Interest rate rises coming sooner than we think, warns OECD
The Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development expects higher rates in the second half of next year.
The Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development expects higher rates in the second half of next year.
These are indeed challenging times for public policy. Listening to the federal Treasurer and reading the Business Council of Australia chief executive, I'm getting flashes of Fantasy Island.
Eight years since the birth of bitcoin, central banks around the world are increasingly recognising the potential upsides and downsides of digital currencies.
There are few aspects of taxation that involve more deception than bracket creep.
With the year rapidly drawing to a close, the word is we're getting back to normal.
The party is finally winding down for the nation's housing market. How severe the hangover is will determine the economy's fate for years to come.
Steven Levitt, the co-author of bestselling novel Freakonomics, talks about gun violence, tax reform and terrorism.
Australia's richest and brightest are on to something. Super can fund business.
An A-list of Australia's richest and best-connected billionaires has launched an audacious bid to channel money directly from super funds to businesses.
The Coalition is not afraid of getting into business with the cryptocurrency world.
It is a mystery that is confounding economists - why wage growth is at record lows when the economy is not all that far off full employment.
Reserve Bank governor Philip Lowe has pointed the finger at employers for Australia's extraordinarily low rate of wage growth, saying it means low interest rates for months to come.
The RBA has played down expectations of wage rises and offered little hope to struggling retailers in an economic assessment that has pushed forecasts for the next interest rate rise until the end of next year.
Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull has flagged tax cuts for millions of Australians in the lead up in the lead up to the next federal budget, or sooner if an election is called early next year.
Chinese demand for Australian residential property has eased because of tighter capital controls imposed by Beijing and tougher restrictions on mortgage lending by local banks, a top central banker said on Monday.
Home sales across Australia's capital cities have edged higher in the past week, but the auction market remains soft with prices largely unchanged.
Inner Sydney has a "significant surplus" of housing.
The week's haul at Christie's and Sotheby's screams late-cycle liquidity, recalling Japan's impressionist fever in the late Eighties before the Nikkei collapsed and the bottom fell out of the art market.
It's a process that's gone on for so long few people have noticed it: the waning influence of the once-mighty federal Treasury.
One need not be a card-carrying revolutionary to deduce that global capitalism has a problem. Enter the universal basic income.
Victoria has economic growth of 3.3 per cent, but NSW has recorded the best growth per resident.
Simplistic views of complex issues don't deliver the full story. What the critics of Australia's immigration policy miss is that one plus one can add up to more than two.
The Workplace Gender Equality Agency has released its annual gender pay gap data showing men still take home $26,527 a year more than women on average, and the pay gap for is even larger at $89,516 for top management.
It has been 23 years since we have had an employment run this good and still wages are going nowhere.
Reserve Bank board member Luci Ellis has said Australia should stop searching for the next mining boom or "an identifiable engine of growth," and accept that future economic prosperity will come from several directions.
Australian wages rose by less than expected last quarter, with even a mandated jump in the minimum wage failing to lift workers' pay across the economy. It's a weak result that threatens to sap consumer spending and inflation.
Australian businesses are in the midst of the best economic conditions in two decades, with rises across all industries including retail.
It might be hard to get corporates to admit it, but business conditions are actually booming.
There are signs of life returning to investment outside the mining industry, says the Reserve Bank of Australia, which is hoping business "animal spirits" will sustain spending in the services sector as the resources boom comes to an end.
The Trans-Pacific Partnership is dead. In its place, maybe, we'll have something lesser, with a longer title: the Progressive Comprehensive Trans-Pacific Partnership, or PCTPP.
Professor Michelle Ryan says women need something to lean towards.
Australia's culinary queen says she has to be a "hard arse" in the male dominated industry.
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