If the Minerals Council can make representations to government, why can't the Voice? - Weekly Roundup
If the Minerals Council can make representations to government, why can't the Voice? - Weekly Roundup
Ian McAuley

If the Minerals Council can make representations to government, why can't the Voice? - Weekly Roundup

The Liberal Party is moving further to the right; The arithmetic of referendums; and the sorry demise of suburban socialist communes. Read on for the Weekly Roundup of links to articles, reports, podcasts and other media on current political and economic issues in public policy.

The Voice

The Liberal Party is moving further to the right on a fragile limb. If the Minerals Council can make representations to executive government, so too should the Voice be able to. Why the Voice embodies good economics. Stan Grant on the Voice its about concerns that are older than Dutton, Albanese, the Liberal Party or the Labor Party. The arithmetic of referendums.

Housing

The simple numbers demand > supply, and its getting worse. Build-to-rent is commonplace in other countries why is it a novelty here? The sorry demise of suburban socialist communes.

Other economics

How the gains from economic growth are distributed unfairly. The IMFs economic outlook Australia is doing comparatively well, but watch out for housing debt. The Grattan offers budget advice raise more tax, cut spending by getting rid of waste without cutting programs. Reflections of a business journalist who notes that we now run a current-account surplus. How Burke and Wills set a model for inland rail. Why hairdressers and accountants need twin-cab utes. Early childhood education we should learn from the Jesuits.

Public ideas

What have we learned from the twentieth century nothing perhaps. How the Liberal Party was once liberal.

Airport delights

Airports dont have to be the worlds most horrible places.

Links to sources of webinars, podcasts and readings

Ian McAuley

Ian McAuley is a retired lecturer in public finance at the University of Canberra. He can be contacted at “ian" at the domain “ianmcauley.com” .