Ross's articles (124 total)

Best of 2025 - More Boomers are choosing not to retire. Why? They don’t want to

Best of 2025 - More Boomers are choosing not to retire. Why? They don’t want to

As the great bulge of babies born after World War II has moved through their life course, the world has changed to suit them and their needs.

The RBA says changing rates won’t raise house prices. I wouldn’t be so sure

The RBA says changing rates won’t raise house prices. I wouldn’t be so sure

The Reserve Bank has always denied that its manipulation of short-term interest rates to slow or hasten the growth in demand for goods and services plays any part in worsening the cost of home ownership. But I doubt this.

Trump says climate change is a hoax. Are we in safer hands with the ‘commos’?

Trump says climate change is a hoax. Are we in safer hands with the ‘commos’?

When you hear that malevolent old fool Donald Trump tell the United Nations that climate change is “the greatest con job ever perpetrated on the world”, it’s hard to resist throwing up your arms in despair. If mighty America won’t set a good example, what hope is there for the rest of us?

Seeking the positive-sum economy where everyone wins a prize

Seeking the positive-sum economy where everyone wins a prize

What is this “abundance” thing that progressive economists are suddenly banging on about after reading the latest American pop economics book? At last, one of them has explained it.

More Boomers are choosing not to retire. Why? They don’t want to

More Boomers are choosing not to retire. Why? They don’t want to

As the great bulge of babies born after World War II has moved through their life course, the world has changed to suit them and their needs.

Albanese takes his usual each-way bet on climate change

Albanese takes his usual each-way bet on climate change

After last week, Anthony Albanese and his Climate Change Minister Chris Bowen are entitled to a great sigh of relief.

AI: Much ado about something that one day may be important

AI: Much ado about something that one day may be important

AI. AI. AI. Maybe if I utter those magic initials one more time, you’ll reach peak ecstasy. Worried about our lack of productivity? Fear not. The economy will soon be rocketing ahead.

We’re going up in the financial world, but no one’s noticed

We’re going up in the financial world, but no one’s noticed

Economists like us to think they’re coolly rational in all things. Nah. They’re just as susceptible to fads and fashions as the rest of us.

Our future prosperity is bright. We’ve hidden an ace up our sleeve

Our future prosperity is bright. We’ve hidden an ace up our sleeve

As you may have noticed, the nation’s economists are in a gloomy mood and warning of tough times ahead.

Why we'd be mugs to cut the company tax rate

Why we'd be mugs to cut the company tax rate

Ask any businessperson if we should cut the rate of our company tax and, almost to a pale and stale male, they’ll unhesitatingly tell you we should.

The one big reform not discussed at Labor's roundtable

The one big reform not discussed at Labor's roundtable

Despite the strong support for tax reform at last month’s economic reform roundtable, perhaps the most important single reform hardly rated a mention: a carbon tax – or, in the economists’ preferred euphemism, “a price on carbon”.

We have arrested the development of our young

We have arrested the development of our young

I hope you’re not among those silly people who concluded last week’s economic reform roundtable was just a talkfest that will lead to nothing concrete. Breaking news: we have to get together and talk about things before we agree on what our biggest problems are and what we will do about them.

I’ve changed my mind about red tape, but cutting it won’t solve everything

I’ve changed my mind about red tape, but cutting it won’t solve everything

This is the week to understand something most people don’t: businesses don’t do productivity.

Albanese is crying poor, but we’re losing billions a year from untaxed gas

Albanese is crying poor, but we’re losing billions a year from untaxed gas

It’s likely much will be said, but little done, at next week’s economic roundtable.

It’s official: A cut in company tax will deliver little benefit at best

It’s official: A cut in company tax will deliver little benefit at best

Be sure your dodgy modelling will find you out. I’m starting to think economists have become so used to pretending to know more about the economy than they really do, that they don’t notice the way they mislead the rest of us.

Roundtable will fix nothing unless we can all park our self-interest

Roundtable will fix nothing unless we can all park our self-interest

I’m not sure if it’s happening by accident or design, but we may be about to convince ourselves that, though our democracy isn’t nearly as stuffed up as America’s, we’re fast making ourselves ungovernable, unable to agree on how to fix our problems.

Roundtable warning: When they say ‘modelling’ grab your bulldust detector

Roundtable warning: When they say ‘modelling’ grab your bulldust detector

The warm-up for next month’s three-day economic roundtable has begun, and this week we’ll start hearing from worthies who know exactly what we should do to improve our productivity. What’s more, they have the modelling to prove it.

