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Opinion

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The big smoke ... dangerous particulate pollution is getting worse.
Opinion
NSW

Our year of breathing dangerously: Sydney, Hunter pollution alert

Rising air pollution is a failure of governance, says the author of a report that identifies hotspots from Liverpool to Parramatta Northt and Muswellbrook.

  • by Ben Ewald

Latest

The royal commission left AMP's vertically-integrated model intact. Its recommendations may, however, force new chief executive, Francesco de Ferrari, to develop a different version.
Opinion
Banking & finance

AMP dodges disintegration but hasn't escaped unscathed

The royal commission may not have decreed the end of vertical integration but the recommendations it did make, and its own internal challenges, will still impact and reshape AMP.

  • by Stephen Bartholomeusz
A crowd gathers to protest Labor's proposed changes to franking credits.
Opinion
Banking & finance

Taxpayers should not be subsidising lifestyle of wealthy retirees

The current imputation cash refund system is, essentially, a reverse death duty: low and middle-income earners are subsidizing the estates of the very wealthy.

  • by Emma Dawson and Tim Lyons
Please Explain podcast
Analysis
National

Royal reckoning: is it enough to make the banks change?

Royal commissioner Kenneth Hayne has made 24 referrals for criminal or civil action - and 76 recommendations that will shake up the industry in a way that hasn’t happened in generation - but was it the great reckoning the public hoped for?

  • by David Estcourt and Rachael Dexter
Scott Buchholz has apologised for "idiot" behaviour.
Opinion
Federal

Where idiots play: the Parliament of the inappropriate

Assistant Minister Scott Buchholz is apologising for being an idiot, but won't say what sort of "inappropriate behaviour" caused a female RAAF officer to complain about him. So what's new?

  • by Tony Wright
Hakeem Al-Araibi in a Thai court.
Opinion
Soccer

Silence from FIFA president as world unites behind Hakeem

The question is whether FIFA is prepared to apply the kind of pressure that might make a difference and possibly save Hakeem Al-Araibi's life.

  • by Sam Wallace
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Telstra chief executive Andy Penn has warned of a shortage of software engineers.
Opinion
Small business

Who’s really to blame for too many unwanted graduates?

Australia’s skill base suffers as students choose oversupplied professions.

  • by Tony Featherstone
Illustration: Dionne Gain
Opinion
Banking & finance

Why you're better off paying a mortgage broker yourself

Reform of mortgage broker pay is long overdue, writes Jessica Irvine.

  • by Jessica Irvine
In the Herald dinkus
Opinion
NSW

In the Herald: February 7, 1952

The King is dead, the new Queen, and Menzies speaks

  • by Brian Yatman
Are we raising 'generation anxiety'?
Opinion
Health & wellness

Pushing happiness as the holy grail is creating 'generation anxiety'

We’re still teaching children to deny their feelings and pursue happiness as the holy grail.

  • by Jill Stark
Reserve Bank Governor Philip Lowe
Editorial
Banking & finance

RBA shows it can change its mind on interest rates

Reserve Bank governor Phil Lowe had good news for homebuyers in his speech on Wednesday.


The big banks are shown to be guilty of greed and corruption, but their share prices rise sharply .
Letters
NSW

Investors bank on business as usual after Hayne report

The big banks are shown to be guilty of greed and corruption, but their share prices rise sharply.

Eddie Obeid.
Opinion
NSW

Labor better hope it has shaken its skeletons in NSW

If memories of the last NSW Labor government were fading, they would have been resurrected this week.

  • by Alexandra Smith
Reserve Bank Of Australia (RBA) building in Sydney, Tuesday, November 6, 2018. RBA board meeting - interest rate decision.(AAP Image/Brendan Esposito) NO ARCHIVING
Opinion
The economy

Let's not talk ourselves into an interest rate cut

Amid talk of interest rate cuts, it's also important to consider the strengths of the domestic economy.

  • by Jessica Irvine
Opposition Leader Bill Shorten.
Opinion
Consumer affairs

Labor is exploiting misunderstandings about franking credits

The problem the electorate has with the Labor Party policy proposal is unraveling the terminology.

  • by Tony Dillon
column 8 granny dinkus
Opinion
NSW

Column 8

Oh, the Payne.

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School teacher Erin Canavan.
Opinion
National

The culture driving teachers like me from the profession

As many as half of Australian teachers leave the profession within their first five years in the job. This young teacher understands why.

