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Treasurer Josh Frydenberg and Prime Minister Scott Morrison.

Battle over high-income tax cuts

Labor has hardened its position against tax breaks for high-income earners while also fighting the planned withdrawal of the temporary rebate for the lower paid.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison and Treasurer Josh Frydenberg.

Coalition spends big as border rhetoric shifts

Josh Frydenberg is getting plaudits for spending up to boost jobs growth and investment, but he and Scott Morrison are also sounding worryingly like Mark McGowan on borders.

Artificial intelligence could transform the Australian economy.

The missing link in Morrison government’s AI strategy

World leaders in artificial intelligence research are missing from the federal government’s artificial intelligence strategy. This needs to be addressed if we are to attract and retain the best talent.

Sinovac shot appears 94pc effective in real-world study

A study of more than 128,000 health workers in Indonesia found the vaccine prevented death by 98 per cent and hospitalisation by 96 per cent. Follow updates here.

Budget reply to tap into innovation debate

Opposition Leader Anthony Albanese will launch a program to mentor 2000 entrepreneurs in his response to what has been labelled a Labor budget because of its big spending.

The Treasurer ought to have put it this way

Here is the budget speech that Josh Frydenberg should have delivered on Tuesday night.

WHO panel calls COVID-19 this century’s ‘Chernobyl moment’

A new report says a meeting of world powers should boost preparedness for the next global pandemic.

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FEDERAL BUDGET

 Economists warn tax cuts for wealthy ‘very doubtful’

Tax cuts for high earners ‘doubtful’

Entrenched budget deficits will force tax rises, massive spending cuts or revoking income tax cuts for higher earners a few years from now, economists said.

The low and middle income tax offset was extended by 12 months to continue into the 2021-22 income year.

Forget the spin, extension of offset isn’t really a tax cut

Josh Frydenberg’s moves to extend a key tax offset in this week’s budget only defers a likely increase for workers.

The government is offering incentives to retirees to tap into their home equity.

Boomers enticed to spend their home equity

Two measures in the budget are nudging seniors to tap into home equity to fund their post-work lifestyles and spend on the economy.

Tourism industry to hold government to mid-2022 border reopening

The $50 billion industry said it was left empty-handed by the federal budget, but would hold the government to its mid-2022 border reopening as Qantas pushed back its international restart plans.

‘They’ve thrown a heap of money at us’: CEOs cheer stimulus

Business leaders gave the budget the thumbs up despite concerns about record deficits and government debt.

Companies

CBA chief executive Matt Comyn says the federal budget is “positive and supportive of ongoing growth in business lending and investment”.

CBA profit surges on higher lending to business

CBA says lending to business is growing at three times the average of the other banks and cash profit almost doubled in the March quarter.

Star offer could be worth $16.45 per Crown share: Macquarie

Analysts are bullish on the proposed tie-up, with JP Morgan, CLSA and E&P viewing The Star’s offer as ‘superior’ to Blackstone’s sweetened bid.

Former chief casino officer Michael Connolly told the royal commission that WA casino inspectors never looked for evidence of money laundering or criminal activity.

Casino regulator sold boat to Crown Resort manager fishing mate

WA’s former chief casino officer told an inquiry about fishing trips and friendships with Crown staff as a money laundering storm erupted in eastern states.

Coca-Cola API general manager Peter West

Coca-Cola Amatil’s COVID-19 lessons for new owner

Amatil’s strategies, including analysing sales postcode by postcode, will be copied by its new parent as Europe emerges from lockdowns.

Lex Greensill says dealings with SoftBank conflicted

Lex Greensill acknowledges conflicts of interest in having Japan’s SoftBank as an investor, but says Sanjeev Gupta was asked to sell his shares in the supply chain finance group.

Boral won’t stop buyback in wake of Seven bid

Boral says it’s full steam ahead with a share buyback for now, but it may change tack if market conditions shift.

CBA ready for buyback or special dividend

The country’s biggest and best-capitalised bank has an excess of capital that will only grow before the August board meeting to consider capital management initiatives.

Markets

Treasurer Josh Frydenberg delivers the budget.

