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Website improvements

Hi all, A quick note to offer guidance on the new website. As well as the layout changes that make it easier to access content for new readers, it comes with a dramatically improved sign-up and resubscription process, greatly enhanced speed, and a much better mobile experience (since 95% of traffic is now phone!). The

Latest posts

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Australia’s economy is built for low productivity growth

Australia’s labour productivity and per capita GDP growth slowed alongside the massive increase in net overseas migration in the mid-2000s. This slowdown in productivity and GDP per capita growth is illustrated clearly in the following chart, which plots labour productivity (GDP per hour worked), per capita GDP, and the immigration rate (i.e., immigration as a

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5% deposit FHBs brace for interest rate rises

The Reserve Bank of Australia’s (RBA) latest Financial Stability Review reported a sharp increase in high-loan-to-value-ratio (LVR) mortgage lending to first home buyers following the introduction of the expanded 5% deposit scheme on 1 October 2025. The latest pricing from financial markets suggests that the RBA will raise the official cash rate a further three

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QLD goes from ‘leaner to lifter’ on GST

Queensland received the largest dollar increase in GST in 2026–27: $2.45 billion, or $423 per person. Even so, Treasurer David Janetzki claims Queensland is being unfairly penalised in the GST carve‑up because it actively develops gas resources. States like Victoria and NSW, which have banned or restricted gas exploration, are treated by the Commonwealth Grants

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Trading Trump’s mind is like…

Trading Trump’s mind is like…stepping in dog shit to shine your shoes. Sure, it might work if scrubbed hard enough, but it doesn’t make much sense. That is the kind of market we are dealing with today: a market that covers investors in shit in bulk. After threatening Armageddon. Trump is now talking about Iran

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International university enrolments hit new high

The Department of Education has released data showing that international university (higher education) commencements rose slightly (+0.7%) in 2025 to a record high of 214,100: This pushed university international enrolment to a record high of 545,000, well above both 2024 and pre-Covid levels. Australia already had the highest concentration of university enrolments in the developed

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Australians aren’t allowed to debate immigration

Australia has run one of the strongest immigration programs in the world this century, resulting in a remarkable 9 million (47%) population increase, as indicated by the ABS Population Clock’s most recent reading. Australia’s population growth has exceeded that of nearly every other developed nation this century, driven by two decades of extreme immigration. Australia’s

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Aussie flash PMI crashes into recession

Our first March data point. Flash Australia Composite PMI Output Index: 47.0 Index, sa, >50 = growth m/m % qr/qr (Feb: 52.4) Flash Australia Services PMI Business Activity Index: 46.6 (Feb: 52.8) Flash Australia Manufacturing PMI: 50.1 (Feb: 51.0) Flash Australia Manufacturing PMI Output Index: 49.8 (Feb: 49.6) S&P says that Australia’s private sector entered

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Fuel rationing starts to bite

On Wednesday, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese put out a tweet that he had spoken with Singapore Prime Minister Lawrence Wong, noting that the two had agreed to “support the flow of essentials goods including petroleum oils, such as diesel, and liquified natural gas between our two countries.” While it’s positive that the Prime Minister has

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Australia braces for 6% unemployment

On face value, Australia’s labour market is in a solid position. The nation’s unemployment rate remained at a historically low 4.3% in February 2026, well below the decade average of 4.9%: Australia’s job advertisements and job vacancies are also tracking slightly above pre-pandemic levels: However, there are economic storm clouds on the horizon in the

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Lord Charlton’s jalopy is full of gas. Pip, pip!

Lord Charlton is on the hustings again today, and wouldn’t you know it, rather than doing the work of securing global fuel supplies, he’s busy blame-shifting the imminent Australian catastrophe on…you. “I think the government acted quickly. We acted quickly, upon coming to government four years ago when Chris Bowen made the decision to locate our

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NSW dudded again on GST

In 2024, former federal Treasury official Stephen Anthony warned that Victoria may need a federal “bailout” due to increasing state debt. The federal government has already effectively moved to bail Victoria out. In 2024-25, Victoria’s GST allocation was increased by $3.8 billion, whereas NSW lost $188 million. NSW Premier Chris Minns responded by labelling Victoria

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When to buy the oil shock

Where tech goes…goes the market… Gamma is free to exaggerate price falls. Energy-poor Europe is leading the way into the pit but is getting pretty oversold here. Oil is in troubled waters. Got it, vol down. Not it, vol up. Prepare for depressflation. Stagflation doesn’t cover this shock. This is 20% oil scarcity. It will

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Power bill price cuts on deck!

Yes, the impossible has happened. Power prices may drop more than 10 per cent for households across NSW, South Australia and south-east Queensland under a draft regulator’s ruling, although the final decision partly depends on how the turmoil in global energy markets is felt here. However, the end to government subsidies on electricity bills at

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American Idiot readies Armageddon strike

It appears, finally, that MB is now running Australia’s response to the Iran War. Having lied to the Australian people for three weeks, the Cabinet pivoted over the weekend, illustrating that it has been reading and is starting to catch up. First, Australia has joined a broadening coalition of navies headed to the Strait of

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Trump’s threat of apocalypse, the clock is ticking

At 10:44AM (Australia Eastern Daylight Time) on Sunday, U.S. President Trump made the boldest and most dangerous threat of the war against Iran so far: that if the Iranians did not reopen the Strait of Hormuz within 48 hours of that “exact point in time”, the U.S. would start destroying Iranian power plants, “STARTING WITH

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Australia’s housing market has turned

In last weekend’s market wrap, leading Sydney auctioneer Tom Panos declared that the “market has changed”, noting that “buyer depth is diminishing” and that “fear is gripping the market” amid rate rises and inflation. Last weekend’s final auction clearance rates supported this assessment, with Sydney’s and Melbourne’s final average March clearance rates falling to their