WSJ Hilsenrath – QE3 may be sterilised
The WSJ’s Jon Hilsenrath has another of his ‘fly on the wall’ stories. He says that there are three options
macro, politics, markets, ambivalence
The WSJ’s Jon Hilsenrath has another of his ‘fly on the wall’ stories. He says that there are three options
The Australian Government’s Finkelstein inquiry into media regulation has found that the existing regulations of print and broadcast media have
Tte WSJ reports that the ISDA committee agreed unanimously that the insertion of collective action clauses and loss of over
The Telegraph reports the findings of the latest Galaxy poll on the ALP leadership. With Gillard, the ALP polls 34%
The Washington Post article on Modern Monetary Theory is getting a bit of air play on blogs – even Mankiw
Australia’s Foreign Minister – and former Prime Minister – Kevin Rudd just announced that he was resigning his commission as
Bad information seems to drive out good information – and so it is that the recently fashionable howler that rising
The minutes from the RBA’s February meeting (unch at 4.25%) suggest that a cut was not seriously discussed at that
In my mind, the purpose of the economy is to put folks into work – folks who are employed live
Paul Howes has been howling about the RBA’s decision to leave their policy rate at 4.25% in February – saying
The Jan jobs report caught the market by surprise, with the unemployment rate falling ~14bps to 5.08% (mkt 5.3%). Given
Christie Romer makes all the right arguments against the special treatment of the manufacturing sector. This theme is one of