Forcing the more productive, intelligent and resourceful people in the economy to bear the weight of those who should be going out of business is just stupid. That hasn’t stopped countries from trying it. But the IMF points out that most countries abandon it. And what would happen to government revenue when the economy slows?
June 26th, 2010 | Nickolai Hubble | 11 comments | ContinuedAll Posts Tagged With: "Ken Henry"
Zombie Bureaucratic Socialists Attack in Daylight
These rules are worth reviewing because an army of wealth-stealing Zombies from the government are now on the march. They walk amongst us in broad daylight. And their ludicrous proposals to impose super taxes on every industry and to bludgeon free people into unthinking submission are starting to become a real threat to personal freedom and your ability to achieve financial independence.
June 22nd, 2010 | Dan Denning | 62 comments | Continued
Your Garden Variety Global Financial Crisis or Something Wilder?
But first, why are companies hoarding cash? Bloomberg reports that companies in the S&P 500 have increased their cash holdings to an aggregate US$1.18 trillion dollars. The big blue chip multinationals have cut spending, frozen new hires (not literally), and generally kept cautious until more details emerge about the economic landscape.
February 12th, 2010 | Dan Denning | 121 comments | Continued
Aged Pension MkII
It would mean that the hundreds of thousands of dollars, or even millions of dollars that you’ve accumulated in your superannuation fund would be compulsorily acquired by the government on your retirement and in return you would get an Aged Pension MkII.
The worst thing about it is that it was a commissioned submission…
December 11th, 2009 | Kris Sayce | 24 comments | Continued
Rally in Stocks and Rise in Aussie Dollar is a Result of the Carry Trade
That’s just what happened last year. Only then, it was both a dollar and yen carry trade that led to a rise in Aussie assets. Once the credit crisis set in, the yen carry got dropped and investors fled risk assets and piled right back into the greenback and U.S. Treasuries.
October 29th, 2009 | Dan Denning | 9 comments | Continued
The Dark Underbelly of Australia’s Resource Boom: Chinese Resource Demand
But when it came to resources, most analysts made an exception for the resource sector. The argument was that while everything else was floating on a sea of credit, there was a bedrock of Chinese and Indian demand for commodities which underpinned the Aussie resource market and resource share prices.
October 23rd, 2009 | Dan Denning | 7 comments | Continued
What’s Wrong With the Stimulus Packages
The Australian Senate has been running an inquiry into the stimulus package for which I provided a written submission and afterwards spoke to the Senate Economic References Committee which has been conducting this inquiry.
October 20th, 2009 | Dr. Steven Kates | 11 comments | Continued
Can Governments and Central Banks Prevent More Credit Writedowns?
Are we changing our tune, then, about what to expect from markets? Not one bit. But the question now is timing. The collapse of 2008 was so severe because of the sudden reduction in leverage in the financial sector. As assets fell in value, the most highly leveraged firms (or lenders who raised money by selling debt) went out of business.
October 12th, 2009 | Dan Denning | 34 comments | Continued
Attention Dr. Ken Henry: Government Could Make Employee Voluntary Contributions Compulsory
Maybe she didn’t support an effective 30% compulsory super contribution after all. Time for some humble pie we thought.
And then we ‘un-thought’ the idea of eating some humble pie.
It seems that rather than coming to the wrong conclusion, instead we made a schoolboy error by quoting the wrong part of the submission.
September 24th, 2009 | Kris Sayce | 24 comments | Continued
The New Normal: Where the Government Plays a Significant Role in Controlling the Economy
In the “old normal” view – preached by politicians left and right and amplified by a compliant media and a smarting financial industry – you should go back to doing what you were doing before. Have a short memory. Buy stocks automatically because they always go up. Get a mortgage and buy a house, perhaps even a second one. Spend money. The government will make more.
September 4th, 2009 | Dan Denning | 17 comments | Continued


