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    Latest

    Rising inflation tests RBA’s ‘limited tolerance’

    More rate rises could be needed, as soon as August, after Reserve Bank noted rising inflation “increased the risk” rates would not rein in CPI as quick as forecast.

    • 47 mins ago
    • Ronald Mizen
    Queensland will review its housing tax structure.

    Queensland mulls expansion of stamp duty discounts in tax shake-up

    Expanding stamp-duty concessions and overhauling land tax in Queensland will be considered as part of a new tax shake-up.

    • James Hall

    ‘A cruel joke’: Why AUKUS might leave Australia stranded

    A group of defence experts says that the Albanese government is on course for a financial and strategic AUKUS disaster, in the final part of an exclusive series.

    • James Curran

    Morrison’s ‘longest night’: Inside the making of AUKUS

    The military agreement is a mess and risks leaving Australia with no submarine capability at all by the late 2030s. The cloak of secrecy that secured the deal could now be its undoing.

    • James Curran

    Super giant seeks tech stock ‘second wave’ after delivering 11.3pc

    Rising tech stocks helped land an 11.3 per cent return for Australian Retirement Trust superannuation members, but unlisted property was still a drag.

    • Hannah Wootton

    Why people with cancer don’t get the full benefit of clinical trials

    Australian researchers say regulators should mandate the requirement to share data.

    • Jill Margo

    Opinion & Analysis

    Central banks have done their job. Now others must do theirs

    Central bank independence from governments has proved its worth yet again. But it is politicians who now have to step up reforms that cannot be put off.

    Augustin Carstens

    Central banker

    Augustin Carstens

    On AUKUS, Australia must catch up, not start again – yet again

    Australia’s political, diplomatic and defence chiefs need to work with AUKUS counterparts in America and Britain to find a way through the gridlock.

    The AFR View

    Editorial

    The AFR View

    AUKUS ‘moonshot’ may be a tragically expensive failure

    It is alarming that both Coalition and Labor politicians fail to acknowledge the risk that Australia could be left with no submarine capability by the end of the 2030s.

    James Curran

    International editor

    James Curran

    The public sector is the key to Australia’s productivity puzzle

    There is some cause for cautious optimism for increased productivity in the healthcare sector if outcomes can be more accurately measured and assessed.

    Alex Robson

    Productivity Commission deputy chair

    Alex Robson
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    More From Today

    The Bank of England has now reached its inflation targets.

    Central banks have done their job. Now others must do theirs

    Central bank independence from governments has proved its worth yet again. But it is politicians who now have to step up reforms that cannot be put off.

    • Augustin Carstens
    James Curran’s AUKUS series is timely.

    On AUKUS, Australia must catch up, not start again – yet again

    Australia’s political, diplomatic and defence chiefs need to work with AUKUS counterparts in America and Britain to find a way through the gridlock.

    • The AFR View

    AUKUS ‘moonshot’ may be a tragically expensive failure

    It is alarming that both Coalition and Labor politicians fail to acknowledge the risk that Australia could be left with no submarine capability by the end of the 2030s.

    • James Curran

    Yesterday

    The quality of healthcare outcomes has risen, but so has the cost.

    The public sector is the key to Australia’s productivity puzzle

    There is some cause for cautious optimism for increased productivity in the healthcare sector if outcomes can be more accurately measured and assessed.

    • Alex Robson
    Nuclear power would cost households at least $200 more a year says Rod Sims.

    There is a respectable economic argument for nationalised nuclear

    The bottom line is that there are sound public choice arguments for the government to build and own nuclear power plants.

    • Sinclair Davidson
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    June

    The Suncorp deal only adds about 2.5 per cent to its market share in home loans and will keep ANZ the smallest of the big four.

    Chalmers’ ANZ-Suncorp merger approval is ironic for bank competition

    The whole drawn-out process could end up discouraging market dynamism by offering no way out to the smaller banks lacking the economies of scale to compete effectively.

