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Ronald Mizen

Senior reporter

Ronald Mizen reports on politics, economics, business and the law, with a focus on corporate regulators, lobbyists and investigations from Parliament House, Canberra. Connect with Ronald on Twitter. Email Ronald at ronald.mizen@afr.com

Ronald Mizen

Yesterday

Australia’s debt interest cost set to surge.

Decade of deficits to spark debt interest surge

While Treasurer Jim Chalmers was spruiking debt in 2023-24 being $904 billion, gross debt is forecast to rise sharply in the years ahead.

Rising interest rates and power prices mean Adam and Erin Foster’s dream of buying their first home keeps “slipping through the fingers”.

$300 off every household’s power bill in cost-of-living cash splash

In addition to a tax cut from July 1, every household will receive an electricity bill discount as part of a $7.8 billion cost-of-living package.

Labor stashes away billions for road and rail project announcements ahead of federal election.

Labor adds $16.5b road and rail projects

The government committed $16.5 billion to road and rail projects, including $4.1 billion for 65 new developments – just 12 of which were revealed in the budget.

ASIC chairman Joe Longo at a parliamentary joint committee in April.

ASIC staff motivation, satisfaction, stress hit critical levels

A confidential staff survey made public through a Senate inquiry on Tuesday showed the regulator had just two out of 12 outcomes at average or desirable levels.

Treasurer Jim Chalmers speaking to the media on Tuesday morning ahead of delivering his third budget.

Chalmers rejects ‘political trick’ inflation reduction claim

Former RBA board member Warwick McKibbin levelled the claim ahead of Tuesday’s budget, while economists warned bill relief would only stoke consumer demand.

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This Month

Transport Minister Catherine King.

Labor warned of risk from Victoria’s $200b rail loop

Infrastructure Minister Catherine King is fighting to keep secret the details of 30 projects that her hand-picked review said should be scrapped, as well as warnings over Victoria’s controversial Suburban Rail Loop, which will cost more than $200 billion to build and operate.

Protesters march during a pro Palestine snap rally in Melbourne.

Labor accused of ‘rewarding’ Hamas with Palestine vote

Opposition frontbencher Senator Jane Hume said there could be no sustainable two-state solution without the consent of Israel.

Shadow treasurer Angus Taylor.

Coalition warns Labor over RBA board ‘sack and stack’

The implication is Labor would seek to appoint board members inclined to lower interest rates ahead of the federal election, risking the push to curb high inflation.

RBA governor Michele Bullock’s communications style is proving successful – so far.

Michele Bullock’s run of good news may be about to end

RBA governor Michele Bullock has proven a better communicator than her predecessor Philip Lowe. But her real test may still be yet to come.

The RBA’s latest outlook for the economy means interest rates will need to stay higher for longer.

Petrol, strong jobs market stoking inflation: RBA

The central bank on Tuesday upgraded its near-term forecasts for headline inflation and pushed back the likelihood of interest rate relief until mid-2025.

Reserve Bank governor Michele Bullock during her post-meeting press conference in Sydney on Tuesday.

Reserve Bank on high alert for rate rise

The RBA is “very alert” to the cost of stubbornly high inflation lingering in the economy, signalling interest rates will need to stay higher for longer.

Treasurer Jim Chalmers and Finance Minister Katy Gallagher ahead of next week’s federal budget.

Chalmers’ budget to fight inflation first, spend up big second

Treasurer Jim Chalmers says his budget next week will avoid a “scorched earth” approach to fight inflation, but spending will come in the out years.

State governments should hand over to the federal government their powers to regulate partnerships of economic significance.

Let ASIC police big four conflicts: Samuel

Former ACCC chairman Graeme Samuel says the big four’s governance changes looked good on paper, but would not fundamentally change the culture of the firms.

The Treasury paper covers how the firms are structured and regulated.

Big four accountants could face partner limits in governance crackdown

The big four accounting firms could be forced to slash partner numbers and incorporate their consulting businesses under a crackdown on governance standards flagged as a possible response to the PwC tax leaks scandal.

  • Updated
Minister for Social Services Amanda Rishworth.

Deeming cliff looms for 850k aged pensioners, welfare recipients

With inflation running high and cost-of-living pressures continuing to plague households, the government is being pressured to extend the freeze, or at least phase in, a higher deeming rate in the budget.

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Rob Scott.

Boosting investment needs more than taxpayer cash: Wesfarmers boss

Rob Scott said he was making major investments in value-added processing for lithium, but faced serious barriers from approvals processes. 

CEOS

OECD warns sticky inflation means rates higher for longer

The warning came as CEOs deliver upbeat assessment of the economy and financial markets push out expectations for rate cuts to May or June 2025, potentially after the next federal election.

Chinese investment critical to reach net-zero goals

Clean energy experts warn moves that limit Chinese investment in Australia could undermine the Albanese government’s green energy goals.

April

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese announcing the government will invest nearly $1 billion into Silicon Valley start-up PsiQuantum.

Budget surplus of $13b tipped, but Labor needs a ‘credible’ plan

It could be the second consecutive surplus for Labor and the first time that has happened in almost 20 years. But the longer-term outlook is increasingly bleak.

ASIC chair Joe Longo.

White-collar crime goes unpoliced due to lack of funds: ASIC boss

“We would welcome additional funding and … there are matters we would like to run now we don’t,” ASIC chairman Joe Longo told a Senate committee.