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Vital Signs: goodbye AAA Australia?

  • Written by Richard Holden, Professor of Economics, UNSW Australia
imageAustralia is one of a small number of countries that enjoy a AAA rating.Image sourced from shutterstock.com

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 impacting global economies.

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  2. Explainer: why stock market panic can signal a good time to buy
  3. In a world of low rates, what else can the RBA and central banks do?
  4. #ausvotes: a final update from the social media hustings
  5. Brexit is done, now what about accounting?
  6. Brexit harms startups but it may not be fatal
  7. Black market jobs cost Australia billions and youth are at the coalface
  8. States will ultimately pay for federal promises, no matter who wins Saturday's election
  9. Google's murky Washington lobbying is making Apple look good
  10. Unit pricing saves money but is the forgotten shopping tool
  11. Election FactCheck: Have 300,000 new jobs been created in the last calendar year and were almost two-thirds held by women?
  12. Robots are moving in to our homes, but there's no killer app
  13. Australia's youth unemployment policy needs to be seen as a hand up, not a hand out
  14. Explainer: what is ‘value capture’ and what does it mean for cities?
  15. Business Briefing: ASIC tries to prevent fintech startups from becoming scammers
  16. How a Brexit could impact on Australia
  17. Internships help students better manage their careers
  18. Seven ways to tell whether a private equity-backed IPO should be avoided
  19. Election FactCheck Q A: does the government spend more on negative gearing and capital gains tax discounts than on child care or higher education?
  20. ATNIX: Australian Twitter News Index, May 2016
  21. How the Property Council is shaping the debate around negative gearing, taxes
  22. What evidence is there that internships secure employment?
  23. Digital disruption: STEM graduates and more regulation not the answer
  24. Are unpaid internships unlawful?
  25. Reducing bankruptcy to 12 months ignores realities of insolvency
  26. #ausvotes 2016: some early impressions
  27. Election FactCheck: have 50,000 full-time jobs been lost this year and are over a million people underemployed?
  28. Woolworths and Coles should heed simplicity lesson from Aldi
  29. Business is waking up to the idea of deep learning
  30. The public should be concerned when academics must battle bureaucrats for academic freedom
  31. Is small business really the engine room of Australia's economy?
  32. Why the voice of Big Business is facing its biggest test
  33. The ghost of the 'greedy geezers' hovers over our super debate
  34. Election FactCheck: has $100 billion been added to Australia's national debt under the current government?
  35. Corporate venture capital can pay, but only if you get the structure right
  36. It's time we broke up the retail arms of Australia's Big Four banks
  37. Election FactCheck: Has the Coalition presided over the most sustained fall in Australian living standards since records began?
  38. Google wants to tap the second golden age of television
  39. Safety – or profit? The booming business of CCTV and Safer Streets
  40. Tax-free super is intergenerational theft
  41. Election FactCheck Q A: was Jacqui Lambie right about apprenticeships and 457 visas?
  42. Vital Signs: why everyone seems a bit worse off
  43. Could the idea of a universal basic income work in Australia?
  44. Strong GDP growth figures show economy on track
  45. Election FactCheck Q A: Is Australia's foreign debt nearly $1 trillion, up from $74 billion last year?
  46. Election FactCheck Q A: has Australia had 25 years of continuous economic growth?
  47. Was Peter Thiel's funding of the Gawker case an abuse of legal process?
  48. Election FactCheck: Has public infrastructure investment fallen 20% under the Coalition?
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