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Australian Economy

Lean on bubbles before they get too big? – Too Late.

Papers published today from the Property Market and Financial Stability conference held in August reveal Reserve Bank Governor Glenn Stevens opened the conference with remarks on if central banks should lean on asset bubbles before they get too big and out of control. Using momentary policy to put downwards pressure

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Australian Economy

We need to live within our means: Gina Rinehart

Gina Rinehart, the richest woman in the world, has over the past few years become concerned about the direction of Australia according to her latest article in the Australian Resources & Investment Magazine. “It goes back to something Australian’s used to understand well: almost every home understood that you had

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Australian Economy

Can’t avoid a recession forever: Ralph Waters

Woolworth’s & Fletcher Building Chairman, Ralph Waters is not surprised either that we have hit a bad patch. Yesterday, I expressed my view the current downturn was inevitable following a stimulus package designed to temporarily prop up an unsustainable, household-debt ridden economy. Mr Water’s told the Australian Financial Review the

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Australian Economy

Who’s unqualified to run a modern economy?

Treasurer Wayne Swan describes today’s 25 basis point cut to the official cash rate as “the early Christmas present that hard working Aussies deserve.” In a press conference after the Reserve Bank announcement, Swan told Australian’s “We’ve now had the equivalent of seven rate cuts over the past year and

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Australian Economy

Housing recovery: Only hope remains

Only hope remains from the phantom housing recovery after the RBA released credit growth aggregates for October. Growth for housing credit has fallen to a positive 0.3 per cent, down from 0.4 per cent the month earlier. Over the 12 month period, housing credit is growing at just 4.7 per

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Australian Economy

Too big to fail

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has highlighted concerns about the concentration and interconnectedness of Australia’s big four banks in the most recent Financial System Stability Assessment on Australia. It reports Australia’s four major banks, The ANZ, Commonwealth, Westpac and NAB hold 80 per cent of the countries banking assets and

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Australian Economy

New home sales plunge to 18 year lows

Last Monday, the Federal Government released its Mid Year Economic and Fiscal Outlook (MYEFO), hoping growth in the residential housing construction sector would take over from our deteriorating mining boom and save Australia from pending recession. Household consumption remains solid in aggregate and there are tentative signs that residential building

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Australian Housing

‘No better time’ to flog a dead horse

It was once the realm of Real Estate Agents to spruik that it was never a better time to buy, but with the residential construction sector in free fall, state politicians are picking up the pieces and taking over from where agents and bankrupt builders have failed. The South Australian

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Australian Economy

The holiday is over: Official unemployment rises

As expected, the official unemployment figures released by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) today showed a sharp rise in unemployment. According to the ABS, unemployment now sits at 5.4 per cent – a two and a half year high. The key driver to the increase in the unemployment rate

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Australian Economy

Housing bubble makes mockery of superannuation

Up, down or sideways? Debate has intensified about the future direction of Australia’s property market since the RBA announced a 25 basis point cut to the official cash rate this week. It’s not the first cut we have had. Australia has experienced five downward adjustments in monetary policy since November

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Australian Economy

Unemployment hits 10%

One of the take home messages from yesterday’s 25 basis point drop is the Reserve Bank’s worry unemployment is starting to rise. On Monday, Roy Morgan research released the results of its latest unemployment and under-employed survey, showing unemployment in Australia is now at 10 per cent, and quite a