This is a mobile optimized page that loads fast, if you want to load the real page, click this text.

Inflation

Australian unemployment rate surprised upwards to 3.7%
And to top it off, they revised the January numbers downaward as well.
The breakdown shows a touch scary drop of 43,000 full time employees, offset by a gain in part time employment of 31,800.
next month will be interesting when the "seasonal" factors are less prominent.
Mick
 
I don't agree with the "narrative". Just that it was being pushed everywhere at one stage.
 
It will be interesting to see how Albo deals with this issue and should give us an indication of future wage movements, thereby inflation trajectory IMO.

Three major union heads and the secretary of a state trades hall are calling on Labor to renew support to increase the wages of Australia’s lowest earners at least in line with inflation in the face of soaring living costs.
United Workers’ Union national secretary Tim Kennedy, Rail, Tram, and Bus Union head Mark Diamond and Health Services Union national president Gerard Hayes called for the government to support an increase in line with the consumer price index ahead of this year’s national minimum wage case decided by the Fair Work Commission.
 
I wonder if public service wages deflate if there's deflation?
 
I wonder if public service wages deflate if there's deflation?
Public service wages used to lag public sector wages by a lot in the 70's-80's, due to the fact management professed a job in the public service compensated with job security, that concept went out the window in the 90's when first globalisation and then privatisation shredded the public sector.
Now public sector wages are as good, if not better than private sector, especially if it is skills the Government don't want to lose. The Govt sectors I've operated in (industrial) have had lean operations of highly skilled and competent people and the wages were good.
I was not in Admin, so I can't comment on that.
 
I don't agree with the "narrative". Just that it was being pushed everywhere at one stage.

I commented because I truly have not seen too many reports putting all the inflation blame on the Russian invasion. That may be because I try to keep away from substandard reporting and research material. And I subscribe to the theory 'Repeat a lie often enough and it becomes the truth', and 'Repetition can even make known lies sound more believable'.
 
The really funny part is inflation works great, for those who can carry the debt on an appreciating asset, so why all the doom and gloom?
The only ones who get burnt are those who took on too much debt and those who don't have any money, or earning capacity.
Yet the major focus of the media, is on those who cant afford their home loans and 5 years ago the focus was on the banks for giving out loans to those who couldnt afford a home loan, when is the narrative going to go back to people being responsible for their decisions? Then they might start and make better ones.
 
Last edited:
actually it was all the covert bail-outs after September 2019 ( the Repo crisis .. where those untrustworthy banks wouldn't trust each other with short-term loans even with 'secured loans ' ) everything else was cover for bailing out major 'Basel III compliant banks including one in Germany and one in Switzerland ... OH and a massive rescue package for Boeing
 
Hey @JohnDe yeah I said that 'tongue in cheek with a little sarcasm' as everytime I complain to anyone about bills/living costs becoming more expensive - answer/reply is almost always invariably because of Ukraine conflict as all Putin's fault lol
 
Hey @JohnDe yeah I said that 'tongue in cheek with a little sarcasm' as everytime I complain to anyone about bills/living costs becoming more expensive - answer/reply is almost always invariably because of Ukraine conflict as all Putin's fault lol
It is a major contributing factor, to be fair.

And I am not one to let public officials off the hook lightly.
 
We're probably heading into a plateau until the Fed releases their guidance for future hikes in March. Might get some guidance from the RBA on the meantime.

IMO, all the data so far indicates that the economy has managed to tolerate these rate hikes of 2022, so there's no reason not to continue hiking particularly given is >6%....

RIP property
 
Rents will not go down that's for sure
Open in incognito mode if you have trouble to read
I think it is more local govs screwing the citizens home owners /builders and by extension renters...
No one is safe with this rotten form of socialism we are headed for in this country..
And I bet you the owner will pay higher rates..before higher land taxes
 
The US government just creating a narrative along with the media.
 
Cookies are required to use this site. You must accept them to continue using the site. Learn more...