CBA warns AAA rating faces ‘likely’ September downgrade

CBA fixed income strategists say that forecasts for continually rising debt could see Australia lose its AAA credit rating, which it has held since 2003.

 A freight train carrying iron ore from mine to port travels along a rail track in Australia.

Why the budget is already wrong, and why that’s a good thing

The booming iron ore price means the budget figures are probably undercooked and Treasurer Josh Frydenberg should expect a boost to the bottom line.

Regal’s Phil King. The hedge fund’s listed investment company has rewarded investors.

Regal fund maintains premium after 100pc gain

The Regal Investment Fund is one of the few hedge fund listed investment companies or trusts to trade above its net asset value.

ASX dips 0.7pc amid regional sell-off over US inflation fears

The Australian sharemarket tumbled for a second straight session, extending its fall away from its record high, as concerns over Wednesday’s US inflation report prompted a sell-off across regional markets.

Treasury’s forecasts more downbeat than the street

Treasury forecasts for the rate of economic growth released in the budget are more pessimistic than the RBA’s predictions. Market economists are somewhere between the two.

Opinion

Stage three tax cuts on collision course with political reality

The better-off were supposed to get their tax cuts six years after the lower paid got theirs. That’s not how anything is working out.

Chris Richardson

Contributor

Chris Richardson

The Treasurer ought to have put it this way

Here is the budget speech that Josh Frydenberg should have delivered on Tuesday night.

The AFR View

Editorial

The AFR View

Where does the budget leave Labor?

The Coalition’s great flip on deficits and spending has also opened the way for Labor to return to its own reforming tradition.

Richard Holden

Contributor

Richard Holden

Budget starts injecting the power of choice into aged care

If Australians are serious about aged care quality, they’ll have to accept higher taxes, more modest inheritances, or both.

Henry Cutler

Contributor

Australia is now a hostage to fortune

Australia has gone straight back to its recurring bad habit: the permanent spending of any temporary budgetary gain. It just assumes everything will keep going the government’s way.

The AFR View

Editorial

The AFR View

A fiscal revolution in a zero interest rate world

This big-spending budget exposes a shift in economic policy that turns the old fiscal rules upside down.

John Kehoe

Economics editor

John Kehoe
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Politics

Treasurer Josh Frydenberg has set a goal of creating 250,000 jobs over the next two years.

‘Disconnect’ in job market could thwart Frydenberg’s 250,000 target

Economists say barriers in the labour market could hinder the government’s objective of driving unemployment below 5 per cent.

More workers will be allowed to return to offices under the new rules.

The one problem budget cash splash can’t fix

Wages, wages, wages: it’s a problem that Treasury forecasts suggest won’t be addressed for four years – or two federal elections away.

Experts doubt the effectiveness of youth mental health services like Headspace.

Mental health experts question $280m for ‘abject failure’ Headspace

Funding for youth service provider Headspace will do little to stop Australia’s rising suicide rate in young people, say mental health experts.

Dismay at failure to extend paid parental leave scheme

Female business leaders welcomed much of the “women’s budget” but say paid parental leave should be extended to give both parents equal access.

No money for new quarantine camps a ‘glaring’ omission

The Victorian and Queensland governments said hotel quarantine was not a long-term solution for bringing home Australians, the return of international students or foreign workers.

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World

Health workers training in India earlier this year.

WHO panel calls COVID-19 this century’s ‘Chernobyl moment’

A new report says a meeting of world powers should boost preparedness for the next global pandemic.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson has been accused of escalating the crisis.

Boris Johnson served with court judgement over unpaid $968 debt

The court judgement was entered against the British Prime Minister for the sum of $968 - a move that comes in the wake of his use of funds to pay for renovations.

True rate of infections unknown: a roadside cash changer at Asemka Market in Jakarta, Indonesia.

Fears of south-east Asia COVID-19 outbreak as Ramadan ends

More than half of 6000 Indonesians caught trying to travel home to celebrate a Muslim holiday have tested positive to COIVD-19, sparking fears of a regional pandemic emergency.

Cameron’s flattery on show in his lobbying for Greensill

Former British prime minister David Cameron’s relentless lobbying has been exposed in his messages, which have just been released.

BioNTech to begin making vaccines in south-east Asia

The German pharmaceutical giant that collaborated with Pfizer on its coronavirus vaccine plans to establish a manufacturing plant in Singapore.

