logo
Inside Macquarie  Is Trump good for markets?

Inside Macquarie Is Trump good for markets?

This week on the Chanticleer podcast, Anthony and special guest, associate editor Joyce Moullakis look at what happens when you shake up the RBA, sink their teeth into the company Joyce co-wrote the book on (Macquarie) and catch up on the latest from Donald Trump – and there is a bit.
Listen to the full conversation below, or download the podcast from Apple, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. New episodes of the Chanticleer podcast are available every Friday at 5pm AEDT.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

PM restates support for two-state solution in call with Palestinian leader
PM restates support for two-state solution in call with Palestinian leader

News.com.au

time5 hours ago

  • News.com.au

PM restates support for two-state solution in call with Palestinian leader

Anthony Albanese has restated Australia's support for a two-state solution in a phone call with Palestinian Authority president Mahmoud Abbas. The call comes amid mounting pressure on the Prime Minister to recognise a Palestinian state at the UN General Assembly (UNGA) next month. France, the UK and Canada have all conditionally said that they would. Mr Albanese has neither committed to nor ruled out doing so. 'Prime Minister Albanese reiterated Australia's call for the immediate entry of aid to meet the needs of the people of Gaza, a permanent ceasefire, and the release of all hostages,' according to a readout of a call with Mr Abbas. 'Prime Minister Albanese also reinforced Australia's commitment to a two-state solution because a just and lasting peace depends upon it. 'President Abbas thanked Prime Minister Albanese for Australia's economic and humanitarian support. 'The leaders discussed deepening co-operation across a range of areas and agreed to meet on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly.' France was the first major Western country to say it would recognise a Palestinian state at the UNGA. It did so condemning Hamas' October 7 attacks on Israel in 2023 and saying the Palestinian Islamist group cannot play a role in Gaza. The UK took a similar line, though its pledge to recognise Palestinian statehood was more of a threat to the Israeli government. UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer said he would go ahead with recognition if Israel did not loosen its chokehold on aid flowing into Gaza, where the death toll from starvation has climbed to nearly 200, according to local health officials. Foreign Minister Penny Wong on Tuesday repeated the Albanese government's condemnation of Hamas and said there was an 'unique opportunity in the international community to isolate and diminish' it while giving life to a Palestinian state. 'Hamas is a terrorist organisation. We consistently condemn them. We have multiple sanctions on them,' she told the ABC. 'When you look at what the Palestinian Authority and the Arab countries have said, condemning Hamas and committing to Hamas having no role in the future of the governance of Gaza.' Senator Wong went on to say the 'best way to ensure peace and stability in the Middle East is for there to be two states'. 'And the reason for … the urgency behind this is that there is a risk that there will be no Palestine left to recognise if the world does not act.'

Will Labor's conversation about everything produce anything much?
Will Labor's conversation about everything produce anything much?

ABC News

time10 hours ago

  • ABC News

Will Labor's conversation about everything produce anything much?

