Dollar's rally hinges on US rate clues
Traders betting on further gains in the US dollar aren't being dissuaded by its slump late last week after the February employment report showed robust jobs growth
Traders betting on further gains in the US dollar aren't being dissuaded by its slump late last week after the February employment report showed robust jobs growth
Confidence and capacity are the real drivers of investment.
Mortgage pain in towns hit by a commodities downturn is beginning to be felt in parts of the financial system.
Company boards are on notice. The world's third largest asset manager will use its proxy voting powers to influence greater gender diversity.
Australia's solid labour market performance is sullied by its failure to fully tap the potential of women: those with young children, single mothers and females in their late 50s
Soaring home prices in Australia's biggest cities don't necessarily mean the country is in the grip of a housing bubble, according to the heads of the big four banks.
On the present trajectory of political fiddling about housing affordability, the odds are reasonable that Scott Morrison's second budget will include National Housing Lotto. It's not much worse an idea than some that have been suggested and apparently are about to be tried.
Markets are tipping a one-in-three chance the RBA will start lifting rates this year, while Goldman Sachs says a move in 2017 is now more likely than not.
The Reserve Bank is increasingly certain the global economy is picking up and increasingly determined not to cut its cash rate again.
Why is it that a mother caring for her children produces no "measured"Â economic value, but the same mother hiring others to look after her children does?
The Reserve Bank of Australia has held the cash rate steady at 1.5 per cent amid concern about what another cut would do to the housing market and amid signs the economy is picking up.
Retail sales rebounded in January after two months of tepid outcomes, although the underlying pulse was one of sluggish household consumption.
An estimated 400 restaurants and cafés and hair and beauty salons will get a visit from the Tax Office this month.
What happened to the the job of "paid companion" or "inspector of nuisances" recorded in Australia's first national census in 1911?
Australia is on the cusp of achieving something truly remarkable – not to mention unprecedented in modern world history. It will be worth celebrating.
The value of our collective wellbeing increased by $22 billion in 2016
When the media headlines hit about bad behaviour by men at the highest levels of corporate Australia, female board directors can't help but feel despondent.
Fabulous news on the economy this week. The recession that never was, didn't happen. Phew. That's a relief.
The OECD has warned of a "rout" in Australian house prices leading to a new economic downturn, saying both prices and household debt have reached "unprecedented highs".
This week's rebound in GDP growth after a shock September quarter means the economy has now expanded for more than a quarter century, and is closing in on the record held by the Netherlands. But the smashing growth may not be quite as good as it seems.
Australia's top economic bureaucrat has begged the government not to spend the coming windfall from soaring coal and iron ore prices, saying if it did it would repeat the mistakes of prime minister John Howard and treasurer Peter Costello in the early 2000s.
Peter Thompson had an unlikely saviour last year: the humble chickpea.
The ACT's economy bounced back in the December quarter, growing 1.6 per cent, much faster than NSW and most other states.
Corporate Australia may have lost the debate on tax reform, says Australian Institute of Company Directors chairwoman Elizabeth Proust.
Treasury boss John Fraser has implored Parliament to consider cutting the company tax rate, saying it would be "critical" to respond to international competition.
The strong result means Australia is likely to technically avoid a recession.
A yawning growth gap has opened between our inner cities and the rest.
An appeal against a multimillion dollar tax bill owed by multinational oil giant Chevron is taking place, and will have global implications for the way tax paid by large companies is assessed.
Australia could record its first current account surplus since the mid-1970s this year, economists say.
The Turnbull Government proposed company tax cut would cut national income for years before it boosted it and would never be self-funding, a new analysis from the Grattan Institute has found.
Entrepreneur Allen Liao launches his 'unlosable' glasses in Sydney backed by actor/comedian Stephen Fry.
Why basic business learning should be mandatory at schools and in higher education.
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