More jobs, but more jobless
The jobs numbers project once again the exquisite failure of Australia’s population-led profitless economy.
The jobs numbers project once again the exquisite failure of Australia’s population-led profitless economy.
CBA continues to show its strength as one of the world’s most profitable banks, with shareholders and customers sharing the spoils.
Wages and productivity are the real pressures when it comes to which way the RBA breaks next.
JB Hi Fi’s purchase of E&S will bring one of Australia’s great retail brands in head-to-head combat with bathroom and plumbing giant Reece for the first time.
The ‘Magnificent Seven’ super-stocks have surged on the back of the AI frenzy, but what’s next for America’s tech giants?
Can Australia survive the Albanese Labor government’s minister for destroying our electricity system Chris Bowen?
Rio Tinto has been talking up the 4 billion tonnes of iron ore it’s shipped to China, but has the miner forgotten about its commitment to saving the planet?
Our financial and economic future does not hang on who lands in the White House but rather by the decisions made by the Federal Reserve.
The RBA’s next move appears all but certain, but the latest jobless data shows how keeping a lid on both inflation and layoffs remains a delicate balancing act.
The CFMEU crisis is the latest in a long line of Labor failings that has left ordinary Australians short-changed.
Rio’s decision to build another iron ore mine in Guinea – to compete directly with its mines in the Pilbara – is shaping up as another risky move.
Sir Roderick Carnegie came to the top job at mining group CRA exactly as Australia began to change so dramatically in the 1970s and he both rode and helped mould that change.
Original URL: https://www.couriermail.com.au/business/terry-mccrann/page/3