Labor's triumphant election victory left its true believers with a question: now what? Before long, Anthony Albanese and Jim Chalmers had a concept of a plan. They would summon leading experts and advocates to Canberra to share economic ideas, with nothing off limits and an appetite not just to talk about reform, but to take it on. Inside the Labor fold, two camps have formed around the government's productivity roundtable, slated for later this month. One camp doubts that a cautious Albanese has much inclination to take on a controversial new policy — and question whether "consensus" can be achieved with business and unions appearing poles apart on several issues. But the other camp sees genuine opportunity to achieve something of substance on the budget, the tax system and productivity — urgent national concerns that have been rotting for years in the too-hard basket. There is a risk that a talkfest about everything could amount to nothing, but the rewards could be great if the ambitious Chalmers can emerge with a term-defining reform package that he can sell to the public — and most importantly, his prime minister. The three-day agenda is sorted from easiest to hardest. The theme of the first day is "economic resilience" — that is, how Australia should weatherproof its economy to survive a chaotic world, a worthy but relatively uncontroversial topic. Day two is about productivity, a misunderstood and long-neglected subject but one where plenty of consensus can be found. Productivity is what makes an economy greater than the sum of its parts. It does not come from making people work more, as often thought, but from new technology, better regulation, education, or anything that grows or harnesses our economic potential. Build a road between two towns and you boost productivity because the people in each can visit one another, exchange ideas and find new ways to work together. Educate kids, and you boost productivity. Remove a bureaucratic obstacle, and you boost productivity. Remove a barrier that holds people back from fully participating in the workforce, such as the cost of parenting, and you boost productivity. Economists see productivity growth as the main reason living standards have steadily but dramatically improved in countries like Australia compared to a century ago, and the only reliable guarantor that this will continue. But as in much of the developed world, it has been hard to come by for the last decade or so, prompting urgent conversations about how it can be revived. Some ideas for how to do so are uncontroversial and even dull. In its last term, for example, Labor moved to stamp out the overuse of non-compete clauses, used to restrict everyone from hairdressers to data analysts from changing jobs or starting their own businesses, and so stifling innovation. Few objected. Similar ideas could be steered through the round table, such as removing unnecessary duplication in accreditation and regulation across states and territories or countries. Other bigger-ticket items match up with Labor's political priorities and may also find broad support. On housing, where Labor is falling well short of its target of 1.2 million new homes over five years, Housing Minister Clare O'Neil has recognised more needs to be done to make new housing easier to build. Productivity is part of the story — Australia's construction sector completes half as many homes per hour of work as in 1995, according to the Productivity Commission (PC), which has called for better planning coordination and a review of building regulations. On major projects, Labor is inching towards landing an overhaul to the environmental approval process, which business, unions and environmental groups all agree are too slow and serve no-one well, even if they have different priorities for reforming it. There has been some speculation that a deal on these reforms, which Environment Minister Murray Watt appears close to landing, could be announced at the round table. One of the most obvious frontiers for productivity growth, but where perils are also apparent, is the growth of artificial intelligence. The question of how — if at all — government should respond is a vexed one and will spark much disagreement between the participants. Business groups have argued any regulation should be light touch, and the most important task for government is to promote the development of AI and the innovation it can make possible. Unions see risk for jobs and want government to constrict and contain AI rather than unleash it. Both views have their sympathisers within the Labor fold. Assistant Minister for Competition Andrew Leigh, is an AI optimist who sees the potential for major productivity gains. Industry Minister Tim Ayres, has appeared more sympathetic to union fears, suggesting internal disagreements that may take more than the round table to fully resolve. In the care sector, which Labor has devoted billions to expanding, the PC will release a report the week before the round table with suggestions about how to deliver the standard of care the public expects while also doing so more efficiently. Unions, business groups and many economists also argue that making childcare universal would boost productivity by harnessing the talents