Grim sign for Australian workers
A massive employment platform has just delivered some bleak news to Aussie job hunters.
A massive employment platform has just delivered some bleak news to Aussie job hunters.
Wages are exploding across Australia, but there’s a downside to the money bump.
Senior government minister Bill Shorten has sparked a fiery debate with the opposition after he claimed the Liberal Party wants to put Australia in a recession.
Bumper results from a bellwether retail giant injected renewed confidence into the Aussie sharemarket on Monday.
An Aussie bank has been whacked with almost $1m in fines after admitting to providing false representations to customers about their home loans.
The IMF has warned the Albanese government must slash spending and the Reserve Bank should hike rates even further.
Led by a rally in tech stocks, the local share market finished in the green for the first time in five days, but closed out the week 1 per cent lower.
More than 28,000 reports and inquiries were made to the ACCC last year about consumer guarantees or warranties.
More parents are being forced to make a desperate move as their children go back to school.
The share market extended its losses on Thursday, as property, energy and material stocks dragged the benchmark lower.
In a further sign that the Australian economy is cooling, more than 65,000 Australians found themselves out of a job in December.
With all sectors posting declines, the local benchmark slumped to its lowest level in four weeks on Tuesday.
Chances are you’ll score a tax cut from the middle of the year – unless a concerted campaign by economists to claw it back succeeds.
Despite the surging cost of purchasing a new home and the rise in borrowing costs, the number of first home buyers taking out loans has rocketed higher in the last 12 months.
Original URL: https://www.goldcoastbulletin.com.au/business/economy/interest-rates/page/55