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Victor Susman and Andrew Fraser

Convicted cocaine trafficker launches defamation action

A former criminal lawyer who served jail time is taking a former business partner to court.

  • by Stephen Brook and Samantha Hutchinson

Latest

Illustration: Cathy Wilcox.
Letters
Letters

Time to bring this tragic human farce to an end

Age readers have their say on a Tamil family’s continuing detention on Christmas Island.

Opinion
SMSFs

End-of-financial-year essentials for SMSF trustees

As the end of the financial year approaches, it is a good time for trustees to do an annual check-up on their Self-Managed Super Fund.

  • by John Maroney
Borrowing to buy a new home in a land lease community provides people with greater flexibility about how and when they downsize or retire.

Borrowing to fund a land-lease community home comes of age

The ability to borrow to buy a new home in a land-lease community provides people with greater flexibility about how and when they will downsize to retire.

  • by Rachel Lane
About 40 per cent of Australians are working from home, opening up a range of new potential tax deductions.

Why 2020-21 could provide your biggest tax refund yet

Unprecedented working-from-home tax deductions plus tax cuts offered by the federal government mean more than half of taxpayers can expect their biggest tax refund this year.

  • by Joel Gibson

Property must be exempt from CGT to qualify for super downsizing rules

Downsizer contribution rules permit up to $300,000 from each spouse to be contributed to superannuation from the sale proceeds of a jointly owned house sale.

  • by Noel Whittaker
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Retirement income products are being launched but, as always, there are pros and cons
Opinion
Investing

Investments that promise security of income have drawbacks

While retirement income products have their place, their pros and cons need to be fully understood.

  • by John Collett
Sikander Kang with his then newborn son, Viraj, in Melbourne in April 2018, and daughter Sehar. Viraj is now three.

Keeping hold of our humanity in a pandemic

A more responsive, transparent and flexible approach by governments to extreme cases involving spouses and young children is necessary if we are to meet the standard of a civilised society.

  • The Age's View
Ollie Robinson took two wickets on debut at Lord’s before his day turned sour.
Opinion
England

Ollie Robinson the fall guy for England cricket’s institutional racism

Ollie Robinson has become the lightning rod for England’s generational failure to adequately deal with racism

  • by Malcolm Conn
Archibald Prize 2021 finalist
Hong Fu’s ‘Professor Mabel Lee’.

Archibald 2021 just like Goldilocks: most works not too bad and not too good

Inclined to focus on the former rather than the latter, critic John McDonald delves into the judges choices and explains how he warmed up to the bogong moth jumper.

  • by John McDonald
New parents Moe and Sarah Haider have been separated from their baby boy for a week since his birth.

Lack of compassion in our rigid response to COVID threat

In our determination to keep Australia COVID-free, we are at risk of losing something of greater importance.

  • by Chip Le Grand
Ollie Robinson on the field at Lord’s.
Opinion
England

No excuse or alibi for bigotry: Timeout for twit tweets is right for the times

At first glance, England’s standing down of debutant fast bowler Ollie Robinson for offensive, but old, tweets seems unfair. But there is a wider context.

  • by Greg Baum
Afterpay sponsors fashion week to promote its services
Opinion
BNPL

US class action against Afterpay exposes the hidden cost of BNPL

The legal action itself may be frivolous but it brings the spectre of regulation back on the radar for Afterpay, which is hoping to hit paydirt in the US. 

  • by Elizabeth Knight
Please Explain podcast.

Frosty relations between the ABC and the government show no signs of warming

Today on Please Explain federal political reporter Lisa Visentin joins Nathanael Cooper after ABC managing director David Anderson’s appearance at Senate estimates on Monday.

  • by Nathanael Cooper
Time is running out for the Afghan interpreters who helped Australian troops in Afghanistan.

For mateship’s sake, get Afghan interpreters out - fast!

The US and its allies are pulling out but 300 Afghan interpreters are still in the country and likely to be Taliban targets.

  • by Peter FitzSimons
People line-up for a COVID-19 vaccine on June 2.

To defeat COVID we need to think outside the bureaucracy box

Our bureaucratic systems are built for the predictable needs of a population, but this won’t help us with volatile situations such as the pandemic.

  • by Anna Peeters
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Australotitan cooperensis roamed the shores of the inland sea of Australia 95 million years ago.
Opinion
Science

Discovery of Australia’s largest dinosaur to challenge America’s dino dominance

Thanks to Jurassic Park, most kids know an awful lot about American dinosaurs, but we have a growing list of unique beasts.

  • by Matthew McCurry
AMC sold more than $US500 million in new shares on Thursday (Friday AEST) in a matter of hours.