  • by Erin Canavan
Commonwealth Bank of Australia CEO Matt Comyn.
Opinion
Banking & finance

Messy and lacklustre: CBA earnings suffer from Hayne hangover

CBA says banking conditions are challenging

  • by Elizabeth Knight
President Donald Trump during his State of the Union address.
Opinion
North America

Trump shamelessly used Jewish Americans in State of the Union address

While slurring refugees as a dangerous threat, the US President sought to shield himself from charges of racism by invoking a Jewish tragedy.

  • by CJ Werleman
Pressure: St Kilda coach Alan Richardson.
Opinion
AFL

Saints coach wisely quits TV gig in year of living dangerously

With his job on the line, St Kilda coach Alan Richardson is right to give up his weekly Fox Footy appearance.

  • by Jake Niall
New man: Matt Lodge says he can give back after his recruitment dominated headlines this time last year.
Opinion
NRL

A sanctuary for sinners, rugby league must be more frugal with its charity

Rugby league has helped reform many lost souls but another serious incident means the code has no choice but to be more clinical with its outreach.

  • by Phil Lutton
Putting the interests of ordinary Australians before those of the political class was one of the first promises made by Scott Morrison when he took over the leadership of the Liberal Party.
Analysis
Federal

Lower rates were once a political positive, but a cut will not be on Scott Morrison's wish list

Political rhetoric and economic reality are on a collision course.

  • by Shane Wright
Darren Weir leaves the RAD board hearing on Wednesday.
Analysis
Racing

From rags to riches to disgrace: Weir's career and reputation in ruins

The rise of Darren Weir was one of racing's great rags-to-riches stories, but it has ended in disgrace after he was disqualified from racing for four years.

  • by Michael Lynch
5G smartphones are launching in 2019.
Analysis
Technology

Why you should not buy a 5G phone in 2019

Let's put aside the hype for a moment and look at what a 5G smartphone in 2019 really means for you.

  • by Krishan Sharma
Jerome Powell's abrupt shift has bought the crumbling world economy some time.
Opinion
Markets

Bloodbath averted: The world economy may have been saved in the nick of time

The Fed chief's instincts may have just bought the world economy another year.

  • by Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
President Donald Trump espoused unity and bipartisanship in previous speeches but has failed to act on his promises.
Opinion
North America

Trump will call for 'unity' in State of the Union address. It's a scam

It's one of the most dispiriting rituals that attend State of the Union addresses in the Trump era but this time around, there's just no excuse for playing along.

  • by Greg Sargent
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Shadow Treasurer Chris Bowen was very blunt when addressing a concerned listener on radio last week.
Opinion
Tax

Tax the rich, not the helpless

Today, apparently, policy is king. The odd person who gets in the way of the ever-turning wheels is seemingly disposable.

  • by Nicholas Stuart
Commissioner Kenneth Hayne.
Letters
NSW

Cost of corporate greed is public's loss of faith

In the fallout from the banking royal commission, we are all poorer.

Jessie Tu
Opinion
Life & relationships

'Why is it OK to ban certain races on your dating profile?'

'You’d never find a job advertisement that discriminates applicants based on race. Why is it OK to put a race-based ban on your dating profile?'

  • by Jessie Tu
In the Herald dinkus
Opinion
NSW

In the Herald: February 6, 1965

The ballad of Winston, Doug and Ramblin' Bob.

  • by Brian Yatman
The development slated for Victoria Cross station in North Sydney.
Opinion
National

'Permanently destructive': new tower will make North Sydney's problems worse

There is a single site suitable for a civic centre in North Sydney and the state government is putting a building on it.

  • by Jeremy Dawkins
Kenneth Hayne's cautious approach minimises uncertainty.
Opinion
Banking & finance

'Why wait': challenge laid down to the banks and Parliament

Here's a way we can get some action from the banks without having to wait.

  • by Adele Ferguson
column 8 granny dinkus
Opinion
NSW

Column 8

Blanket mortgage bingo.

NAB Chairman Ken Henry and CEO Andrew Thorburn received a slap fromn the royal commissioner, Kenneth Hayne.
Opinion
Banking & finance

The banks haven't escaped unscathed, quite the contrary

The reaction to the royal commission's final report might suggest the major banks got off lightly. They didn't.

