Alex Bainbridge writes new analysis by the Parliamentary Budget Office聽has found that the cost of the 鈥淪tage 3鈥 tax cuts will be $313 billion over 10 years 鈥斅燼 huge increase on the $254 billion previously estimated.
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The聽big lie at the heart of every budget it that it is a plan to manage the economy for the collective good of the nation, write聽Peter Boyle 补苍诲听Paul Oboohov.
The ecological and social impacts of a new surge in global military spending will be one of the discussions at the Ecosocialism 2023 conference in Naarm on聽July 1鈥2. Peter Boyle reports.
A聽new Australia聽Institute report reveals that a staggering 93% of income growth over the past decade in Australia went to the top 10% of income earners, reports聽Isaac Nellist.
Susan Price reports that聽Labor聽is聽weighing up 116 new coal, oil and gas projects 鈥 the equivalent of starting up 215 new coal-fired power stations.
Young people are moving away from the major parties in search of real political change, Isaac Nellist reports.
Public school funding has been on the decline for years. No wonder older, experienced teachers are so angry, writes Sue Bull.
The 20th anniversary of the then largest protest in world history is on February 15. As time passes, memories fade. But the huge 2003 protest against the Iraq war was worth remembering, argues Alex Bainbridge.
Oxfam's annual report on global inequality is a damning indictment of the聽chronically inequitable capitalist system, argues Peter Boyle.
Labor promised to end the cruel practice of imposing temporary protection visas. Alex Bainbridge argues its announcement concerning 19,000 refugees is聽welcome, but聽does not go far聽enough.聽
Grassroots movements have gotten us to the point where governments can no longer deny climate change is happening. Pip Hinman聽argues that those movements have to grow to avoid being sucked into false solutions.
Reserve Bank governor Philip Lowe聽apologised聽to those who took out home loans on the basis of his promise not to raise聽interest rates. But he had聽no聽apology for wage earners trying to make ends meet amid sharply rising prices. Peter Boyle reports.
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