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Featured Opinion

Rebooting farm productivity will help achieve climate goals

Delivering sustainability outcomes is paramount for farmers,  but more work needs to be done to understand the challenges in the sector as costs rise faster than revenues.

Jared Greenville

Head of ABARES

Jared Greenville

Dunkley sets up Labor’s 2025 win

While the Liberals look down rabbit holes like crime and refugees, Labor plans to claim vindication on economic policy.

Craig Emerson

Former Labor minister and economist

Craig Emerson

If we don’t take advantage of ASEAN’s rewards, others will step in

Australia’s trade and investment with its giant Asian political and economic neighbour is seriously underdone. Where should we start to change things?

Khoon Goh

Economist

Khoon Goh

Dunkley shows Liberals can win Teal seats

Defeat for Liberals in the byelection offers “blue shoots” in seats that turned teal if they focus on the economy.

Tim Wilson and Jason Falinski

Contributor

Dunkley exposes further shift away from major parties

With the core demographics exposed and projected nationally, the byelection points to a narrow majority for Labor in 2025.

John Black

Election analyst

John Black

It’s a mistake to think about ASEAN in binary terms

It is unrealistic to think the outcome of this week’s summit will be the next step in Australia building a broader network of Asian allies against China.

James Curran

International editor

James Curran

The Liberals go downmarket after Dunkley

The Coalition should have used the Sunday morning after Dunkley to start talking about an alternative economic narrative that would have broad appeal.

The AFR View

Editorial

The AFR View

Albanese claims vindication as well as victory

Labor has reason to be pleased by a moderately sized swing against the government in the Dunkley byelection, but with no knockout blow.

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More From Today

Ukraine needs total Western support - and so does Israel

Both are fighting for Western civilisation - one against Russian imperialism, the other against Iranian-backed Islamism. And we should want both to win.

  • Niall Ferguson
The Albemarle lithium hydroxide plant at Kemerton in WA.

In WA, a lesson in the tough reality of processing lithium

Albemarle’s emerging plant is a living example that reality is much harder than Australia’s rhetoric about more downstream processing in lithium hydroxide.

  • Jennifer Hewett

Downer’s stoush with KPMG a big test for corporate Australia

Cosy relationships between big four audit firms and directors have greased corporate Australia’s wheels for decades. Now they are coming under pressure.

  • Anthony Macdonald
Capitalism is about harnessing the energy of self-interest.

Why we need an Australian Institute for Applied Ethics

Capitalism depends on government to provide a trusted framework of rules around it. But when politics turns into reality TV, we must ask the ethical questions ourselves.

  • Ken Henry
House prices are heating up again as supply remains weak.

Why rising house prices make RBA rate cuts less likely

The latest data from the housing market says supply remains weak, and prices are rising again. That will probably give the RBA a headache.

  • James Thomson
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Macquarie has faced heat from Swiss investors Julius Bear.

Macquarie stoush exposes private capital’s ‘make-believe’ problem

The dispute between the investment bank and Switzerland’s Julius Baer highlights the problem of how valuations in private markets lag those in public markets.

  • James Thomson
Qantas CEO Vanessa Hudson.

Vanessa Hudson is not alone. Why women teeter on ‘glass cliff’

Female workers are deemed more likely to rise to the top when the job is dire, the risk of failure is high and men are less interested in the gig.

  • Pilita Clark

We don’t believe it. A smart home device that actually works?

Every six months or so, we perform in-depth experiments to see if smart home devices are still as bad as ever. This time, we got a different answer than usual.

  • John Davidson
BYD Seal Performance sedan

BYD’s fast new EV sedan is hot on Tesla’s tail

The Chinese makers of the BYD Seal Performance Sedan are so proud of its acceleration they’ve put a badge on the boot boasting of the rate. But this fast EV has other surprises, too.

  • Tony Davis
Brad Banducci may be leaving Woolworths later this year, but his work is not done yet.

Big profit margins at Woolworths and Coles are only part of the story

Australia’s supermarkets do make higher profits than offshore peers. But one of the sector’s top analysts says there is an important reason why.

  • Anthony Macdonald
Meta chief executive Mark Zuckerberg before a Senate committee in the United States. Meta says it will no longer pay for news content in Australia.

The time has come for parliament to fire its cannon – at Meta

The owner of Facebook is an unavoidable partner for many businesses. Our response to their refusal to pay for news will be watched closely around the world.

  • Michael Miller

Yesterday

News Corp executive chairman Michael Miller.

The Australian considers moving with The Times in new radio play

A proposal to expand The Australian’s daily podcast The Front is going upstairs at News Corp; Barrenjoey’s two-sided Southern Cross deals.

  • Sam Buckingham-Jones
Jamie Pherous is the enigmatic founder of Corporate Travel Management.

Corporate Travel and Reece trip up traders in wild reporting season

They are two very different companies. But the difference between earlier remarks and their final results set the scene for massive share price swings.

  • Jonathan Shapiro
Coles CEO Leah Weckert is in a technology, as well as pricing battle with her supermarket rivals.

Customers may hate supermarket anti-theft tech, but investors don’t

Coles share price rise is partly due to its ability to take advantage of tech like artificial intelligence to stop thieves and appeal to more shoppers.

  • Paul Smith
Western Sydney University Chancellor Jennifer Westacott (left) launching the Australian Universities Accord last month.

Trouble with the universities accord goes from ridiculous to unreal

The report is little more than a la-la-land wish list drawn up by vice chancellors, campaigning groups and the public sector.

  • Salvatore Babones
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CA ANZ chief executive Ainslie van Onselen.

Accountants body shows a disregard for its public interest duty

Readers’ letters on Chartered Accountants ANZ’s poor oversight, Australia’s Indo-Pacific challenge, why uni fees are too high, and the diminishing role of the post office.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Philippines President Ferdinand R Marcos jnr last week.

ASEAN must anchor regional security through co-operation

Australia needs ASEAN leaders now, more than ever, to be an effective anchor for security in the region.

  • Peter Drysdale and Mari Pangestu
While the market is pricing in a US rate cut in June, the picture looks different in Australia.

Don’t bet on deep rate cuts from the RBA

While the market is pricing in rate cuts in the US as soon as June, inflation and the real rate argument is far more finely balanced in Australia.

  • Chris Dickman

This Month

The Fair Work Commission is considering whether working from home rights should be incorporated into modern awards.

No productivity revolution coming from the couch

Working from home to get through an emergency is not the same as the concerted drive for growth and productivity Australia desperately needs.

  • The AFR View
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg.

Meta opts to fight the type of journalism it once lauded

The company behind Facebook and Instagram had its best quarter in Australia ever. It’s decided to put more value in the latest viral meme than quality content.

  • Sam Buckingham-Jones
Opposition leader Peter Dutton with the Liberal candidate in Dunkley, Nathan Conroy.

Dutton’s Dunkley plan is crime and utes, not cost of living

The opposition wants to talk about everything except the hip-pocket pain that voters are most exercised about.

  • Laura Tingle