    • The AFR View
    Reserve Bank of Australia deputy governor Andrew Hauser.

    RBA’s new Englishman tells Aussies: you’ve forgotten how rich you are

    If Australians don’t appreciate their fortune, as Andrew Hauser correctly points out, they may not be well placed to preserve it.

    • Michael Stutchbury
    Former AFL CEO Gillon McLachlan will step into a big new role at Tabcorp.

    Businesses failing to weigh wider risks

    Readers’ letters on the need for boards to consider risks beyond their organisation; the links between gambling and sport; and the fight against inflation.

    The reformed safeguard mechanism is expected to deliver at least 200 million tonnes of net abatement by 2030.

    Better carrot and stick provides investment certainty for carbon cuts

    The climate safeguard mechanism for large emitting facilities means reaching the 43pc emissions reduction target by 2030 is certainly “doable”.

    • Kerry Schott
    Sir Keith Starmer is in the box seat as the UK heads to the polls on July 4.

    Will Keir Starmer go wobbly on AUKUS?

    The fantasy of a post-Brexit “global Britain” is gone, but British Labour says it will be everywhere around the world, and all at once.

    • James Curran
    The report showed inflation-adjusted outlays for services rose 0.1 per cent, driven by airfares and health care.

    Fed’s favoured inflation metric slows, supporting case for cut

    The so-called core personal consumption expenditures price index, which strips out volatile food and energy items, increased 0.1 per cent from the prior month.

    • Augusta Saraiva
    Jim Chalmers believes Australians will be better off with more understandable information from the nation’s largest banks.

    Recession a 50-50 chance if RBA raises rates: economists

    As many as 100,000 Australians could lose their jobs in an inflation-driven recession likely to coincide with the federal election.

    • Aaron Patrick
    Bhavi Desai has purchased 10 investment properties since 2020.

    Ten properties and counting: meet Australia’s ‘super investors’

    There is a hardcore cohort of 20,000 Australians who own six or more investment properties, according to AFR Weekend analysis of annual Tax Office data.

    • Michael Read

    How the RBA’s big interest rate experiment exposes Labor

    The moment of truth to test Australian exceptionalism is about to arrive. Persistent local inflation suggests the strategy is coming under pressure and may be about to come unstuck.

    • John Kehoe
    Ausgrid CEO Marc England: now is the time to have a proper debate on the role well-regulated distributors can play in the energy transition beyond maintaining poles and wires.

    Distributors can drive lower-cost transition

    Electricity distributors can help deliver a lower cost, more socially equitable transition.

    Sponsored 

    by Ausgrid

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    Bill Shorten launched an NDIS cost tracker in Parliament House on Thursday.

    NDIS to cost $100b, exceeding the pension: budget watchdog

    The NDIS is on track to overtake the age pension as the most expensive area of spending within three years if it remains stuck on its current trajectory.

    • Michael Read
    Xinhua

    We must consider imposing non-military costs on China

    We are failing to deter China from committing increasingly frequent acts of aggression and intimidation against Taiwan.

    • John Lee
    RBA deputy governor Andrew Hauser.

    RBA deputy talks up renewable energy potential

    RBA deputy Andrew Hauser has talked up Australia’s potential to be a world leader in solar, as the nation debates the best energy mix to achieve net zero.

    • Updated
    • John Kehoe and Joanne Tran
    Some economists say at least two rate rises are needed to curb inflation.

    Multiple interest rate rises needed to quash inflation

    The hawkish warnings from economists came as the share of borrowers falling behind on repaying their home loan has risen to the highest level in five years.

    • John Kehoe
    The chance of a rise in interest rates has grown after a surprise jump in inflation in May.

    August rate rise could eat up a chunk of your stage three tax cuts

    With markets pricing a one-in-three chance of an August rate rise, borrowers may not enjoy the full benefit of the stage three tax cuts that start on July 1.

    • Michael Read