Land taxes mean better services
The ACT election of a fifth-term government shows that voters don't mind paying higher taxes for the public services they want
Dr Richard Denniss is chief economist at The Australia Institute, a Canberra think tank, www.tai.org.au
The ACT election of a fifth-term government shows that voters don't mind paying higher taxes for the public services they want
Billions were spent in tax cuts and subsidies by the Howard and Barnett governments, now all we have is ruined communities and structural deficits
Cutting dole payments is not only punishing poor people for misfortune, it's also very bad economics.
The BCA and the Liberal party just lost a debate with Bill Shorten about the economy. Badly.
Britain will now decide who can invest the UK and the circumstances in which they can do so.
When even business lobbyists don't want to mention company tax cuts, Mr Turnbull's growing ambivalence about them makes sense.
There's nothing common sense about economics and no effective real tax decrease in the Coalition's company tax cut
Detention center contracts are more about creating political distance than cost cutting.
Banks need to clearly disclose if their loans are a bet against rising risk on carbon.
The ruling mantra once was user pays, but now laws requiring mining companies to clean up their mess are derided.
Politicians are too quick to release modelling that confirms their own prejudices.
Rather than attack the way Peter Costello turned superannuation into a tax shelter, Paul Keating actually defends it.
The notion that company tax cuts will flow into more investment is self-serving circular logic.
Capital gains concessions on expensive private houses mean the budget is supporting the spare bedrooms of the well-off.
Let's start reforming a superannuation system that everyone now agrees is badly broken.
The Turnbull government will have to buy off a lot of interest groups to get a rise in the GST. Why not shut down some loopholes instead?
A moratorium on new mines might help shore up sagging coal prices and protect mining royalties, rather than restrict supply.
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