'Spike in stress': Australians curb spending as debt balloons
There are clear signs that the consumers who have driven much of Australia's growth are running out of puff.
There are clear signs that the consumers who have driven much of Australia's growth are running out of puff.
Revealing the secret identifies behind shell companies and opaque trusts is the "new frontier" in fighting tax evasion, says the OECD's head of tax Pascal Saint-Amans.
Company profits grow 40 per cent while wages grow 0.9 per cent
Australians are some of the most pessimistic in the world, with seven out of 10 believing their kids will end up worse off than they are.
Job advertisements rose for a third straight month in May, a promising sign for continued labour demand even as official figures on employment remain patchy.
Market bets on an interest-rate cut by the end of this year have doubled in the past month.
The World Bank has maintained its forecast that global growth will improve to 2.7 per cent this year, citing a pick-up in manufacturing and trade, improved market confidence and a recovery in commodity prices.
It's too early to be sure, but not too early to suspect that, if we and the other developed economies keep travelling the way we are, conventional wisdom about what constitutes good economic policy may soon need to be turned on its head.
No-one ever got rewarded for putting the economy into recession.
We won't go cashless, but we could see limits and restrictions on cash transactions, says Black Economy Taskforce chairman Michael Andrew.
How do you battle perceptions that girls are bad at maths and science when the people telling you that may be your family?
There's nothing like losses to focus an investor's mind.
One of the most significant, but least remarked upon, features of this year's budget is Malcolm Turnbull's decision to greatly expand the government's involvement in the construction of public infrastructure.
There's nothing like a prominent visiting economist spruiking imminent ruination to get plenty of media attention.
The Treasurer has begun preparing the ground for weak or negative economic growth in the March quarter.
McDonald's is considering whether it will need to restructure its operations to avoid getting hit by Diverted Profits Tax.
Unemployed draftsman Michael Dempsey wants a piece of the multibillion-dollar infrastructure boom that's happening around him, and he's making himself impossible to ignore.
Australian house prices fell in May for the first time in 18 months, in an early sign lending restrictions are starting to damp demand.
Australian retail spending rose 1Â per cent in April, beating market expectations of a modest rise.
Australia is experiencing a "spectacular housing bubble", which needs to be addressed with tougher regulatory measures, said Willem Buiter, Citigroup's chief economist.
The obvious major missing ingredient in Scott Morrison's 'backflip' budget was the lack of actual tax reform - but there is another glaring black hole. Turnbull's leadership remains weak as long as he's unable to convince his backbenchers that it's OK to come out from under the lump of coal now, that we can move on from Abbott's whatever-it-takes.
The apparent end of the housing boom looks set to hit the employment market, with analysts betting the number blue-collar jobs being advertised will soon drop off.
Sentiment has remained negative this year all the way through May for the first time since the depths of the GFC in 2009, leaving retailers reeling and investors bearish on the sector.
Tax commissioner Chris Jordan has announced an internal review of the Tax Office's policies and procedures following news that one of its highest ranking officers, Michael Cranston, allegedly abused his position as a public official.
The ATO and federal government want us to think its business as usual at the agency, but it's not.
There are signs of heat coming out of the housing market in Sydney and Melbourne.
Pressure is building for the lucky country.
Tell me again about the terrible burden of our progressive tax system, of how the wealthy pay too much tax.
In the past three budgets the Treasury has forecast a lift in economic growth and has been disappointed.
Employers caught up in an alleged fraud ring accused of stealing $165 million can contact the Australian Taxation Office to find out if they will be liable for tax that wasn't paid because it was being siphoned off by a criminal syndicate, the agency says.
Carlton & United Breweries is increasing payment times to small business suppliers rather than cutting them.
Incy Interiors now employs extreme packaging to overcome courier problems.