News | Auckland
25 Jul 2025 15:28
NZCity News
NZCity CalculatorReturn to NZCity

  • Start Page
  • Personalise
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • Finance
  • Shopping
  • Jobs
  • Horoscopes
  • Lotto Results
  • Photo Gallery
  • Site Gallery
  • TVNow
  • Dating
  • SearchNZ
  • NZSearch
  • Crime.co.nz
  • RugbyLeague
  • Make Home
  • About NZCity
  • Contact NZCity
  • Your Privacy
  • Advertising
  • Login
  • Join for Free

  •   Home > News > National > Auckland

    Auckland is NZ’s ‘primate city’ but its potential remains caged in by poor planning and vision

    Other countries have learned to harness the economic and cultural energy of their super-cities, but New Zealand is held back by Auckland’s failure to thrive.

    Timothy Welch, Senior Lecturer in Urban Planning, University of Auckland, Waipapa Taumata Rau
    The Conversation


    The recent report comparing Auckland to nine international peer cities delivered an uncomfortable truth: our largest city is falling behind, hampered by car dependency, low-density housing and “weak economic performance”.

    The Deloitte State of the City analysis was no surprise to anyone who has watched successive governments treat the city as a problem to manage, rather than an engine to fuel.

    The report’s findings were stark: Auckland rates 82nd out of 84 cities globally for pedestrian friendliness, and its car-dependent transport system is more carbon-intensive and slower to decarbonise than peer cities.

    This is the direct result of decades of planning failures, including what urban researchers call the 1970s “great down-zoning” which halved central Auckland’s housing capacity.

    This isn’t just Auckland’s problem. When we mismanage what geographers call a “primate city,” it reveals our fundamental misunderstanding of how modern economies work.

    The concept of the primate city was formalised by geographer Mark Jefferson in 1939. Such cities are defined as being “at least twice as large as the next largest city and more than twice as significant”.

    Auckland fits this definition perfectly. With more than 1.7 million people, it is over four times larger than Christchurch or the greater Wellington region. The city accounts for 34% of New Zealand’s population and is projected to hit 40% of the working-age population by 2048.

    Auckland contributes 38% of New Zealand’s gross domestic product and its per-capita GDP is 15% higher than the rest of the country’s. Its most productive area, the central business district, enjoys a 40% productivity premium over the national average.

    To economists, these numbers represent the “agglomeration benefits” research shows primate cities generate. It is the economic effect of combining businesses, talent and infrastructure.

    Yet New Zealand systematically underinvests in the very place generating this outsized economic contribution.

    A pattern of infrastructure failure

    Auckland’s infrastructure deficit follows a predictable pattern. The City Rail Link, while progressing, has grown from an initial budget of NZ$2-3 billion to $5.5 billion, with opening delayed until 2026.

    Light rail was cancelled entirely after years of planning. A second harbour crossing has been studied for decades without a shovel hitting dirt. Each represents billions in opportunity costs while congestion worsens.

    This goes well beyond project mismanagement. It is a deep structural problem.

    The Infrastructure Commission-Te Waihanga identifies a $210 billion national infrastructure shortfall, with Auckland bearing a disproportionate burden despite generating a disproportionately high level of revenue.

    International research by the OECD shows successful countries treat metropolitan regions as engines of national growth, not a burden.

    The ‘Wellington problem’

    Public policy expert Ian Shirley called it the “Wellington Problem”: the way Auckland’s governance became an obsession for politicians and bureaucrats based in Wellington.

    The tension dates to 1865 when the capital was moved from Auckland to Wellington, establishing a pattern where political power was deliberately separated from economic power.

    Auckland loses an estimated $415.35 million annually in GST collected on rates. This goes to Wellington and into government revenue rather than being reinvested locally. Central government properties in Auckland, worth $36.3 million in rates, are exempt from payment while still using Auckland’s infrastructure.

    When Auckland speaks with “one voice” through its unified council, Wellington responds with legislative overrides.

    The recent National Land Transport Programme, for example, cut Auckland’s transport funding by $564 million. Mayor Wayne Brown said the government’s transport policy “makes zero sense for Auckland”.