  • by Stephen Bartholomeusz
The hardest word: Elton John sang it, Treasurer Josh Frydenberg is feeling it. 
Opinion
Federal

It's getting absurd: Josh Frydenberg's struggle with one little word

Treasurer Josh Frydenberg can't find the words to apologise for attempts to avoid the royal commission on banking.

  • by Tony Wright
Trump's presidency is hanging by a thread - the economy.
Opinion
North America

Americans have finally wised up when it comes to Trump

Democrats in 2020 will have a receptive audience if they make the case that Trump has made the US less free, less united, less respected in the world, less safe and less decent as a people.

  • by Jennifer Rubin
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Commissioner Kenneth Hayne and Josh Frydenberg at a  photo opportunity on Friday.
Opinion
Banking & finance

Hayne report kicks true reform down the road ... again

Failure to tackle bank structure means that, in a decade or so, another treasurer will have to call another royal commission.

  • by Andrew Linden and Warren Staples
The Royal Commission into the Financial Services Industry. 12 February 2018. The Age News. Photo: Eddie Jim. ( Senior Counsel Rowena Orr in the middle with Mark Costello, left and Eloise Dais, right )
Opinion
Banking & finance

Quiet and determined: how a couple of lawyers stole the show

In popular culture lawyers are either bumptious self-important figures of fun or, at worst, greedy and immoral. Kenneth Hayne and Rowena Orr showed the profession in a much more flattering light.

  • by Duncan Fine
Retail investors had a win from buying up bank stocks while short sellers have been burnt.
Opinion
Banking & finance

Bank short sellers feeling $5b worth of Hayne pain

That noise you're hearing that's like a painful intake of breath is the sound of bank short sellers being squeezed - $5.3 billion worth of pain.

  • by Elizabeth Knight
Illustration: Andrew Dyson
Opinion
The economy

Never fear, Hayne is a new start – and not just for the banks

If you think that once the dust has settled on the royal commission we’ll find little has changed, you haven’t been paying attention.

  • by Ross Gittins
The Married at First Sight hosts.
Analysis
TV & radio

How much more reality TV can viewers take?

Nine and 10 stretch their programs beyond 90 minutes some nights – while Seven exceeds two hours.

  • by Michael Lallo
Businessman with hands cupped in front of him.
Analysis
Federal

Perverse perk: The 'dud' executives paid to quit

Many of the bureaucracy's leaders seem to expect a golden handshake upon their departure.

  • by Markus Mannheim
Michaela Banerji outside the Federal Circuit Court in Canberra in 2013, where she lost her initial application to stay her sacking.
Opinion
Federal

Will the High Court gag public servants?

We'll soon know whether sacking bureaucrats over their expression of political views is constitutional.

  • by Kieran Pender
Pioneer statistician Alison Harcourt in Canberra last month for the Australian of the year awards.
Federal

Alison Harcourt, the almost-forgotten genius

This remarkable woman's impact on Australian society almost went unnoticed.

  • by Markus Mannheim
Sir William Cole in 1952, when he worked in the Treasury.
Opinion
Federal

Telegraph boy to brilliant bureaucrat

Sir William Cole, 1926 to 2019, was among Australia's greatest public servants.

  • by Paddy Gourley
Can you sack someone for not disclosing a past criminal conviction? (Answer: not necessarily.)
Opinion
Federal

Panicking over an employee's past

A labour-hire firm that works for the APS provides a perfect example of how not to sack a recruit.

  • by John Wilson
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Minister for Finance Mathias Cormann addresses the media during a doorstop interview at Parliament House in Canberra on Tuesday 27 March 2018. fedpol Photo: Alex Ellinghausen
Opinion
Federal

The expenses lapdog or watchdog?

The public doesn't necessarily see politicians' travel spending as evidence of greed.

  • by Richard Mulgan
A World War II-era T-34 Soviet tank rehearses for a Victory Day military parade. Russian patriotism and nationalism is a powerful brew.
Opinion
Federal

Russia's shoe on the other foot

The long-downtrodden motherland has gained some hints of Western decadence, but little of its liberty.

  • by Mark Thomas
Centrelink and Medicare offices.
Opinion
Federal

Catching mice with privatised cats

We'll solve no social problems by whittling away at the government's role in providing services.

  • by John Falzon
Regulators have taken insufficient action against super fund trustees, a report finds.
Opinion
Federal

Super diagnosis over-egged, but prescription has merit

Our system has become so expensive and complicated that a government-run fund is warranted.

  • by Andrew Podger