The ‘long squeeze’: Reddit crowd could be trapped by the share frenzy they created

The latest attempt by US retail investors to squeeze short-sellers is producing some peculiar outcomes, including a squeeze on the investors themselves.

  • by Stephen Bartholomeusz
Apple’s control over the app world continues to cause friction.
Opinion
Software

The Apple fury is building. Here’s how peace can be declared

Apple’s dictatorship over iPhone apps continues to upset many. Here are two solutions to solve the problem.

  • by Shira Ovide
Genuine bundles of Chinese one-hundred yuan banknotes and U.S. one-hundred dollar banknotes are arranged for a photograph at the Counterfeit Notes Response Center of KEB Hana Bank in Seoul, South Korea, on Monday, Aug. 14, 2017. China's factory output and investment?slowed?somewhat in July, according to data released today, yet the yuan appeared not to take the data as negative, if in fact it's paying attention to it at all. Photographer: SeongJoon Cho/Bloomberg
Analysis
Currencies

China’s banks are bursting with US dollars, and that’s a problem

A mountain of dollars on deposit in China has grown so large that banks are struggling to loan the currency and traders say it poses a risk to official efforts to control a fast-rising yuan.

  • by Winni Zhou and Tom Westbrook
I don’t often go to the funerals of patients who have died under my care.
Opinion
Medicine

Going to my patient’s funeral honoured our bond

I had thought that I had known David but what I knew was really only a part of who he was.

  • by Ian Kerridge
Innovators like Elon Musk used to focus on creating new products that didn’t exist before. Now. they are taking old industries and working out how to reinvent them.

Reinventing the wheel: big tech is shaking up the world in a new way

A restaurant meal served to you by Tesla. An Apple store that doesn’t seem to be selling anything. An Amazon haircut. After years of inventing new products, big tech is causing new upheaval.

  • by Matthew Lynn
Once Thanmaya Navada wished for more online learning, now she is aware of its limitations.
Opinion
University

All I can think is: what am I paying for?

With rising fees and falling class time, domestic university students are starting to feel like cash cows.

  • by Thanmaya Navada
Lockdown restrictions in Melbourne were extended for another seven days.

Victorians are suffering and need mental health support

Demand for psychologists is exceeding supply amid the coronavirus pandemic, and we need tangible solutions to our mental health crisis. 

  • by Tegan Carrison
The profits of big miners are up for grabs.

New deal sets scene for Australia, China to squabble over who gets to tax big miners

The G7 agreement puts Australia’s claim to tax the profits of BHP and Rio in play.

  • by Peter Hartcher
Foreign Affairs Minister Marise Payne has hit out at closed trials in China but Australia does not have clean hands.
Opinion
Courts

Australia takes China to task for secret trials, but one could be happening here right now

Secret trials are the hallmark of authoritarian regimes yet Witness J was tried in complete secrecy in Canberra.

  • by Kieran Pender
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LETTERS
Letters

The QR codes won’t work unless we all use them

Age readers discuss QR code compliance and Melbourne’s latest lockdown.

Grab your partners as Phil Williams takes to the stage.

Heritage battle for Albany Rd Toorak hots up

Old money Melbourne is keen to slap a preservation order on a house before Friday’s auction.

  • by Stephen Brook and Samantha Hutchinson

Evidence criminals have infiltrated Qantas should serve as a wake-up call

The federal government must find a balance between giving enforcement agencies the ability to crack down on crime gangs and protecting civil liberties.

  • The Age's View
The Blues lost to West Coast.

‘Issues with their coaching and issues with their list’

Michael Gleeson, Jake Niall and Caroline Wilson discuss the fallout at Carlton after another disappointing loss and what changes could be coming at Ikon Park.

Joe Root of England collides with Dom Sibley in a botched single.
Analysis
Test cricket

Timid England begin Ashes preparation in reverse

England’s meek draw against New Zealand in a rain-marred first Test has proved an unlikely Ashes boost for Australia

  • by Malcolm Conn
National Australia Bank in the AUSTRAC firing line

Impact regulating: How AUSTRAC launched its blitz on money laundering

A well crafted flexing of regulatory muscle has sealed AUSTRAC’s position as the most potent, feared and now media-savvy watchdog in the country. 

  • by Elizabeth Knight
Even royal families are all unhappy in their own way.

Meghan and Harry keep the royal ties in naming newborn Lilibet Diana

After actively distancing themselves from the British royals, the prince and princess-in exile name their daughter after two of its most famous women.

