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Gary Banks thinks the Earth is flat: Albanese

Anthony Albanese has hit back at criticism of the government’s Future Made in Australia Act by former productivity commissioner Gary Bank.

Jobless rate edges up to 3.8pc, strong February gains retained

Unemployment edged up in March as more people searched for work, which was largely driven by strong population growth.

The Chinese economy consumed 296 million tonnes of  steel in 2019, but the RBA expects demand to fall by 80 per cent to 58 million tonnes by 2050.

China’s iron ore demand may have peaked, RBA warns

The country’s shrinking population is posing a multi-decade headwind for mining industry profits and government revenue.

Economy loses 6600 jobs in March, unemployment rises to 3.8pc

Economy loses 6600 jobs in March. Unemployment rate climbs 0.1pc to 3.8pc. Iron ore prices jump. Wall Street falls. Follow the latest here.

Bonza brings in KordaMentha to review operations at budget carrier

Sources close to discussions said the corporate restructuring specialists had not been appointed as administrators, but to provide financial advice.

Bob Carr slams AUKUS in warning to New Zealand

The former Australian foreign minister says pillar two of AUKUS is a ‘science fiction’ American invention designed to lure nations into a strategic alliance against China.

Economics professor sacked for ‘personal relationship’ with student

The University of Melbourne’s defence of its firing of an academic has pointed to claims he massaged shoulders and often asked a student to go out for a drink.

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legal affairs

Tapped: Ingmar Taylor SC, will be the president of the NSW Industrial Court

Top silk to head new NSW Industrial Court

Three Sydney barristers have been chosen as judges for the new court, with leading employment law silk Ingmar Taylor, SC, to be the president.

Justin Quill, one of Network Ten’s lawyers, outside the Federal Court in Sydney on Monday.

Lehrmann judge queries Ten lawyer’s criticism

Lawyer Justin Quill says the way defamation trials pick apart journalists’ work is “divorced from reality”.

Taylor Auerbach leaves Federal Court with his lawyer Rebekah Giles after giving evidence in the Bruce Lehrmann defamation case in Sydney on earlier this month.

Ex-Seven producer demands compensation, apology from Seven

Taylor Auerbach, who helped secure Bruce Lehrmann for an exclusive Spotlight interview, says he has been proven right by the Federal Court’s decision on Monday.

A rape, a cover-up narrative and a political firestorm

“Tonight, claims of rape, roadblocks to a police investigation, and a young woman forced to choose between her career and the pursuit of justice”. That is how Ten introduced its interview with Brittany Higgins.

Bruce Lehrmann’s lawyer, Mark O’Brien, is on a losing streak

Losses in high-profile cases have experts wondering if Sydney’s client-friendly defamation culture is changing.

Features include the ability to save articles, dark mode and real time notifications.

Get the latest business news on the go with the AFR’s new iOS app.

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Companies

Santos said revenues were weighed down by lower production and prices.

Santos blames lower output, prices for 15pc revenue slide

But the gas giant says the result sets it up to complete major projects including a carbon capture and storage scheme which is due to start later this year.

BHP suffers new productivity hit in Queensland coal

Another downgrade means the miner spends almost seven times more money to dig a tonne of coal out of the sunshine state as it does for each tonne of iron ore in WA.

The embattled Star Sydney is facing another round of public hearings.

Star inquiry fallout spreads to Bendigo bank board

Wednesday’s hearing was interrupted when Star’s solicitors released documents to the inquiry related to its former CFO, Christina Katsibouba.

Jon Adgemis’ high-wire act is coming unstuck

The former KPMG dealmaker burst onto the hospitality sector after buying up a string of venues. Huge debts and angry lenders are threatening to push it over.

Rinehart’s presence stokes rethink of foiled $10b Lynas-MP merger

Australian richest person, Gina Rinehart, has emerged as a potential kingmaker in any rare earths mega-merger involving Lynas.

Federal Court says Blumenthal market rigging was ‘serious, deliberate’

The stockbroker will be banned from managing companies for five years and pay an $850,000 penalty four months after reaching an agreement with the regulator.

Wall Street icon Lee Ainslie: it’s a historically good time to invest

The founder of Maverick Capital and former Tiger Cub says there are four reasons active managers are well-placed, including higher rates.

Companies in the News

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Markets

The RBA is watching the shrinking sharemarket.