and ideas of parents, mostly mothers, for whom the cost of childcare is a barrier to full-time work. Labor promised at the election to guarantee three days of subsidised childcare each week to nearly all families, and a $1 billion fund to open more centres. Many still regard universal childcare as the likely choice if the PM wants a "signature" reform for his second term, although the PC dealt it a blow last year when it advised against the move, urging a focus instead on improving access. The spotlight on the sector's poor regulation following shocking allegations against a Melbourne childcare worker present another obstacle, a reminder of the risks associated with expanding the sector prematurely. Apart from universal childcare, which does not feature prominently on the roundtable agenda published in late July, none of these items feels like the centrepiece reform Chalmers could be seeking. If that is to come in the productivity space, it could involve company tax, a key priority for the business lobby and some economists after a decade where investment has fallen. There has long been support in some quarters — echoed in recent Treasury advice to government, and by Labor backbencher Ed Husic — for cutting Australia's 30 per cent company tax rate, which is higher than some global comparators. That was last attempted by the Turnbull government, which managed to cut the rate to 25 per cent for small businesses but fell short of doing so for larger companies. Ahead of the round table, company tax is again on the agenda but with more fine-grained proposals than a simple rate cut. The PC has recommended a headline rate of 20 per cent for companies with less than $1 billion in revenue — that is, most companies. This rate applies to profits and is only really meaningful for foreign investors, because for Australian investors the rate is ultimately refunded in the form of "franking credits" so that the tax can instead be paid at the investor's income tax rate. At the same time, the PC suggests a new 5 per cent tax on cashflows. It expects this would see some larger companies pay more tax, but help smaller companies by allowing them to deduct the cost of new capital immediately, stimulating investment. Several similar proposals have been floated, including ANU tax professor Bob Breunig's proposal for an effective tax-free threshold for business investors. Other economists including Chris Richardson favour higher specific taxes on offshore gas companies, mining companies or banks, but lower taxes on others. The business lobby has focused its calls on a more generous tax credit for research and development spending, although some economists say the current credit mostly benefits companies who would have spent the same amount on research anyway. Chalmers has shown much appetite to focus on company tax, but a proposal favoured by the business community — and which the Coalition may have no choice but to support as well — could balance out a package that raises taxes elsewhere. That question — whether to raise taxes somewhere — will consume the third and likely most controversial day of the round table, about the federal budget. The budget's problem is well documented: we consistently spend more than we collect in tax, and there are reasons to believe this will worsen over time. Labor bucked this trend in the last two years with budget surpluses, but these were anomalies helped by the good fortune of high commodity prices, which boosted the company tax take. Strip out these short-term vagaries and the "structural" position of the budget is in deficit to the tune of 1.5 per cent of GDP — or almost the size of the entire NDIS. Add in state governments and the picture more than doubles, to 3.1 per cent. While Australia's current level of debt is modest by global standards, the trajectory is troubling given spending is at the highest non-crisis level in a generation while the tax take has not substantially changed, and there is more spending pressure ahead. Debate over the budget tends to be split in two between those who emphasise spending cuts as the solution and those who emphasise higher taxes. But Treasury bluntly stated that both would be needed to fix the budget, and the round table will consider both. Independent MP Allegra Spender, who will attend the round table, convened high-profile economists last month to canvass ideas on both sides of the equation. On the spending side, Labor acted in the last term to contain cost growth in the NDIS and aged care, although there are calls to go further on both. To those two, the e61 Institute's Michael Brennan added what he called a "capital binge" on mega-projects with benefits that did not justify their costs and which were diverting capital from other uses. Brennan also questioned the budget impact of shifting towards universal payments, for example in childcare, but also in schemes like the NDIS and the health system where care recipients with financial means are not expected to contribute out of pocket. The counterargument, made by tax professor Miranda Stewart, is that "targeted" payments can actually punish recipients for earning more, because the benefits of higher income are diluted or even eliminated by the accompanying loss of payments. It is