Pitch Engine
The Times Real Estate

.

FactCheck: is deficit, debt and the spending trajectory of the previous government on the wane?

  • Written by The Conversation
imageFinance Minister Mathias Cormann said the government is continuing to reduce the deficit and debt.AAP Image/Paul Miller

The Final Budget Outcome for 2014-15 shows that the government is continuing to reduce the deficit and debt and is lowering the spending growth trajectory of the previous government. – Joint media release from Finance...

Read more: FactCheck: is deficit, debt and the spending trajectory of the previous government on the wane?

More Articles ...

  1. Another day, Another IT failure
  2. Fifield faces a hard road to bring Australia's media regulations into the 21st century
  3. Why everybody knows CEOs are overpaid, but nothing happens
  4. Youth unemployment 'crisis' more about job quality
  5. Managing across generations will deliver more productive workplaces
  6. 'Companies deserve human rights' among litany of weak tax disclosure excuses
  7. Explainer: Glencore and why analysts move stock markets
  8. Volkswagen outrage shows limits of corporate power
  9. Five reasons the Turnbull government shouldn't let us spend super on a home
  10. The government's focus on innovation is too narrow
  11. Yes, it is our business: how corporations can help on Sustainable Development Goals
  12. To change our economy we need to change our thinking
  13. Down, down but not different: Australia's supermarkets in a race to the bottom
  14. Rich and poor: which areas of Australia are most unequal?
  15. FactCheck Q A: is Australia the most unequal it has been in 75 years?
  16. Let's talk about your pay, and loudly
  17. The myGov future is here – but can they please let us know!
  18. Keeping up or holding back? The regulation challenge for government
  19. How corporates co-opted the art of mindfulness to make us bear the unbearable
  20. Using family trusts to minimise tax is on the nose: so why are policy makers silent?
  21. All eyes on the Aussie dollar as Australia stalks recession
  22. When 'hand crafted' is really just crafty marketing
  23. From 'debt and deficit' to 'building prosperity': what's needed to shift the economic narrative
  24. Banks are training us to embrace their competitors
  25. Exciting times for the Financial System
  26. The competition test attracts odd political bedfellows, but isn't going away
  27. ATNIX: Australian Twitter News Index, August 2015
  28. The unfinished business facing Australia's new treasurer
  29. China's grip still tight on state-owned enterprises
  30. Smart meters, dumb policy: the Victorian experience
  31. Market volatility is here to stay, but high-frequency trading not all bad
  32. Free trade agreements fail to boost Australian agriculture and food manufacturing
  33. Australia's next wave of startups could be from the over-55s
  34. #returnbull: How Twitter Reacted to the Latest Leadership Spill
  35. Team Turnbull's challenge is to fix our economic reform malaise
  36. Ten economic events leading up to the Abbott spill
  37. Turnbull inherits an economy battered by global headwinds
  38. It's the economy wot won it: Turnbull's new communication challenge
  39. Why are we blaming 'culture' for social and economic problems?
  40. How fast food is reinventing itself as healthy and caring
  41. Chinese investment in residential real estate amounts to just 2%
  42. FactCheck: would 60% of any GST revenue raised have to be spent on compensation?
  43. Data indicates the recession is effectively here; it's what policy makers do next that counts
  44. Do the Crime, Do the Time
  45. Civic crowdfunding will challenge governments and charities
  46. The convenience food industry making our pets fat
  47. Apple News could change the news business - will readers win?
  48. 7-Eleven fallout: what are the moral obligations on franchisors?
  49. How marketers condition us to buy more junk food
  50. Dollar down, volatility up: what Australia can expect from a US rate rise