Private equity’s hunger risks leaving ASX behind, RBA warns

Buyout funds’ Australian assets have grown 75 per cent in four years, but the ASX 200 has shrunk by roughly $6 billion this year.

Woolworths chief executive Brad Banducci at the supermarket prices inquiry earlier this week.

Balance sheet quirks skew supermarket returns measures: MST Marquee

The concept became a political football this week after it was used by Greens senator Nick McKim to accuse Woolworths and Coles of “making off like bandits”.

Mining stocks have been a key driver for ASX 200 earnings for years.

Time’s up for top stocks: riding the ‘ASX 190’ to better returns

The top 10 stocks should account for more than half the ASX 200’s earnings this year, but that figure will drop below 50 per cent in FY25 as market leadership shifts.

What Bloxham, Masters and Ong say will be in the budget

Economists surveyed by Financial Review expect government spending in the federal budget to be aimed at struggling families, but it will be small and not inflationary.

Wall Street icon Lee Ainslie: it’s a historically good time to invest

The founder of Maverick Capital and former Tiger Cub says there are four reasons active managers are well-placed, including higher rates.

Opinion

So-called ‘reform’ is working against the productivity objective

The government’s (self-)celebrated productivity agenda is mainly a spending agenda, indeed a spending more agenda, and avoids the regulatory reforms we need.

Gary Banks

Founding chair of the Productivity Commission

Gary Banks

Subs ahoy! Marles defends Labor’s record in defence

Richard Marles argues the Labor government has delivered dramatic reform in defence to project Australia into a much changed and more dangerous region. Is that right?

Defence strategy fills gaps but misses holes

We need to move towards a wider conversation around national security and mobilisation, and be clear on the vulnerability in our capabilities until the late 2030s.

Jennifer Parker

Defence expert

Jennifer Parker

Marles forced to revise Canberra’s take on far away wars

The Defence Minister has made it clear the government is going to stare down critics who want our troops turning up at every world trouble spot.

James Curran

International editor

James Curran

Higgins ‘cover-up’ no Watergate. It was another ‘Russsiagate’

Journalists won “glittering prizes” for the stories that were misinformation, but there’s no sign of anyone giving back their awards.

John Roskam

Columnist

John Roskam

Greens’ supermarket inquiry a Canberra political freak show

Does anyone think the public interest was served by the back and forth over the best metric of Woolworths’ profitability and threatening Brad Banducci with six months in prison for contempt of parliament?

The AFR View

Editorial

The AFR View
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Politics

Gary Banks and Peter Harris, both formerly Productivity Commission chairmen.

First productivity chief calls for Labor U-turn on policy agenda

Inaugural Productivity Commission chairman Gary Banks and his successor Peter Harris are each separately calling for a “pro-productivity” and a “pro-competition” agenda.

Former Productivity Commission boss Gary Banks is worried about a lack of reform.

We got it wrong on ‘wasteful’ NDIS: former PC boss

Gary Banks has conceded the recommendation to create the National Disability Insurance Scheme was flawed, and has called for major reforms to limit eligibility.

Simon Holmes-a-Court.

Climate 200 targets 20 more seats including Dutton’s

Bradfield in northern Sydney, held by Liberal shadow minister Paul Fletcher, tops the teal movement’s list. It is also eyeing Peter Dutton’s seat, Dickson.

Terrorism definition in spotlight after Sydney attacks

Muslim community leaders are calling for a rethink of how law enforcement defines terrorism after the Sydney church stabbing.

Defence’s $330b plan still leaves decade of danger

Defence Minister Richard Marles says Australia faces a “precarious” decade, by the end of which defence spending will be about $100 billion a year.

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World

A plane in Dubai during flooding.

Record-breaking rain floods Dubai airport and swamps desert

Experts said storm systems across the region were forecast well in advance and that UAE’s cloud seeding would not have caused such a deluge.

The race for clean-tech dominance between the US and China will help the world achieve its climate goals.

Biden’s trade action against China is just polite Trumpism

Improved relations between the two powers can’t mask age-old trade tensions. Better communication is important because the structural problem between them is insoluble, writes Edward Luce.

Joe Biden puts tariffs on Chinese steel.

Biden triples tariffs on Chinese steel and aluminium, denies trade war

US President Joe Biden defends the move, while US Trade Representative Katherine Tai says the US will monitor any impact on Australia.