Property

The AWOF  portfolio includes stakes in some of the country’s best-known office towers, including the Quay Quarter Tower in Sydney.

AMP Capital’s $7b office fund a merger candidate

The potential exit of the fund would put more pressure on the investment platform, whose private markets business is being readied for an ASX spin-off.

Mark Steinert in Melbourne on Wednesday.

You’ll lose staff: Stockland head warns bosses resisting flexible work

In a post-pandemic world where flexible working no longer carries a stigma, landlords and employers can’t go back to the past, Stockland boss warns.

Sydney property investor Katherine Stainsby is upbeat about the housing market and plans to buy more property this year.

First-home buyers now less optimistic

The mood of buyers soured in the past three months as house prices surged and stock dwindled.

Fringe suburbs earning best returns for investors

Analysis by CoreLogic has found at least 200 Australian suburbs are now earning above 5 per cent gross rental yields, offering investors positive cash flow from the outset.

Lendlease passes $2b in Barangaroo apartment sales

Demand for luxury apartments is strong says developer Lendlease, which has sold more than $2 billion in high-end stock at its Barangaroo developments.

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Wealth

The government is offering incentives to retirees to tap into their home equity.

Boomers enticed to spend their home equity

Two measures in the budget are nudging seniors to tap into home equity to fund their post-work lifestyles and spend on the economy.

Think twice before shifting pension to SMSF

Anyone entitled to a government defined benefit super pension should hang on to it for the annual inflation-indexed income, writes John Wasiliev.

Make the most of ‘catch up’ super contribution rules before June 30

Three groups of people stand to get more into their retirement nest egg by taking action before the end of this financial year.

Technology

Solar power converters at a plant in Central Australia.

Taylor backs technology to reduce carbon emissions

Federal Energy Minister Angus Taylor wants technology to help Australia reach its carbon reduction targets.

A render of Nine’s North Sydney headquarters at 1 Denison Street.

Engineering firm involved in Nine HQ hit by cyber raid

The Sydney-based company confirmed the attack and said it had engaged external IT and cyber security experts.

Lack of local RNA manufacturing capacity has hindered Australia’s vaccine defence against the global COVID-19 pandemic

New agency to fix supply chain gaps

A new agency will work with business in a $107 million program to bolster critical supplies, starting with medicines and agricultural chemicals.

Work & Careers

A national approach to the impact of closed borders on universities is critical, says Michael Wesley.

Morrison abandons unis in quest to get students back on campus

As the federal government reviews its international education strategy, it has left it to universities to work out how to get students back.

Josh Frydenberg’s apprentice show: ‘You’re hired’

Extensions to the COVID-19-inspired schemes will allow construction businesses to invest in the people and equipment needed to service a strong pipeline of infrastructure work, says an apprentice and his boss.

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Life & Luxury

Ray Hughes’ Chinese art lands amid political storm

The late Sydney art dealer Ray Hughes was ahead of a cultural curve on contemporary Chinese art. Now son Evan is selling some of the more politically charged works from his estate.

Fishing is just one of the activities at Poronui luxury lodge.

Why it’s time to head to New Zealand’s North Island

It’s often overlooked for its southern cousin’s majestic vistas, but offers its own natural wonders, from epic diving to the country’s highest ski field.

Philanthropist Daniel Besen,with Emily Floyd, sculptor and tenant at Collingwood Yards Arts Precinct.

Sculpting an arts hub from an old TAFE

The founding chairman of Collingwood Yards is leading a charge to restore the creative heart of Melbourne’s inner north with a ‘joyous cacophony’ of creative tenants.

Dior Homme’s autumn 2021 collection was inspired by the energy of street artist Kenny Scharf.

For these fashion designers, art is more than a flirtation

It’s a short hop from needle and thread to paintbrush and canvas for creators on the cutting edge.

Cirque du Soleil reinvented the circus with jaw-dropping acrobatics, live music and flamboyant costumes.

Cirque du Soleil’s return could be its most challenging feat yet

After cancelling dozens of shows and shedding most of its workforce, the vaunted Canadian circus faces an uphill struggle to bounce back.

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