  • by Kate Halfpenny
Kate Winslet in Mare of Easttown.
Opinion
Parenting

Kate Winslet’s Mare of Easttown is the anti-self care hero we need

At this moment in time, the portrayal of a woman who has gone past the point of burnout is the most relatable character we’ve seen in months.

  • by Natalie Reilly
Please Explain podcast.

How to navigate the complicated tax deductions around working from home

Today on Please Explain, senior economics writer Jessica Irvine joins Nathanael Cooper to help navigate the complexities of tax deductions.

  • by Nathanael Cooper
Izaia Perese.
Opinion
Wallabies

The other Izzy: Why a hard-running Waratah is my Wallabies bolter

Having blooded eight Wallabies debutants in 2020, it would be good if Dave Rennie didn’t need to pick ‘newbies’ this year. But the form of one uncapped Tah may prove irresistible.

  • by Wayne Smith
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Inflation fears have global sharemarkets on edge.

Uncharted territory: The global economy has everyone guessing

We’ve not experienced such a quick and steep economic crash and bounce back, with such massive fiscal stimulus, before. This has made every piece of data a huge event.

  • by Stephen Bartholomeusz
Scott Morrison likes to tell a sunny story.

Scott Morrison’s the man for optimistic narratives but one day Australia will need hard truths

A conversation about what risk the nation is prepared to live with is coming but can this government do it with the honesty and complexity required?

  • by Sean Kelly
Prime Minister Scott Morrison.
Opinion
ABC

ABC versus the government is a song that remains the same

Tensions between the ABC and the government have once again boiled over, despite Scott Morrison’s intentions to steer well clear of the ABC controversies his predecessors delighted in stoking.

  • by Stephen Brook
Professor Jose Polo in front of images of model embryos.
Opinion
Science

Embryo research law needs tweaking to catch up with science

Australia needs to revise its legislation around research into early human life, to reflect new international recommendations and allow crucial breakthroughs to happen.

  • by John Carroll
Prime Minister Scott Morrison had another lever to stimulate wage growth that wasn’t simply opening borders.

Morrison needs the gumption to save business (and the unions) from their folly

It would be bad for our economy for us to stay a hermit kingdom. But it’s wrong to imagine that re-opening our borders would immediately strengthen the recovery given low wage growth.

  • by Ross Gittins
LETTERS
Letters

It’s up to all of us to hold our leaders to account

Age readers discuss ministerial responsibility, personal responsibility and relative risk.

Josh Frydenberg’s children, Gemma and Blake, with mum Amie during the Budget speech.

New partner in the Frydenberg family

The wife of the Treasurer is celebrating a major work promotion.

  • by Stephen Brook and Samantha Hutchinson

Global approach to vaccination will deliver long-term dividends

Resources committed today to combat COVID-19 will deliver a healthy return in years to come.

  • The Age's View
The incredible scene set at Optus Stadium for the Dreamtime blockbuster between Richmond and Essendon.
Opinion
AFL 2021

Four Points: Dream blockbusters on the road, Shai on the way, hands off the back

At Optus Stadium on Saturday night was an event bigger than the game itself, and one that has gained a solid foothold in the imagination of the football-following public. It was the whole event, not just the contest, that drew people to the game.

  • by Michael Gleeson
Federal Education Minister Alan Tudge addresses The Age Schools Summit.
Opinion
Education

To improve Australian schools, cut-and-paste won’t cut it

Adopting the practices of high-performing nations on PISA will not, on its own, improve Australia’s educational performance.

  • by Peter Adams
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Regan (Millicent Simmonds), Marcus (Noah Jupe) and Evelyn (Emily Blunt) brave the unknown in A Quiet Place Part II.

How Melbourne became A Quiet Place and now I’m stuck in a horror movie

I saw A Quiet Place II a week and a half ago, and the next morning I was plunged into my very own real-life horror movie called A Quiet Place II: Return to Lockdown.

  • by Danny Katz
Rory Burns was left holding the baby when all the others had gone.

The fundamental issue with England’s Test team

England have got it the wrong way round. The main pace bowlers are above 30, while the batsmen are green about the gills.

  • by Scyld Berry
Safety first: People queue up for COVID-19 vaccination at the Melbourne convention centre.

No jab, no say: Either join the fight to keep us all safe, or stop complaining

Complacency by the public but more so by bureaucrats and political leaders has been our weakest link.

  • by Jon Faine
Prime Minister Scott Morrison is leaning towards mandating vaccination for aged care workers.

Morrison government has to do its job better before mandating vaccinations

The cornerstone of a legitimate vaccine mandate is that you don’t mandate until you’ve exhausted other options.

  • by Dr Katie Attwell