Skip to content
Inside Story
Current affairs & culture from Australia and beyond
About
Support
Sign up
Search
Search
Menu
About
Support
Sign up
Search
Search
economics
National Affairs
Australia today: slow growth, high debt
Tim Colebatch
13 March 2018
Behind the day-to-day swings in the economic data are worrying longer-term trends
Books & Arts
The not-so-tragic commons
Jane Goodall
12 March 2018
Books
| Following in the footsteps of Nobel prize-winner Elinor Ostrom, two new books make the argument for public property and the public good
National Affairs
Dear Ms Plibersek
Dean Ashenden
5 March 2018
Labor’s shadow education minister faces the problem of working out why school reform has failed, and what a federal education minister could do about it
National Affairs
Good advice, and puzzling blind spots, in the IMF’s latest report on Australia
Tim Colebatch
23 February 2018
The International Monetary Fund gets some things right and some things wrong — but you wouldn’t necessarily know which from the coverage it’s had
National Affairs
It’s going to be a bumpy economic ride
Saul Eslake
13 February 2018
The impact of America’s badly timed stimulus will ripple across the world
National Affairs
Bitcoin’s zero-sum game
John Quiggin
24 January 2018
The quicker the cryptocurrency reaches its true value the better
Books & Arts
How the public interest went missing in action
Carmela Chivers
22 January 2018
Books
| Is the US economy suffering from an overriding malady — and could Australia become infected?
Essays & Reportage
Keynesians of the first hour
Alex Millmow
6 December 2017
Called on the eve of a revolution in economic thinking, the 1936–37 banking royal commission mattered in ways that the latest one probably won’t
International
The fall and rise of America’s rating agencies
Timothy J. Sinclair
21 November 2017
Attempts to regulate rating agencies haven’t been notably successful. But perhaps the diagnosis was wrong
Essays & Reportage
Is a universal basic income “challenging but possible”?
Tim Dunlop
10 November 2017
With interest growing, supporters gathered in Melbourne recently to discuss the practicalities
Books & Arts
Private gains and social losses
Jason Sharman
6 November 2017
From the archive
| The biggest tax havens aren’t on faraway islands, writes
Jason Sharman
National Affairs
The Productivity Commission’s multi-factor problem
John Quiggin
31 October 2017
The need to lift multi-factor productivity has become an article of faith. But what if it doesn’t really exist?
National Affairs
Dial M for missed opportunity?
Lesley Russell
30 October 2017
The Productivity Commission’s healthcare recommendations might not go far enough, but they could still be too bold for the government
International
The calm before the storm?
Kerry Brown
28 October 2017
What did an orderly party congress reveal about China’s priorities for the next half-decade?
International
Have headline, will travel
Peter Brent | Mumble
19 October 2017
Beware of what excitable headline-writers and the betting markets say about Donald Trump’s chances of serving two terms
International
China in the Pacific: a question of influence
Graeme Smith
16 October 2017
Exaggerated fears about China’s intentions reflect a misunderstanding of what’s happening in the region
International
Italy: the bel paese that lost its way
Tim Colebatch
2 October 2017
Life is still good for many Italians, but bad decisions are deepening the north–south divide
Correspondents
A break in the European clouds
James Panichi
19 September 2017
Europe is shipshape and ready for action, according to the European Union’s top official
Essays & Reportage
The generation game
John Quiggin
5 September 2017
It makes no sense, but typecasting generations is more popular than ever
Correspondents
The land that fell to earth
David Hayes
16 August 2017
Britain has spiralled into political failure since voting to leave the European Union. What happened, and what happens next?
National Affairs
The country–city divide: more evidence of how inequality is growing
Tim Colebatch
12 August 2017
Country Australia is losing out on full-time jobs, forcing its young to head for the cities
Essays & Reportage
The coming boom in inherited wealth
John Quiggin
26 July 2017
Will we have to learn to live in a patrimonial society
National Affairs
Tackling inequality: good for the economy, good for the party
Tim Colebatch
26 July 2017
A major economics conference wound up talking about the topic on everyone else’s lips
National Affairs
High-tech, low growth
Brett Evans
25 July 2017
Are the Big Four stifling competition and inhibiting growth? Pro-business commentators have joined the push to dilute their power
Books & Arts
The four horsemen of the global financial crisis
John Quiggin
7 July 2017
Books
| A former Morgan Stanley executive does a great job of exposing the flaws in mainstream economics. But his solution has problems of its own
National Affairs
The devils in Finkel’s detail
Tim Colebatch
23 June 2017
What are the consequences of choosing a second-best scheme?
National Affairs
Ignoring workers’ welfare is hurting the economy
Tim Colebatch
10 June 2017
Growth continues to be slow and uneven, and we seem unable to distribute its benefits fairly
International
The OECD joins the backlash against unfettered globalisation
John Quiggin
9 June 2017
But can an organisation that has promoted a globalised world economy take on the massively powerful finance sector?
National Affairs
Is Australia’s economy really a world-beater?
Tim Colebatch
8 June 2017
Only if you don’t look too closely at how “recession” is defined
National Affairs
Inequality: a three-decade story in eighteen charts
Saul Eslake
6 June 2017
Is Australia doing enough to reduce inequality?
Newer posts
Older posts