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Vital Signs: it's a Trumptastrophe

  • Written by Richard Holden, Professor of Economics and PLuS Alliance Fellow, UNSW Australia
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Vital Signs is a weekly economic wrap from UNSW economics professor and Harvard PhD Richard Holden (@profholden). Vital Signs aims to contextualise weekly economic events and cut through the noise of the data affecting global economies.

This week: a break from normal programming to take in the market reaction to the US election.


I was going to write...

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  1. Explainer: why an Australian trade deal with the UK could take a decade
  2. For single parents, it pays to work
  3. Company directors can be held legally liable for ignoring the risks from climate change
  4. Lack of cyber security knowledge leads to lazy decisions from executives
  5. How the tobacco industry is gaming Australian health regulations
  6. China's currency needs reform at home before gaining more traction internationally
  7. Why Brexit and the spectre of President Trump aren't hurting Australia's economy
  8. Should banks play a role in teaching kids about how to manage money effectively?
  9. China will need to be more transparent to achieve its development goals
  10. Dreamworld owner Ardent Leisure needs a lesson in managing a crisis
  11. ASIC report highlights a deep culture problem in Australia's banks
  12. ATNIX: Australian Twitter News Index, September 2016
  13. Private property developers are really driving China's debt: new research
  14. FactCheck: Has the job market got so bad that 'people have stopped looking for work'?
  15. Phantom brands haunting our supermarket shelves as home brand in disguise
  16. The problems with AT T's bid for Time Warner
  17. Made in China: three ways Chinese business has evolved from imitation to innovation
  18. Business Briefing: being funny with customers
  19. A Trump presidency could bring a range of economic disasters
  20. Paid parental leave plan ignores economics of well-functioning families
  21. Asian home buyers less likely to default on their mortgage: study
  22. Solutions beyond supply to the housing affordability problem
  23. Spectacular cost blowouts show need to keep governments honest on transport
  24. Australia is at risk of losing migrants who are vital to the health of our economy
  25. Australia has a history of courting the Chinese gambler
  26. Collapse of Australian car manufacturing will harm R D in other sectors: study
  27. Business Briefing: rate tracker mortgages
  28. Algorithms might be everywhere, but like us, they're deeply flawed
  29. Western Australia's economic future remains uncertain after the mining boom: study
  30. Apple Pay dispute may mean less opportunity to pay with your mobile
  31. The risks in Australia's housing market shouldn't be downplayed
  32. Forcing insurers to reveal rejected claims a win for consumers
  33. Unhappy workplaces look a lot like unhappy marriages, new research shows
  34. Can Australia stop interest rates from approaching zero? Only with a big shift in policy
  35. New life insurance code riddled with loopholes
  36. Explainer: what is contract theory and why it deserved a Nobel Prize
  37. Data surveillance is all around us, and it's going to change our behaviour
  38. Turnbull's misgivings on renewables overlook economic and financial realities
  39. Private equity isn't all bad: how PE funds help companies expand overseas
  40. The US used foreign investment to develop a new car industry, a lesson Australia hasn't learned
  41. Eager homebuyers still falling victim to shadowy rent-to-buy deals
  42. A Chinese firm could buy Twitter in the coming wave of cross-border tech acquisitions
  43. Business Briefing: Trusting business to take care of your data
  44. AFL and NRL grand final TV ratings show codes still rely on their traditional heartlands
  45. Big four bank chiefs face parliamentary committee: experts react
  46. Australian corporate social responsibility reports are little better than window dressing
  47. Governments and central banks should stop trying to stimulate the economy
  48. Simpler account switching would help keep our banks honest
  49. The superannuation myth: why it's a mistake to increase contributions to 12% of earnings
  50. We need to change more than pay for executives to do better