Cutting HECS debt is the least Albanese could do for young Australians. He should do more

Cutting HECS debt is the least Albanese could do for young Australians. He should do more

It may seem an age since the federal election, but the new parliament has just convened for the first time. Anthony Albanese will be giving top priority to enacting his election commitments – “an honest politician? Really?” – and starting with his promise to cut uni graduates’ HECS debt by 20 per cent.

How Chalmers can square the budget circle despite stagnant productivity

How Chalmers can square the budget circle despite stagnant productivity

As if Treasurer Jim Chalmers didn’t have a big enough problem trying to improve the economy’s productivity, we now know Treasury has privately reminded him he’ll need to find additional tax revenue and reduce government spending to keep the budget “sustainable” – that is, to stop the government’s debt getting a lot higher.

Trump wants us to spend a bomb on defence. We should think twice

Trump wants us to spend a bomb on defence. We should think twice

While I was on holiday, I had a kind of nightmare: suddenly, every rich country in the world — including us — is vowing to spend many billions more on defence each year. This will cost taxpayers an absolute bomb. Why exactly are we doing this?

I have good news and bad about your superannuation

I have good news and bad about your superannuation

When the government wants to cut back the massive tax concessions the rich receive on their superannuation, the media is full of it for weeks.

In one awful decision, Albanese has revealed his do-nothing plan

In one awful decision, Albanese has revealed his do-nothing plan

It didn’t take long for us to discover what a triumphantly re-elected Labor government would be like.

Don’t let rich old men tell you the planned super tax is terribly bad

Don’t let rich old men tell you the planned super tax is terribly bad

Would you want Australia to become more like America? How on Earth did so many Yanks vote to reinstall a crazy, destructive leader such as Mad King Donald?

Why we need our economists to try a lot harder

Why we need our economists to try a lot harder

For most economists, their view of how the world works is virtually unchanged from one decade to the next. They’ve already found the truth, so nothing needs changing.

It was supposed to be the cost-of-living election. But then Dutton showed up

It was supposed to be the cost-of-living election. But then Dutton showed up

Talk about the dog that didn’t bark. Cast your mind back to the distant days of the election campaign, and you’ll dimly remember how often we were told that polling revealed the only subject hard-pressed voters were interested in discussing was the cost of living.

Dutton’s election campaign rout lets RBA off the hook

Dutton’s election campaign rout lets RBA off the hook

Reserve Bank governor Michele Bullock must be breathing a quiet sigh of relief now the Albanese Government has been triumphantly returned to office. If you can’t think why she should be relieved, you’re helping make my point.

The climate won’t change for the Liberals without more women and fewer oldies

The climate won’t change for the Liberals without more women and fewer oldies

If the Liberals have any sense, they won’t waste too much time blaming their shocking election result on Peter Dutton, Donald Trump, Cyclone Alfred, the party secretariat, an unready shadow ministry or any other “proximate cause”, as economists say. Why not? Because none of these go to the heart of their party’s problem.

Home truths: Housing policies are for show, but one side at least gets the problem

Home truths: Housing policies are for show, but one side at least gets the problem

If you think this sounds twisted, it is. The best thing about the two sides’ various promises to help young people afford to buy their first home is the way it has provoked the nation’s economists to rise in condemnation of those schemes’ wrongheadedness. They look like they’ll help, but most of them are more likely to end up making homes less affordable rather than more.

Memo Dutton: Good economic managers don’t try to panic the punters

Memo Dutton: Good economic managers don’t try to panic the punters

A problem in economics is that you can’t use the economy to experiment.

Trump’s trade war is bad, but how bad is up to the rest of us

Trump’s trade war is bad, but how bad is up to the rest of us

At last, we know enough about US President Donald Trump’s opening move on tariffs to start thinking about what it all means. By imposing tariffs on America’s imports, he’s shot his economy in the foot, but the rest of the world decides how bad it’s likely to be by what we do in response.

Dutton wants to know if you’re better off now. It’s a trick question

Dutton wants to know if you’re better off now. It’s a trick question

For most people, the simple answer to Peter Dutton’s repeated question — are you better off today than you were three years ago? — is “no, I’m not”.

