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Smoke from the fire north of Beaufort, photographed from a helicopter on Saturday.

Scramble to set up camp ahead of extreme fire danger

The Wimmera region is slated to have catastrophic fire danger on Wednesday, while extreme fire danger is predicted for five of Victoria’s nine weather districts.

  • 1 hr ago
  • Callum Godde and Cassandra Morgan
Wages growth is adding to pressure on consumer prices.

Smaller minimum wage rise needed to fight inflation: business

The Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry is preparing to argue for a smaller increase in the minimum wage than it was prepared to accept last year.

  • Michael Read

Unis that would pay the most – and the least – under ‘envy tax’ plan

Just six of the country’s 41 universities would bankroll half of the annual contributions to the higher education future fund proposed in the Albanese government’s universities accord.

  • Julie Hare

‘Paradigm shift’: How to switch to spending in retirement

After decades spent saving, lean into the fear, plan obsessively and let go of the guilt, experts say.

  • Joanna Mather

Wage growth drives inflation, average pay tops $100k

Treasury analysis shows that decade high wages growth that has pushed the average fulltime pay above $100,000 is now the biggest driver of consumer price inflation.

  • Ronald Mizen

BCA demands 12-month delay in climate reporting

The Albanese government “should be taking the time to get it right”, argues Business Council of Australia boss Bran Black.

  • Patrick Durkin

Opinion & Analysis

Keating’s strategic illusion dies hard

The former prime minister’s timid isolationism, leaving others to do the heavy lifting, has its roots deep in Labor’s history.

As budget bonanza flows, fiscal caution is the first casualty

The rivers of resources gold coming into the government’s coffers are turning into most expensive marginal seat strategy in the nation’s history.

University success starts with fixing school performance first

The Universities Accord social equity aspiration depends on students being ready to study at a higher level after year 12.

The AFR View

Editorial

The AFR View

The universities accord is like one giant déjà vu

The report has big ambitions. So did the 2008 Bradley review. They are not too dissimilar in scope and intent.

Julie Hare

Education editor

Julie Hare
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More From Today

Prime Minister John Curtin (right) and US southwest Pacific commander General Douglas MacArthur.

Keating’s strategic illusion dies hard

The former prime minister’s timid isolationism, leaving others to do the heavy lifting, has its roots deep in Labor’s history.

  • Alex McDermott
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese writes and signs ‘No Change To WA GST’ on the forearm of a West Australian reporter on Monday.

As budget bonanza flows, fiscal caution is the first casualty

The rivers of resources gold coming into the government’s coffers are turning into most expensive marginal seat strategy in the nation’s history.

  • Chris Richardson

Yesterday

Having been the first person in his family to go to university, Education Minister Jason Clare wants to extend the ladder for others.

University success starts with fixing school performance first

The Universities Accord social equity aspiration depends on students being ready to study at a higher level after year 12.

  • The AFR View
Education Minister Jason Clare with the universities report on Sunday.

The universities accord is like one giant déjà vu

The report has big ambitions. So did the 2008 Bradley review. They are not too dissimilar in scope and intent.

  • Julie Hare
Richard Marles, Greg Moriarty and Angus Campbell.

Marles rips into defence ‘culture’

Defence Minister Richard Marles has sharpened criticisms of his own department, arguing there are “issues of culture” which need challenging.

  • John Kehoe
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10 big ideas in the universities shake-up

From doubling the numbers of students to a ‘Robin Hood’ tax on rich institutions: Here are some of the biggest recommendations in the universities accord and what they mean.

  • Julie Hare
Education minister Jason Clare launching with universities accord at Western Sydney University with Energy Minister Chris Bowen and UWS vice chanceller Jennifer Westacott.

Bright, poor students guaranteed a uni spot

Aspiring university students whose families earn less than $54,000 a year will be guaranteed a place in a degree if they meet admission benchmarks.

  • Julie Hare
Paul Keating at 80: never really understood the Indo-Pacific region.

Keating’s quaint defence of Australia doesn’t grasp regional power politics

Labor has put aside two absurd features of the Keating era: a defence policy designed to deal with direct invasion and the diminution of our US alliance

  • Alexander Downer

Atlassian pays $92m tax bill after years of ATO talks

The software developer has struck a transfer pricing agreement with the Tax Office and has agreed to retain intellectual property in Australia that it will pay future tax on.

  • John Kehoe
The key findings of the Accord make it all the more remarkable that our universities have achieved as much as they have.

Universities accord report highlights funding shortage

If Australia is to have a world-class university system to sustain our standard of living in a highly competitive world, we are going to need to invest far more in it.

  • Mark Scott
A university education needs to be accessible to all, says Jason Clare.

‘Wealth tax’ for top unis in $10b funding shake-up

A major review of higher education has recommended a return to demand-driven funding to get more poor students into university; a $10 billion infrastructure fund; an independent tertiary education commission; and bonuses paid based on graduation.

  • Updated
  • Julie Hare
Jason Clare says ambitious targets for tertiary education are essential to ensure the future economy is robust.

Universities’ accord ‘blueprint for the next decade’: Clare

It will need political buy in, not just to get legislation passed in the coming months and year, but over the long-term – over successive governments and economic roundabouts.

  • Julie Hare

This Month

Russia invaded Ukraine two years ago, and the bombs are still falling.

The sad reality is that Ukraine is outgunned and outmanned

Strategic analysts were adamant either that Ukraine would fall or Russia would buckle. Two years later, neither has happened.

  • James Curran
Inflation is expected to moderate.

High tax rates fuelling avoidance schemes

High personal tax rates are spurring the use of trusts, companies, SMSFs and negatively geared property to minimise tax, accountants and tax practitioners say.

  • John Kehoe
Despite the media hype around “Swiftnomics” and “Swiftflation”, the Australian leg of the Eras Tour is expected to add just $10 million to the economy.

The economic boost from Taylor Swift is a lot smaller than you think

Despite the media hype around “Swiftonomics” and “Swiftflation”, the Australian leg of the Eras Tour is expected to add just $10 million to the economy.

  • Michael Read
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Defence minister Richard Marles announcing surface feet plans on Tuesday.

Navy shipbuilder Austal flags settlement to avoid US litigation

The shipbuilder has enlisted the US and Australian defence departments for support in its negotiations with the DOJ and SEC.

  • Brad Thompson
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken  and Prime Minister Anthony Albanese embrace. But will the love always be there?

What’s Plan B if America never goes back to normal?

Paul Keating has once again asked whether the US alliance shapes Australia’s view of the world more than it should.

  • Bec Strating

Divorce, trusts and negative gearing: the price of high taxes

High tax-paying families are increasingly exploring extreme strategies – including divorce – to make it easier to qualify for subsidies and benefits, writes John Kehoe.

  • John Kehoe
Images of the Beaufort fire.

Firefighters battle ‘potentially catastrophic’ breakdowns in Vic blaze

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has thanked Victorian firefighters as another blaze ripped through the state’s west, forcing thousands to evacuate.

  • Gus McCubbing
Artist’s impression of Navantia’s Tasman class warship, a Tier 2 corvette or light frigate.

Bold navy plan needs backing with hard cash

Australia reaped a resources bonanza from China’s rise as the workshop to the world. Now some of that needs to be redirected as a national security insurance premium.

  • The AFR View