‘It is clear the Israelis are making a decision to act’

Britain’s foreign secretary David Cameron acknowledged during a visit to Israel that an Israeli reprisal seemed inevitable.

The two key things Iran’s attack reveals about its weapons arsenal

The weapons used in the attack on Israel reveal that Iran has an almost unlimited capacity to make missiles, but they are not very good.

Property

Melbourne’s abundant affordable unit offering could provide the city with a competitive edge in attracting a diverse workforce, including first-time buyers and those seeking more affordable housing options according to Suburbtrends.

The suburbs where you can buy a unit for under $400,000

Home buyers looking to score units under $400,000 will not easily find them in Sydney or Brisbane, but Melbourne and Perth still offer plenty, at least for now.

The Mornington Peninsula is home both wealthy and working class suburbs

Developers slam Mornington Peninsula Shire social housing tax

A 3.3 per cent levy on new developments would reduce investment in housing on the Mornington Peninsula, says Rich Lister Sam Tarascio and other developers.

Kapitol Group director Andrew Deveson at the at NEXTDC M2 Data Centre his company is building in Melbourne’s Tullamarine.

Data centre builders fight infrastructure for heavy cranes

Demand for the heaviest type of crane has pushed up costs at twice the rate of ordinary commercial cranes. And there aren’t enough of them.

Redcape sells Sydney pub for $48m, unfreezes fund

The Crescent Hotel in Fairfield was sold to veteran publican Patrick Gallagher. It takes total divestments since asset sales began last year to more than $200m.

Construction’s long hours put next generation of workers off

A new industry survey shows working conditions in an industry already struggling to attract women are also putting off the next generation of men.

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Wealth

New superannuation tax may hit venture capital

SMSFs will shy away from investing in start-ups for fear of being slugged with big tax bills on unrealised gains.

How do I calculate my tax-free super pension limit?

The transfer balance cap has increased twice since its inception to reach $1.9 million. Calculating how to stay within it can be tricky.

Three ways investors can back the next Canva

Dozens of angel investing clubs are allowing sophisticated investors to buy a piece of early-stage start-ups for as little as $10,000.

Technology

Humane AI Pin

World’s first AI consumer gadget panned by everyone

Humane’s Ai Pin flop shouldn’t mean the end of experimentation in this new era of artificial intelligence gadgets.

Amazon opened Fresh supermarkets in the US and the UK.

How Amazon wasted a decade trying to reinvent the supermarket

The online shopping behemoth simply failed to make the technology cheaper than a conventional store.

WhatsApp’s tiny tweaked has annoyed users.

This tiny tweak made WhatsApp users furious

People began to notice the minor alteration last week, prompting outrage from users across social media.

Work & Careers

TechnologyOne CEO Ed Chung says there has been a noticeable shift in the tech market in the past three to six months.

Why TechOne’s CEO gets his executives to swap jobs

The architect of a corporate experiment where the execs change jobs admits it is a little on the crazy side for a $5.2 billion, top 100 ASX tech company.

Want to get fit for retirement? Start with these micro hacks

Retirement is typically a time for running after grandkids, playing golf and travelling. But after years or even decades of office work, regaining fitness can be challenging.

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Life & Luxury

The bar at Shot coffee shop in London’s Mayfair.

Is this flat white really worth $500 a cup?

If you thought coffee was getting expensive in Melbourne, it’s hard to beat the eye-watering price for this Japanese-grown coffee in London’s Mayfair.

The rise of AI has created new anxieties about how an innocent photo could be manipulated into a deepfake or contribute to identity fraud.

Don’t want your kid to end up as a deepfake? Keep their face offline

The rise of AI has created new anxieties about how an innocent photo could be manipulated, so “sharenting” is out and privacy is in.

Jack Delroy is played by David Dastmalchian, the only genuine American in sight.

This new Aussie horror is scary and funny

There’s not a moment in “Late Night with the Devil” when you’re not eager to know what’s going to happen next.

Watches & Wonders 24: How the latest timepieces measure up

Geneva has just hosted the biggest watch fair in years. We look at the blitz of new releases it unleashed.

Pagani’s latest model, the Utopia Coupe, on the factory floor in Italy. The hypercar costs from $6.5 million – but you’d better be quick.

Behind the scenes at Pagani, where hypercars cost up to $23m

The Italian maker’s next car, the Utopia coupe, is priced in Australia “from about $6.5 million”. But nobody ever orders a standard version.

From the gallery