Debt and deficit: Labor’s budget naysayers ignore the cold hard facts

Debt and deficit: Labor’s budget naysayers ignore the cold hard facts

The independent economist and former Treasury officer Chris Richardson, the leader of Treasury-in-Exile and thus chief apostle of fiscal rectitude, does the country a favour with his eternal campaigning to keep budget deficits and public debt levels low.

The government is timid, uninspired and uninspiring. This budget fits it perfectly

The government is timid, uninspired and uninspiring. This budget fits it perfectly

If you’re having trouble working up much interest in the budget, don’t feel bad. It’s not you, it’s the government. So much fuss is made about the annual federal budget that we expect it to be full of major announcements. Well, not this one, and not from a government that never wants to rock the boat.

It’s official – supermarkets are overcharging. Quick, change the subject

It’s official – supermarkets are overcharging. Quick, change the subject

Why does a government release a highly critical report on the conduct of Woolworths and Coles on the Friday before a budget that will lead straight into an election campaign? Short answer: not for any worthy reason.

The outlook for house insurance is much worse than we’re being told

The outlook for house insurance is much worse than we’re being told

The big news on house insurance this week was the response of the insurance industry’s peak body to a parliamentary committee’s extensive criticisms of its treatment of people claiming on their policies after the massive floods of 2022.

Much argy-bargy on the way to next week’s off-again, on-again budget

Much argy-bargy on the way to next week’s off-again, on-again budget

According to the business press, Anthony Albanese was desperately hoping for an early election so he could avoid next week’s budget and the drubbing he’ll get when Treasurer Jim Chalmers is forced to reveal projections of a decade of budget deficits.

Maybe the inflation surge didn’t happen the way we’ve been told

Maybe the inflation surge didn’t happen the way we’ve been told

According to Reserve Bank deputy governor Andrew Hauser last week, we’ve entered a world characterised not just by volatility, complexity and uncertainty, but also by “ambiguity” – a world where “you don’t know the model”, meaning that “judgment and instinct are as important as formal analysis”.

The real truth on productivity: The bosses aren’t trying hard enough

The real truth on productivity: The bosses aren’t trying hard enough

At last, some sense on the causes of our poor productivity performance. For ages, we’ve been told it’s the government’s fault — maybe even the voters’ fault — for failing to make economic reforms. But last week the econocrats finally set the record straight: the problem is, our businesses have stopped doing the things that make us more productive.

To make Medicare healthy again, our leaders must treat these worrying symptoms

To make Medicare healthy again, our leaders must treat these worrying symptoms

I don’t know if you noticed, but the federal election campaign began on Sunday. The date of the election has yet to be announced – it may be mid-April or mid-May – but hostilities have begun. And they began with an issue that’s been big in election campaigns for 50 years: Medicare.

We may be short of leaders, but we’re not short on false prophets

We may be short of leaders, but we’re not short on false prophets

With this year’s federal budget supposedly brought forward to 25 March, the seasonal peak in business bulldust has come early. Last week, Canberra kicked off an annual ritual little noticed in real-world Australia, the call for “pre-budget” submissions on what the government should do in its budget.

The nation is finally coming to grips with home affordability

The nation is finally coming to grips with home affordability

Right now, the prospect of much improvement in being able to afford a home of your own isn’t bright. We don’t look like solving the problem any time soon. But I’ve been watching and writing about the steady worsening in housing affordability for the best part of 50 years, and I’m more optimistic today than I’ve ever been.

Want more economics students? Drop the obsession with maths

Want more economics students? Drop the obsession with maths

The Reserve Bank is worried. The number of students wanting to study economics has been falling over the years, and it’s worried this will lead to a fall in the electorate’s economic literacy, which could end up worsening government policy.

Voters blame one man for rising energy bills while companies get away with gouging

Voters blame one man for rising energy bills while companies get away with gouging

If, as seems likely, Anthony Albanese and his government lose seats at next year’s federal election, one thing we can be certain of is that the nation’s economists and econocrats won’t be admitting to their not insignificant contribution to Labor’s setback.

We’ve entered the era of gutless government

We’ve entered the era of gutless government

Sorry to tell you that I’m finishing this year most unimpressed by Anthony Albanese and his government. I’m still reeling from his last two weeks of parliament, pushing through 45 bills just to show how much he’d achieved and give himself the option of calling an election early next year should he see a break in the clouds.

