remained only in a few remote areas in the post-war years, but is
currently undergoing a renaissance, thanks in part to Māori language
medium schools and a Māori television channel after being set up from
recommendations set down by the Waitangi Tribunal. Māori Television is the
only nationwide television channel to have the majority of its prime-time
content delivered in Māori (sometimes with sub-titles in English). Māori
Television is also the only television channel that tries to generate new
content in Māori and subtitles English programmes in Māori. None of the
other television channels present a substantial number of Māori
programmes, or subtitle English language programmes in Māori, despite the
fact that it is an official language equal to English.
New Zealand's landscape has appeared in a number of television programmes
and films. In particular, the television series Hercules: The Legendary
Journeys and Xena: Warrior Princess were filmed around Auckland, and the
film Heavenly Creatures in Christchurch. The television series The Tribe
is set and filmed in New Zealand. New Zealand director Peter Jackson shot
the epic The Lord of the Rings film trilogy in various locations around
the country, taking advantage of the spectacular and relatively unspoiled
landscapes, and Mount Taranaki was used as a stand-in for Mount Fuji in
The Last Samurai. The latest major movies shot in New Zealand are King
Kong and The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe.
New Zealand has also become a popular filming site for Indian movie
makers.
Taumatawhakatangihangakoauauotamateapokaiwhenuakitanatahu is the longest
Māori word. It is the name of a hill in the Hawke's Bay region of the
North Island. The Guinness Book of World Records lists this as the longest
geographical name in the world.
New Zealand music is a vibrant expression of the culture of New Zealand.
As the largest nation in Polynesia, New Zealand's music is influenced by
the indigenous Māori and immigrants from the Pacific region. The origins
of New Zealand's musical culture lie in its British colonial history, with
contributions from Europe and America. Local artists have mixed these
styles with local influences to create music that is uniquely New Zealand
in style.
New Zealand Sports
New Zealand's national sport is rugby union, with other popular sports
including, cricket, netball, lawn bowling, soccer (perhaps surprisingly,
the most popular football code in terms of participation in New Zealand)
and rugby league. Also popular are golf, tennis, cycling, field hockey,
softball (current Men's International Softball Federation World Champions,
1996, 2000, 2004) and a variety of water sports, particularly surfing,
sailing, whitewater kayaking, surf lifesaving skills and rowing. In the
latter, New Zealand enjoyed an extraordinary magic 45 minutes when winning
four successive gold medals at the 2005 world championships. Snow sports
such as skiing and snowboarding are also popular. Equestrian sportsmen and
sportswomen make their mark in the world, with Mark Todd being chosen
international "Horseman of the Century", and many juniors at pony club
level.
Olympic Games
The country is internationally recognised for performing well on a
medals-to-population ratio at Olympic Games and Commonwealth Games. See,
for example, New Zealand Olympic medallists and New Zealand at the 2004
Summer Olympics.
Rugby union
Rugby union is closely linked to New Zealand's national identity. The
national rugby team, the All Blacks, has the best winning record of any
national team. They hosted and won the inaugural Rugby World Cup in 1987,
and will host the 2011 Rugby World Cup. Variations of the phrase "All
Black" have been adapted by several other national sporting codes such as
the basketball team (the Tall Blacks), the cricket team (Black Caps) and
the hockey team (Black Sticks). The soccer team is called the All Whites.
New Zealand's national sporting colours are black and white (silver). The
silver fern is a national emblem worn by New Zealanders representing their
country in sport and also features as the name of New Zealand's highly
successful national netball team, the Silver Ferns. The haka, a
traditional Māori challenge, is often performed at sporting events and the
All Blacks traditionally perform a haka before the start of international
matches. See Haka of the All Blacks.
New Zealand is one of the leading nations in world yachting, especially
open-water long-distance or round-the-world races. Round-the-world
yachtsman Sir Peter Blake was a national hero. In inshore yachting,
Auckland hosted the last two America's Cup regattas (2000 and 2003). In
2000, Team New Zealand successfully defended the trophy they had won in
1995 in San Diego, which made them the only team outside the United States
to successfully defend a challenge, but in 2003 they lost to a team headed
by Ernesto Bertarelli of Switzerland, whose Alinghi syndicate was
skippered by Russell Coutts, the former skipper of Team New Zealand.
Team New Zealand will compete for the America's Cup at the next regatta,
in Valencia in 2007. The team manager is Grant Dalton.
Public Holidays of New Zealand
There are two types of public holidays in New Zealand:
Statutory Holidays, which are legislated by law;
Provincial Anniversary Days, which commemorate the founding of the
province or an early settlement event.
Under current legislation, workers who work on a public holiday must be
given equivalent time off on another day, and be paid time-and-a-half.
New Zealand International Rankings
Political and economic rankings:
Political freedom ratings - Free; political rights and civil liberties
both rated 1 (the highest score available)
Press freedom - 19th freest, at 5.00
GDP per capita - 27th highest, at I$24,769
Human Development Index - 20th highest, at 0.933
Income Equality - 54th most equal, at 36.2 (Gini Index)
Literacy Rate - Equal first, at 99.9%
Unemployment rate - 22nd lowest, at 3.40%
Corruption - 1st equal least corrupt, at 9.6 on index
Economic Freedom - 9th equal freest, at 1.84 on index
Health rankings:
Fertility rate- 140th most fertile, at 1.79 per woman
Birth rate - 140th most births, at 13.90 per 1000 people
Infant mortality - 192nd most deaths, at 5.85 per 1000 live births
Death rate - 115th highest death rate, at 7.52 per 1000 people
Life Expectancy - 22nd highest, at 78.81 years
Suicide Rate - 35th highest suicide rate, at 19.8 for males and 4.2 for
females
HIV/AIDS rate - 149th most cases, at 0.10%
Other rankings:
CO2 emissions - 32nd highest emissions, at 8.7 tonnes per capita
Electricity Consumption - 48th highest consumption of electricity, at
37,030,000,000 kWh
Broadband Internet access - 22nd highest uptake in OECD, at 8.1%
Beer consumption - 16th highest, at 77.0 litres per capita