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RBA thinks unemployment queues are still too short – Weekly Roundup

johnmenadue.com 2024/10/4
War memorial
Please explain how vandalizing this war memorial helped relieve suffering in Gaza.

Economists call for a cut in interest rates, but the RBA thinks the unemployment queues are still too short; the Greens and the ABC help launch a far-right political movement and land a blow on secularism; the case for disenfranchising men. Read on for the weekly roundup of links to articles, podcasts, reports and other media on current economic and political issues.

Independent economists believe the economy is due for a cut in interest rates, while the RBA remains obsessed with the CPI. An economic optimist infiltrates the RBA top ranks. Why the government’s Future Made in Australia is the right policy for a tricky global economic environment. How a dumb capital-gains policy thwarts the RBA’s attempt to use interest rates to suppress demand. Your next electricity bill explained: electricity prices are falling but corporate profits and waste are rising.

If we want to ease hospital queues we’d better pay more tax. A snapshot of Australia’s health.

The Greens’ brilliance in spawning a new hard-right political movement and undermining secularism. Why do journalists, including ABC journalists, keep telling us how badly we’re doing, fertilising the ground for populist demagogues offering simple solutions to complex problems? What we can learn from the failure of the Voice: there’s more to it than Dutton’s disgraceful behaviour. What the polls reveal: women continue to turn off the Coalition and its silly ideas for nuclear energy. Elections in two European countries: nothing conclusive yet. Welcome to a new Governor-General.

The case for seven weeks’ annual leave, but economists would settle for five weeks. The case for disenfranchising men, but are identity concerns displacing concerns for gender equality?

Jingoism-free American patriotism.

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