Hot Take: The labour market keeps on trucking
Strong labour force data in December have all but ruled out a February rate cut.
Strong labour force data in December have all but ruled out a February rate cut.
For whatever reason I've read more than the usual amount of interesting content over the past week, so here's another post replete with my thoughts on several topical issues. Nuclear is easier said than done In somewhat of a cautionary tale for Peter Dutton's
I trust everyone had a lovely weekend, or for those just getting back into the office, a wonderful summer break! The people want reform The Pew Research Centre released the results of its latest survey measuring the "support for changing the current economic system" across 36 countries: "
A sugary drink tax will do more harm than good.
Inflation cooled in November, with implications for interest rates.
Canada's Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has resigned. The Albanese government could learn a thing or two about how it all went so wrong.
I trust everyone's nice and refreshed from the summer break! Lots of interesting things to discuss today, starting with some positive-sounding housing policy news from NSW. Potentially good news on housing The NSW government and the opposition are getting serious about housing: "NSW Opposition Leader Mark Speakman
The Australian dollar's slide to fresh lows reflects complex global and domestic forces, with implications for trade, competitiveness, and economic policy.
As Australia grapples with its post-pandemic recovery, the principal macro challenge remains inflation.
Most readers of Aussienomics are probably still busy soaking up the Australian summer rather than looking for interesting tidbits in their inboxes. But for those of you still checking your emails, here are a few of my thoughts on some of the essays, papers and news I've read
A new report warns Australia's path to economic stability hinges on tackling inflation, tax reform, and curbing overspending.
The mid-year budget update was depressingly bad; AI won't leave a third of workers unemployable; a Future Made in Australia will politicise the economy; Argentina's remarkable year and what it means for Australia; another look at hydrogen; and the per capita recession may already be over.