How to avoid being conned by lobby groups using you to pressure the government

How to avoid being conned by lobby groups using you to pressure the government

The obvious question arising from big business’ onslaught against Anthony Albanese and his government is: do Australia’s voters know which sides their bread is buttered on? Sorry, boss, I think they usually do.

Authors who write with insight and experience

Authors who write with insight and experience

I read the daily Pearls and Irritations email without fail.

Maybe only a recession will fix macroeconomic management

Maybe only a recession will fix macroeconomic management

In the economy, as in life, it helps a lot if you learn from your mistakes. Or, if you’re in public life, from the mistakes of your predecessors.

Students count cost of epic fail

Students count cost of epic fail

Successive federal governments have propelled a ‘backdoor privatisation’ of Australian universities. It’s shameful.

If you care about future generations, you should support ‘nature positive’

If you care about future generations, you should support ‘nature positive’

The most pressing problem we face is climate change. It’s even more important than – dare I say it – getting inflation down to 2 per cent by last Friday. But we mustn’t forget that climate change is just the most glaring symptom of the ultimate threat to human existence: our continuing destruction of the natural environment.

Reserve Bank has squeezed us like a lemon, but it’s still not happy

Reserve Bank has squeezed us like a lemon, but it’s still not happy

Let me be the last to tell you the economy has almost ground to a halt and is teetering on the edge of recession. This has happened by design, not accident. But it doesn’t seem to be working properly. So, what happens now? Until we think of something better, more of the same.

Earlier Articles (74 more)