also unlikely to appeal to a Labor government that has made universal public provision — especially in Medicare — key to its political message. And even substantial changes to infrastructure or to the payments system would likely pale in the context of long-term projections by Treasury and others of how much the cost of health and care will grow — not to mention any higher spending on defence. The Grattan Institute's Aruna Sathanapally emphasised that spending would need to grow astronomically just to meet our current expectations of care. "Even if did not raise our service expectations, the nature of an ageing population and growing health technology means that government will get bigger," she says. For Sathanapally, who has been chosen to deliver the keynote address for the tax section of the round table, that means the federal government must tackle the uncomfortable question of raising more money. "If we want to find a magic way to have Australian-level service expectations and remain being a low-taxing country, I'd love to know what it looks like," she told Spender's forum. "But my starting proposition is we're going to have to think about higher taxes or we're going to have to think about taking chunks out of our service expectations." Former Treasury secretary Ken Henry agrees, but reluctantly, saying any tax reform package should be designed to be revenue neutral at first, but over time lift revenue as a share of GDP over time in a way that would do the least economic damage. Chalmers has already stipulated that any package brought to the round table should be budget neutral at a minimum and ideally budget positive. The Coalition has said it will only support changes that are revenue neutral, meaning it would only support a package that repairs the budget if the improvements came from the spending side. But the tax debate is about "how", not just "how much", and here there is likely to be much disagreement. Participants in the tax debate tend to complain about one of two things: that the tax system is unfair or that it is inefficient (that is, it distorts people's choices). The objectives of fairness and efficiency do not always align. The GST, for example, is considered an efficient tax because it applies the same rate to everything and so does not distort spending decisions as it would if different rates applied to different products. There are exceptions, which create inefficiencies, but the efficient character of the tax is one reason why some economists say raising it could be a worthy option. But the other side of the coin of a flat rate is that it can be regarded as unfair because it is "regressive" — the same 10 per cent tax is a greater imposition on someone with a smaller income than someone with a larger income. That is one reason why the proposal has been regarded as politically toxic, and Labor has given no indication it is enthusiastic to adopt it. But there is one feature of our tax system where inefficiency and inequity are broadly aligned: our system's heavy reliance on the taxes of wage earners, and comparatively low tax on those who make passive income from their wealth. Australia's tax system is wildly inconsistent in this regard. A couple with no assets, both on the minimum wage, could pay more than a couple with three homes, shares, and hundreds of thousands in annual income. The second couple might even pay no tax. As e61's Greg Kaplan put it at Spender's round table, this can not only be seen as unfair but can also distort choices in an undesirable way because wage earners pay a higher rate of tax than asset owners who can use deductions and discounts to lower their tax. "The absolute worst case you can be in is to earn all of your income as an employee working for somebody else," Kaplan said. "The message that we are sending to our young people is that if you want to be rich … choose a career plan where you can generate capital gains, strive for property development or funds management, not for engineering. That matters for productivity." But nobody needs a long memory to recognise the political perils of taking on issues such as tax discounts for superannuation, capital gains or the treatment of franking credits, several of which were in Bill Shorten's rejected 2019 policy platform and one of which — super tax — is the source of a current controversy. Those ghosts — and the ghosts of the carbon and mining taxes in the Rudd-Gillard era — are fresh in the minds of many in the Labor fold, not least the prime minister, and will weigh strongly against the case for any sweeping reform. While Labor could balance out any of these tax-raising proposals with large income tax cuts or even company tax cuts, any of them risks igniting a political firestorm, and those close to Chalmers have privately sought to lower expectations that this is his plan. But Ken Henry, perhaps Australia's most prominent tax reform authority, who has been consulted by Chalmers in recent weeks and will attend the round table, has a different view: go big or go home. "Tax reform cannot be done piecemeal," he told Spender's forum last month. "This is the lesson I take from Australia's tax reform adventures of the last 40 years. If it's going to be successful, it's going to have to be big."

