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The tale of Mrs Watanabe and two central banks

The tale of Mrs Watanabe and two central banks

If the Bank of Japan ends up raising rates even as the US fed is contemplating a cut, it will unleash an unprecedented level of volatility in currency markets.

  • by Stephen Bartholomeusz

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The surprise state topping Australia’s economic ladder

The surprise state topping Australia’s economic ladder

It’s not WA, although the mining state is fast gaining on top spot, leading on relative population growth and home lending metrics.

  • by Jacob Shteyman and Abe Maddison
Trump’s deluded desire for a lower US dollar

Trump’s deluded desire for a lower US dollar

Weakening the US dollar would inject massive uncertainty and volatility into the global economy and will be bad news for open economies like Australia’s.

  • by Stephen Bartholomeusz
China has a solar problem that is not going away

China has a solar problem that is not going away

China has come to dominate the global market for solar energy, but it’s a different story at home.

  • by Keith Bradsher
Tax is bursting the craft beer industry bubble

Tax is bursting the craft beer industry bubble

Australia now has the world’s third-highest beer tax after Norway and Finland and it’s wrecking the brewers, says the Independent Brewers Association.

  • by Abe Maddison
Cost-of-living crisis? It pays to be a Boomer

Cost-of-living crisis? It pays to be a Boomer

Life is getting desperate for those bearing the full brunt of the economic crisis, but it is a very different story for cashed-up older Australians.

  • by Colin Kruger
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Cost-of-living crisis? Why only some of us are feeling the pinch

Cost-of-living crisis? Why only some of us are feeling the pinch

A fascinating study into how our standards of living have changed since before COVID helps to explain why some Australians are feeling no pain.

  • by Ross Gittins
Dodgy Perth dealer fined a second time over illegal car trading business

Dodgy Perth dealer fined a second time over illegal car trading business

Jacob Hamilton copped a $40,000 fine two years ago for running a car sales business in Stirling without a license. Within weeks he was back at it.

  • by Rebecca Peppiatt
How the government’s CFMEU response plays into the Coalition’s hands
Opinion
CFMEU

How the government’s CFMEU response plays into the Coalition’s hands

The government’s light-touch response to the allegations swirling around the CFMEU risks emboldening Labor’s critics.

  • by Elizabeth Knight
Xi just doubled down on his big China bet

Xi just doubled down on his big China bet

China’s struggling economy was the driving force behind an unexpected cut in interest rates, but Xi Jinping is doubling down on his long-term dream.

  • by Stephen Bartholomeusz
The cinema was ‘cash-free’ but the eftpos machines were down. Was I in a movie?

The cinema was ‘cash-free’ but the eftpos machines were down. Was I in a movie?

The CrowdStrike outage reminded me and the rest of the developed world of how reliant we are on a few big companies to keep the show on the road.

  • by Millie Muroi