Our obscene debate about who is poor
While the debate about the fairness of abolishing cash refunds for "spare" tax credits has conflated poor people and those with good accountants, the two groups are quite easy to distinguish.
While the debate about the fairness of abolishing cash refunds for "spare" tax credits has conflated poor people and those with good accountants, the two groups are quite easy to distinguish.
Labor's changes to dividend imputation will place more pressure on companies to pay out credits to investors via special dividends or capital returns, Morgan Stanley says.
ANZ has been forced to defend its home lending policies after the royal commission revealed the bank does not examine the expenses of its customers.
A CBA executive admits the bank sold credit card insurance to 64,000 people who couldn't claim on it and told ASIC the number was 42,000. Follow live here.
NAB is discounting home buyer rates by more than 142 basis points in its first rates move since last week's bruising over mortgage fraud at the banking royal commission.
Investors can't decide on ASX direction today, with weaker banks contrasting with stronger miners and energy companies.
The ASX has moved swiftly to tighten rules and remind companies of their disclosure obligations after scandals at two tech companies cost investors millions.
SurfStitch's administrators have recommended a merger with EziBuy and found directors may have broken the law.
Young financial advisers are trying to resurrect the sector's sullied reputation.
A scheme replacing 457 visas won't list specific occupations or have a limit on the number available.
Wesfarmers chief executive Rob Scott has dismissed suggestions Coles would be any less competitive after it is spun out.
Newcrest Mining's Wafi-Golpu mine will cost $US200 million more to build as it confirms mine wastes will be dumped into seas off Papua New Guinea.
There are still questions about the drug's medical benefits, safety, and social acceptability. The risks in dabbling in a new and controversial industry are as long as a hookah pipe.
Beijing has appointed US-educated former economist Yi Gang as its new central bank governor, in a move analysts say is good for market stability but in a role fraught with challenges.
Can the former Reagan era "supply side" economic official and Bear Stearns Wall Street economist help propel the greenback by encouraging Donald Trump to be a strong dollar president?
A shortage of truck drivers, childcare workers and interns leads Janus Henderson's Carmel Wellso to believe that inflationary pressures are more threatening than the market realises.
Two political movements which should have been able to make inroads into the majors have failed, and, as a result, changed the psychology of politics.
The demerger of Coles continues Rob Scott's clean-up. But his next growth move is unlikely to be a bet-the-farm deal.
The royal commission appears to be a medieval morality play, with the big four taking it in turns to act the seven deadly sins.
Trade wars, an increasingly aggressive US central bank and bad behaviour from our banks are issues for investors to wrestle with this week.
Hundreds of anxious residents on the NSW far south coast keen to return home to assess the damage after a ferocious firestorm ripped through Tathra are being warned the danger is not yet over.
A handout from the Federal Government has helped bring about an unlikely pairing between Italian oil and gas colossus Eni and a small cap Australian renewable energy company.
Labor's resounding victory in Batman has emboldened Bill Shorten to pursue his policy to scrap cash payments for excess dividend credits.
Tensions inside the Greens have erupted in the wake of the party's failure to win the federal seat of Batman.
South Australian Premier-elect Steven Marshall wants to cut energy costs but also welcomes investment from Elon Musk and Sanjeev Gupta.
Consolidating Xi power under the Party might make more people follow what he has to say. But it will also mean that more people will expect him to solve China's many problems.
Exit polls show Vladimir Putin having 74 per cent of the vote amid heavy turnout after he sought fourth six-year term on a "strong Russia" platform.
Donald Trump has launched an attack on the whole US system of justice after firing a top FBI official.
Australia is pushing for free trade deals with Indonesia and the wider region to be signed by the end of this year.
A shake-up is under way, courtesy of January's Mifid II rules that require greater disclosure of costs.
If the global economy was really on the mend, investment funds should have swung in behind companies leveraged to activity that comes from capital and consumer spending.
The reduction in housing turnover shows that consumers are keeping more of the property gains to themselves.
Labor's proposal to cancel cash refunds for excess dividend imputation credits is bad policy, unfairly targeting the SMSF sector.
Berkshire Hathaway's Warren Buffett is scoring particularly well on a new rule requiring companies to disclose the ratio of a chief executive officer's pay to that of the median employee.
After using your 20s to find yourself, your 30s are typically a time for further establishing your career and personal life. Don't get it wrong.
The traditional MBA needs to be taken away from the centrepiece at Australia's premier business school.
Even smug, virtue-signalling PC males like me are queasily realising that we have spent our careers participating in unfair scenes.
One-of-a-kind experiences in the city of love are just a click (and thousands of euros) away – if you know who to ask.
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