    Learning from others

    The contrast with international approaches reveals just how counterproductive New Zealand’s approach has been.

    London has an integrated Transport for London authority with congestion charging powers, generating £136 million annually for reinvestment. Paris is investing more than €35 billion in the Grand Paris Express transit project.

    Japan’s “Quality Infrastructure Investment” principles include ¥13.2 trillion in regional infrastructure investment. Australia’s A$120 billion infrastructure programme explicitly recognises its largest cities contribute over 50% of GDP and require proportional investment.

    Research has shown excessive urban concentration in one country can create problems. But denying the primate city resources only leads to a “deterioration in the quality of life” that drags down the entire national economy.

    The solution lies in making strategic investments that maximise the benefits of agglomeration while managing any negative costs to the national economy.

    Growing pains

    Auckland isn’t a problem to be managed, it is an asset to be leveraged. Every successful developed economy has learned this lesson. Paris generates 31% of France’s GDP and gets treated accordingly.

    Seoul produces 23% of South Korea’s output and receives massive infrastructure investment. Tokyo drives Japan’s economy.

    The international evidence is unambiguous: countries that strategically invest in their primate cities achieve higher productivity growth and maintain competitive advantages.

    Auckland doesn’t need sympathy or special treatment. It needs what every primate city in every successful economy gets: infrastructure investment proportional to its economic contribution, governance structures that reflect its scale, and political leadership that understands agglomeration economics.

    The question isn’t whether Auckland is too big. The question is whether New Zealand is big enough to nurture its primate city.

    The Conversation

    Timothy Welch does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.
    © 2025 TheConversation, NZCity

     Other Auckland News
     24 Jul: Warriors coach Andrew Webster's reacted to Titans counterpart Des Hasler's changing shed blow-up as the two sides prepare for their NRL game in Auckland on Saturday
     24 Jul: An Auckland serial sex offender's prison term has been cut after he challenged his sentence in the Court of Appeal
     24 Jul: A 21-year-old's been arrested accused of assaulting another man in central Auckland's Lorne Street, around 2am
     24 Jul: The death of a man near Auckland's Southern Motorway on Tuesday has been referred to the Coroner
     24 Jul: An Auckland man faces more than 100 charges, after making intimate visual recordings of women from 2022, through to this year
     24 Jul: An end of an era looms at the Tactix as they gear up for Sunday's ANZ Premiership netball final against the Mystics in Auckland
     23 Jul: Police say pipe bombs found next to Auckland's Southern Motorway yesterday, were capable of causing deadly harm
     Top Stories

    RUGBY RUGBY
    A boost for the All Blacks depth at lock as coach Scott Robertson prepares for the Rugby Championship starting next month More...


    BUSINESS BUSINESS
    Ultrafast fashion brand Princess Polly has been certified as ‘sustainable’. Is that an oxymoron? More...



     Today's News

    Netball:
    The Silver Ferns coach is open to the idea of co-captains replacing the outgoing Ameliaranne Ekenasio 15:27

    Rugby League:
    Titans captain Kieran Foran believes coach Des Hasler's heated post-game spray following their last NRL outing was warranted 15:27

    Entertainment:
    Winona Ryder felt pressurised by female directors to slow down signs of ageing 15:22

    Law and Order:
    Police are appealing for sightings of an experience hiker missing on the South Island's West Coast 14:57

    Entertainment:
    Jamie Lee Curtis "never thought" that she would get to sit in the front row at the Oscars 14:52

    Entertainment:
    Hailey Bieber found it difficult to "accept" her pregnancy 14:22

    National:
    Gaza is starving – how Israel’s allies can go beyond words and take meaningful action 14:17

    International:
    Australia's Ben O'Connor wins Tour de France's stage 18 in the Alps 14:17

    Politics:
    Multiple sides of the coalition are taking credit for changes to the country's passport 14:07

    Entertainment:
    An air ambulance was called to Ozzy Osbourne's mansion in the hours before his death 13:52


     News Search






    Power Search


    © 2025 New Zealand City Ltd