Date Title Categories
2024-05-16 This budget will make us better off now, worse off later economy, politics
2024-05-09 Labor deploys ‘security’ to protect bad policy from proper scrutiny politics
2024-03-21 Rent-seekers put their hands out as budget looms politics
2024-02-15 Greedy businesses deserve part of blame for cost of living crisis economy, politics
2024-02-13 Podcast: Time for radical tax reform on climate change, housing affordability podcast, politics, topfive
2024-01-25 It's on PM to make tax cuts fair economy, politics
2023-12-18 Australia has so far resisted American populism and dysfunction. This is why politics
2023-10-31 Paying tax is good and, for better government, we should pay more economy, politics, topfive
2023-10-12 Nine 'planetary boundaries' set the limits of global economic freedom economy, politics, topfive, world
2023-09-14 Business should serve, not enslave economy, politics, topfive
2023-08-25 We won’t fix inflation while economists stay in denial about causes economy, politics
2023-07-20 Numbers fail to add up for central bankers in fight against inflation economy, politics
2023-06-17 Grim Reaper is catching up with the Baby Boomers, waving bills economy, health, politics
2023-06-07 Big business cries poor on wages even as profits mount economy, employment
2023-05-11 This is the budget of a government that wants to be loved by everyone economy, politics, topfive
2023-04-19 How squabbling pollies let miners wreck our economy economy, politics, topfive
2023-03-29 Albanese is just pretending to be tough on emissions politics
2023-02-24 Lowe's secret inflation fear: big companies' price-setting power economy, politics, topfive, world
2023-02-06 Blindly following our political masters? Pearls and Irritations can help media
2023-02-03 An apology to my grandkids for not fighting in the war of our times politics
2022-11-13 Better, not smaller government: confessions of an econocrat-watcher economy, media, politics
2022-11-09 Labor will struggle with deficit and debt until it raises taxes economy
2022-06-21 Why Albanese needs to protect capitalism from capitalists economy, politics
2022-05-25 Planes, trains and autocues: Pollies on script with wasteful vote-buying plans politics
2021-10-30 Scott Morrison’s budget report card: could do a hell of a lot better economy, politics
2021-10-14 How flimflam politicians cultivate a culture of business greed economy
2021-09-19 Why journalists have a trust problem media
2020-10-06 Smaller government has failed, but let’s cut taxes anyway (SMH Oct 5, 2020) politics
2020-09-03 Pandemic: inconvenience for the privileged, tough luck for the poor (SMH … politics
2020-08-23 We've been electing governments that damage our children's future (SMH August … politics
2020-04-14 ROSS GITTINS.Scott Morrison,Easter and the pandemic(SMH 13.4.2020) politics
2020-04-01 ROSS GITTINS supports Pearls and Irritations. commendations
2020-02-20 ROSS GITTINS. An economy for the common good.(SMH19.2.2020) politics
2020-01-30 ROSS GITTINS. Zero net carbon choice:do we want to be losers or winners?(SMH … politics
2020-01-02 ROSS GITTINS Why I didn't donate to the Rural Fire Service this time around.(SMH … politics
2019-12-13 Morrison is perfecting the seal on his own personal Canberra bubble. (SMH … politics
2019-11-13 ROSS GITTINS. Confessions of a pet shop galah: a lot of reform backfired (SMH … economy, politics
2019-10-11 ROSS GITTINS. Viking economics: How Nordic nations debunk a Scott Morrison … economy, politics
2019-06-19 ROSS GITTINS. Controversial reforms stalled until politicians win back our … politics
2019-05-22 ROSS GITTINS. Morrison's miracle election may turn out to be the easy bit. (SMH … economy, politics
2019-05-15 ROSS GITTINS. Universities: both sides should clean up the mess they've made education
2019-02-19 ROSS GITTINS. Stagnation spanner in the works? The tradesman you need to call is … economy
2019-02-12 ROSS GITTINS. Never fear, Hayne is a new start – and not just for the banks. … economy, politics
2019-02-05 ROSS GITTINS. Hey pollies: weak wage growth won't fix itself. (SMH 4.2.2019) economy, politics
2019-01-11 ROSS GITTINS. Don't assume more expressways and trains will fix traffic jams. … economy
2018-11-08 ROSS GITTINS. Our oldies have never had it so good (SMH 5.11.2018) economy, politics
2018-11-01 ROSS GITTINS. World growth a toxic danger for the environment. (SMH 27.10.2018) climate, economy
2018-10-25 ROSS GITTINS. Tax reform is pushed by rich males, for rich males (SMH … economy, politics
2018-10-09 ROSS GITTINS. Why businesses are behaving badly. (SMH 6.10.2018) economy, politics
2018-10-04 ROSS GITTINS. Nowhere to hide now for banks. (SMH 3.10.2018) economy, politics
2018-09-21 ROSS GITTINS. How market forces have failed the nation (SMH 19.9.2018) economy, politics
2018-09-20 ROSS GITTINS. Long way to go to get banks back in their box (SMH 17.9.2018) economy, politics
2018-09-18 ROSS GITTINS. Morrison's surplus secret: bracket creep kills the tax cuts. (SMH … economy, politics
2018-09-13 ROSS GITTINS. How we could revive faith in democracy (SMH 6 June 2018) economy, politics
2018-09-05 ROSS GITTINS. Inequality: Nothing to see here is not the true picture (SMH … politics
2018-07-10 ROSS GITTINS. Clever tax strategies may be legal, but they aren't productive … economy, politics
2018-07-09 ROSS GITTINS. Cash and kind: How governments shift income from rich to poor. … economy, politics
2018-07-04 ROSS GITTINS. Memo Canberra: it's not taxes, it's wages, stupid. (SMH 2/7/2018) economy
2018-06-08 ROSS GITTINS. The threat of terrorism in Australia is a scam that costs us … defence, politics
2018-05-25 ROSS GITTINS. Parties offer clear choice at next election economy
2018-05-09 ROSS GITTINS. Budget 2018: This budget is too good to be true economy
2018-05-02 ROSS GITTINS. The boot is on the other foot and big business is on the nose economy, politics
2018-03-27 ROSS GITTINS. We have a bad case of misdirected compassion economy
2018-03-15 ROSS GITTINS. Who is to blame for the housing crisis and how to fix it economy
2018-03-09 ROSS GITTINS. If governments don't get this message they will be tossed out. economy
2018-02-24 ROSS GITTINS. Self-interest standing in the way of a fix for the Murray-Darling climate, economy
2018-02-15 Private health insurance is a con job health
2017-12-23 ROSS GITTINS. A bigger, better public sector will secure our future economy
2017-11-14 ROSS GITTINS. Economists are giving up on smaller government. economy, politics
2017-09-05 ROSS GITTINS. Treasury must prevail against 'pushy young punks' economy
2017-08-29 ROSS GITTINS. Government losing its resistance to rent-seeking businesses economy
2017-02-28 How we can do better on education. (Jean Blackburn Oration) economy, education, politics
2017-02-16 ROSS GITTINS. Outlook for Australian politics and government in 2017. climate, economy, politics
2015-11-09 Ross Gittins. Launch of book by Menadue and Keating. economy, media, politics