Housing boom incoming? Surprise spike in building approvals sparks affordability debate
Housing boom incoming? Surprise spike in building approvals sparks affordability debate

7NEWS

timea day ago

  • 7NEWS

Housing boom incoming? Surprise spike in building approvals sparks affordability debate

Economics Expert Last week we received confirmation from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) that the rate of inflation has continued to slow. The further decline in inflationary pressures will likely result in the Reserve Bank (RBA) reducing official interest rates by 25 basis points when they meet next week. At the time of writing, market expectations are for another two 25 basis-point reduction in the cash rate this calendar year and a further 25 basis-point cut to the cash rate early in 2026. The RBA historically targets a rate of inflation of between 2 percent and 3 percent throughout the cycle, nowadays it specifically targets 2.5 percent annual inflation and with headline inflation at 2.1 percent over the year, inflation is below target. I think the public doesn't always grasp that the rate of escalation of inflation is slowing, but prices are still rising. It's rare that we go into a period of deflation, so the cost of goods and services remains elevated and is continuing to rise but the slower rate of growth is providing some relief for households. Let's be honest, deflation is terrible from an economic perspective. When you are in a period of deflation, purchase decisions are delayed because if you buy now and the expectation is that prices will continue to fall, people will decide to wait until the thing they want to purchase is even cheaper. But I would imagine most households would appreciate the cost of everything falling. Not that I think there is any chance that the RBA would sit by and let us go into a period of deflation but we would all appreciate lower prices. The harm caused by the high rate of inflation over recent years will persist for some time, especially considering that wage growth has not kept pace with inflation. For the housing sector the rapid growth in costs over recent years is pertinent, especially for new housing. On Friday of last week, the ABS published a quarterly data series which is called the Producer Price Indexes. This data measures price changes of goods and services as they leave or enter the production process. The Producer Price Index provides insight into what is happening with housing construction and housing materials costs. Over recent years, the cost of constructing housing in Australia has increased substantially. There have been several impacts of these increased housing construction costs. Firstly, these increased costs are passed on to the end user so new housing has become more expensive and the gap between new and existing house prices has widened making new housing less attractive to many purchasers. Secondly, higher interest rates have driven up financing costs for developers and increased borrowing costs for would-be purchasers further dampening both the demand for and the supply of new housing. Thirdly, labour and material shortages in the housing construction sector which built up during the pandemic and have persisted thereafter, particularly labour shortages, have led to a decline in construction activity and led to new housing taking longer to complete. Finally, because most housing only gets built when there is a sufficient level of pre-commitment to purchase, higher costs to purchase and higher finance costs due to higher interest rates for buyers have contributed to a reduction in new housing supply. The latest construction cost data from the ABS is encouraging because it points to a slowing of the escalation in these construction costs. When you couple a slower escalation in construction costs with lower interest rates, it is likely that the industry response will be a much-needed increase in the supply of new housing. Over the June 2025 quarter, both house construction and other residential (which represents medium and higher density housing) construction costs saw stronger growth than over the previous quarter. Despite this, the annual change in house construction costs fell to 0.3 percent which was the slowest rate of growth since December 2019 and the annual growth in other residential construction costs was 3 percent which was above the rate of inflation but the slowest rate of growth since June 2021. The escalation in housing material costs saw similar results with an acceleration in growth over the quarter but the annual rate of growth at 1.6 percent was higher than the previous quarter but inline with the December 2024 result. The 1.6 percent annual increase in these costs was also well below the rate of inflation. Even though the escalation in construction and material costs is easing, these costs are significantly higher over the past five years and have increased by more than inflation which was 26.2 percent higher over the period. Over the five years to June 2025, housing material costs are 34.5 percent higher, house construction costs are 42.1 percent higher and other residential construction costs are 28.7 percent higher. Remember, that these increased costs are typically passed on to the end user, that is the person purchasing a new property. Encouragingly, there is evidence that the housing sector is now starting to respond to the two interest rate cuts we've already had, the expectation of further cuts and the moderation in construction price increases. The latest building approval data, which is notoriously volatile month-to-month, found that dwelling approvals in June 2025 reached 17,076 for the month which was the highest monthly number since August 2022. The increase was driven by other dwelling approvals which were 86.6 percent higher than the previous June and at their highest monthly volume since December 2022. While monthly data is volatile, looking at annual approvals shows that things are improving. Over the 2024-25 financial year 187,333 dwellings were approved for construction which was 10.2 percent more approvals than the previous financial year and the highest annual approvals since the 12 months to January 2023. There were 112,483 house approvals over the year which was 7.9 percent higher than the previous financial year and the highest volume since February 2023. Other dwelling approvals reached 74,849 which was 14.2 percent higher than the previous year and the highest volume since January 2023. Dwelling approvals are necessary to commence and construct new dwellings but they are still lagging well behind the federal government's National Housing Accord target. If you aren't familiar, the National Housing Accord is a target to build 1.2 million new homes over the five years from 2024-25 to 2028-29 which comes in at 240,000 new dwellings each year. Not everything that gets approved will end up built, so in order to hit the Housing Accord target you would need to approve more than 240,000 new dwellings each year. As you can see, although dwelling approvals are increasing, they remain well behind that volume. Whilst I never thought that the National Housing Accord target was going to be achievable, assuming construction cost escalations remain moderate over the coming years and interest rates fall as expected, I anticipate a lift in dwelling approvals, commencement and construction. A lift in housing construction would be a welcome development considering how much housing prices and rents have increased over recent years. More supply can alleviate future price rises and with a rapidly growing national population it's imperative that we grow housing stock in line with our population growth. I am certainly hopeful that the construction cycle continues to turn and a greater volume of new housing is delivered over the coming years. More housing is going to be a key component of improving housing affordability and alleviating rapid housing price increases.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store