John Kehoe

US Republicans lick wounds after losing fight

John Kehoe

No winners emerged from the farcical 16-day political impasse in Washington that finally ended last week, though there was one clear loser: the Republican Party.

Chanticleer

Zahra’s departure inspires rethink at DJs

Chanticleer

In the end it was the relentless pressure that became too much for Paul Zahra.

Ben Potter

It’s time for car makers to stand on their own two feet

Ben Potter

When the late, great Labor industry minister John Button sought to soften the blow of tariff cuts for Australia’s uncompetitive car makers in the late 1980s with direct subsidies, he saw it as a temporary down payment on an industry that could stand on its own two feet.

John Davidson

Windows 8.1 lets the desktop team down

Windows 8.1 lets the desktop team down

The Windows 8.1 was meant to be the version of Windows 8 where Microsoft listened to all the public’s complaints about Windows 8, and addressed them.

Karen Maley

US looks good, but serious doubts remain

US looks good, but serious doubts remain

Investors’ deep-seated faith in the ability of central banks to keep markets perpetually levitating looks set to be tested in coming days, after global sharemarkets bolted to record levels last week.

John Wasiliev

Contrarians lock in profits is share rally does not last

John Wasiliev

While some pundits are tipping smooth sailing ahead for the Australian sharemarket for the rest of 2013, others are concerned that possible profit taking or more subdued activity could temper such positive views.

Matthew Stevens

AiG’s Willox challenges government at gas conference

Matthew Stevens

The inadequate approval process that saw governments state and commonwealth approve $80 billion of export gas terminals at Gladstone have left domestic customers exposed to rare cost and supply risk and the nation’s taxpayers really should pay the price of that failure.

Joe Aston

Holy spirit! Parliament House goes Papal

Holy spirit! Parliament House goes Papal

Catholic is soooo hot right now, apparently...

Howard Davies

How the world wearied of ‘too big to fail’ regulations

How the world wearied of ‘too big to fail’ regulations

The troubles of JPMorgan, and its $US13 billion fine, have reopened the debate on what to do with banks that are too big to fail.

Alan Oxley

Treasury changes its tune on FTA investor-state provision

Treasury changes its tune on FTA investor-state provision

The free-trade agreement most likely to deliver an early harvest for the Abbott government is the one with South Korea. It will protect Australia’s $650 million beef export trade against American competition and expand trade with Korea.

Richard Denniss

Trade threatens to split Coalition

Trade threatens to split Coalition

The issues of coal seam gas and free trade are combining to create a perfect storm for the National Party, and in turn, the Coalition government.

Richard Thornton

Preparing for the fire season, and other dangers

Preparing for the fire season, and other dangers

The destruction and heartache caused by the fires on Sydney’s outskirts are yet another opportunity to count the full cost to all Australian communities.

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