Households hoarding $40b of unwanted items as secondhand economy booms
Hannah Richardson is one of the more than one in two Australians who regularly sell secondhand items.
Hannah Richardson is one of the more than one in two Australians who regularly sell secondhand items.
Woolworths, Coles, Aldi and Officeworks are among major retailers who have adopted a new voluntary industry code designed to reduce the number of Australian children killed and injured after swallowing button batteries.
Twitter was sued by a shareholder over claims it misled investors on key growth metrics, including user count and user engagement, almost two years after touting plans to top 500 million users.
Australia's biggest private health insurer Medibank Private has joined many of its peers in offering free annual dental checkups for its 2.7 million 'extras' policyholders.
Temporary government workers may have their contracts extended for up to three years as part of reforms introduced by Australian Public Service Commissioner John Lloyd.
South Korea said on Sunday it will buy a total of 390,000 tonnes of domestic rice in a bid to keep the price stable in a bumper year.
Australia will move on and pursue other trade deals in Asia if the Trans-Pacific Partnership collapses, Foreign Minister Julie Bishop says.
The Donald Trump name is a branding issue for a $US212 million luxury hotel in Washington DC that opened this week.
Coal's comeback was a little too late for its poster boy: Nathan Tinkler.
Sometimes I'm tempted by the thought that a major economic reform would be for the Business Council of Australia to disband, so the nation's big business chiefs had to spend more time doing their knitting.
Resources stocks are making their way back into portfolios again following hints China is on the growth path.
Investors are likely to stay cautious and markets volatile ahead of crucial meetings from the US and Japanese central banks later this week.
The BoJ meeting on Wednesday even promises to eclipse the usually pre-eminent market event: a US rates decision early Thursday morning.
A casual job results in a hugely successful career in retail.
Samsung said it sold stakes in four companies to free up money and focus on its main business.
The UK is losing its appeal for Poles seeking work abroad.
A federal judge in New York rejected the US Justice Department's changes to decades-old rules governing music royalty payments, handing a victory to songwriters and publishers.
The man who helped German discount supermarket Aldi set up in Australia at turn of century reveals how Woolworths and Coles can fight back.
MORE than one in five NSW coal mining jobs have gone since employment peaked four years ago, the industry body Coal Services has revealed.
A decorated country netball player accused of defrauding the Wathaurung Aboriginal Corporation has admitted to taking $240,000 of the company's funds for her own personal use.
Investors are tipped to come out in force this week when a range of properties, worth more than $50 million combined, come up for auction.
Commodities had their best June half since the GFC, outperforming shares, bonds and currencies. But the frenzy has come to a sudden end.
Why have technology companies been spared the populist anger against big business since the GFC? Because everybody loves a winner. But sentiment is changing.
Renewable energy project could lead post-coal energy future.
When a store compares a "was" price to a "now" price, it can be the difference between a shopper purchasing something and not.
What if the world's richest gave their money to start-ups? How many businesses could be created? Quite a lot, according to the 2016 Robin Hood Index.
Share prices fell around the world as volatility returned to global financial markets last week in expectation the times of cheap money are coming to an end.
Fast. Ultra fast. Super fast. Would you use any of these to describe your internet?
Mining. Like most city-dwellers I have blatant disregard and indifference how the fluctuating fortunes of the state are driven by what mining giants rip from the earth.
This weekend marks the end of an era as Glenn Stevens hands the keys to the RBA to Philip Lowe and Guy Debelle. Here are 10 things you probably didn't know about the new leadership team.
"There are a squillion people who love Australians and what we do, and who are coffee addicts."
"Social entrepreneurs are inherently driven by improving people's lives, lifting people out of poverty."
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