-
Oil falls, stocks rise as traders bet on Mideast progress
-
Liverpool close to hiring Iraola: reports
-
'Nightmare': Russian attacks kill 18 across Ukraine
-
Southampton boss Eckert takes blame for 'spygate' scandal
-
Israel risks new quagmire in Lebanon
-
Mozambique says five citizens killed in S. Africa 'xenophobic attacks'
-
Exoplanets can have magnetic fields, 'hot Jupiter' winds reveal
-
Chelsea's French star ready to attack World Cup with gusto
-
Kenyan president defends US Ebola centre amid protests
-
England cricket legend Flintoff named Sydney Thunder head coach
-
Southampton coach Eckert takes blame for 'spygate'
-
Most stocks rise, oil drops as traders assess outlook for Mideast deal
-
Russian missile, drone barrage kills 13 across Ukraine at night
-
Saints owner sticks by manager despite 'spygate' scandal
-
Most stocks rise as traders assess outlook for Mideast deal
-
Russian missile, drone barrage kills 11 across Ukraine at night
-
Pay workers 'as much as possible', Nvidia's Huang says
-
Israel, Hezbollah clash ahead of US-hosted talks
-
Indie horror flicks 'Obsession' and 'Backrooms' draw Gen Z to cinema
-
French wine growers plant trees to protect vines from climate
-
Fears of hunger overwhelm Guatemalan village as El Nino approaches
-
Between ballet and war: Japanese dancers pursue dreams in Russia
-
Ukrainian haiku poet finds small miracles in war
-
'Messi, Maradona, Tim': NZ footballer's viral fan club hits 4 million
-
For Roland Garros youth, quarter-final moment of truth
-
Asian stocks swing on mixed signals over Middle East
-
Russian missiles rock Kyiv, kill several in eastern Ukraine
-
Bollywood divided over bid to cap punishing work hours
-
Hanoi curbs kerb culture as city clamps down on pavement vendors
-
Peru votes in tight runoff as Fujimori makes fresh bid for power
-
As Trump cheerleads for AI, some in MAGA world fret
-
AI unearths football talent beyond scouts' radar
-
Euphrates flood deprives east Syria farmers from crops
-
Vital to keep a UN force in Lebanon after current peacekeepers depart: Guterres
-
Australia says wheat crop set to plunge
-
The Alkaline Water Company Signs Letter of Intent to Acquire Eureka Beverages Inc., Expanding Canadian Manufacturing and Private Label Platform
-
KIDZ AI Announces Strategic Treasury Pivot to Hyperliquid Ecosystem and Yield-Bearing Stablecoin Strategies
-
Silver X Intersects 40.71 m True Width at 98.7 g/t AgEq (69.53 g/t Ag, 0.87% Pb, 0.28% Zn) at Blenda Rubia, Including 4.12 m of 274.5 g/t AgEq
-
The Eastern Company Acquires Sungear and Crown Precision
-
Moderna to Present at Upcoming Conference in June 2026
-
Uraniumx Reports Visually Identified Pitchblende At Murphy Lake
-
Experience Summer Skiing at Banff Sunshine Village on June 20th!
-
Debut Author Grace Lynx Jenkins Unveils Sight - A Riveting Psychological Thriller
-
Anthropic's IPO Filing Underscores AI's Power Bottleneck and the Trillion Dollar Opportunity for Helio's Space-Based Solar Power
-
Snipp Interactive Reports Q1 2026 Financial Results; Bookings Backlog Reaches Record $20.6 Million; Announces Conference Call on Wednesday, June 3, 2026Vancouver, BC, Canada - June 2, 2026
-
American Critical Minerals to Attend Benchmark Mineral Intelligence's GIGA USA 2026 Conference as Company focuses on US Govt. Initiatives
-
Airline Hydraulics Acquires Industrial Automation Supply (IAS)
-
MMJ International Holdings Joins Legal Challenge to Trump's Cannabis Rescheduling Order
-
Star Copper Begins Drilling at Star East Target as 15,000 Metre 2026 Exploration Campaign Gets Underway
-
InterContinental Hotels Group PLC Announces Transaction in Own Shares - June 02
Australian economy Crisis
Australia is facing a suite of troubling economic trends. Growth is slowing, prices are rising and people’s living standards are slipping. Despite a headline unemployment rate that remains around 4.3 %, officials warn that the economy may be trapped in a slow‑growth, high‑inflation environment unless investment and productivity improve. Households are feeling the strain as wages fail to keep pace with costs and the housing market becomes increasingly inaccessible.
Official national accounts show that the economy grew by only 0.6 % in the June 2025 quarter and by 1.3 % over the year; the terms of trade fell and the household saving ratio slid to 4.2 %. Living cost indexes rose between 0.6 % and 1.5 % in the September quarter, with housing and recreation costs making the biggest contribution. Consumer prices increased 1.3 % in the September quarter and 3.2 % over the year, while wages grew only 0.8 % in the June quarter and 3.4 % annually. The resulting squeeze on household budgets is causing real incomes to stagnate.
Underlying inflation has accelerated to around 3 %, reflecting higher electricity, fuel and services prices. The September inflation pulse overshot forecasts and dashed hopes of a quick rate cut; electricity prices jumped 9 % in the quarter, holiday travel costs rose 2.5 % and local government charges climbed 6.3 %. Analysts note that real wages are unlikely to regain their 2011 purchasing power until the latter part of this decade.
Housing is the most visible symptom of the malaise. About one‑third of households rent, and median advertised rents have increased by roughly 48 % over the past decade; they rose 5.5 % between the first quarter of 2024 and the first quarter of 2025. More than 1.26 million low‑income households spend over 30 % of their disposable income on housing, including 44.5 % of mortgage holders and 20.5 % of renters. Median house prices have risen by 8.6 % in the past year, far outpacing incomes, and home values rose 1.1 % in October alone. Investor lending now accounts for two in every five new home loans, with the value of these loans rising 17.6 % and calls emerging for regulators to curb landlord credit growth. A government scheme allowing first‑home buyers to borrow with a 5 % deposit effectively grants buyers the equivalent of a $120 000 deposit on an $800 000 home; critics warn that this incentive fuels investor speculation and pushes up prices.
Mortgage stress is spreading. Research shows that 27.9 % of mortgage holders were at risk of stress in the three months to August 2025, with 17.9 % extremely at risk. Nearly one million Australians now work two or more jobs – 6.6 % of the employed population – because rising living costs and inflation are outpacing wage growth. Taking on additional employment has become a coping strategy for households trying to meet mortgage repayments and other bills.
Young Australians are particularly pessimistic. A national survey found that 85 % of young people experienced financial difficulty in the past year and almost four‑fifths believe they will be worse off than their parents. Fewer than half expect to own a home, and about 44 % have experienced unemployment while 60 % have endured underemployment. Poverty is widespread: more than one in seven people (14.2 %) and one in six children live below the poverty line, defined at 50 % of median after‑tax household income, and more than 57 % of low‑income renters are in housing stress. Rents in major cities have risen between 34 % and 41 % since 2021, deepening financial hardship.
Beneath the veneer of a modestly strong labour market lie deepening structural problems. Per‑capita economic output has contracted at various points over the past two years, and productivity growth has slowed. Officials acknowledge that without a revival of investment and productivity, the country risks a prolonged period of sluggish growth and persistent inflation. Rising housing costs, real wage stagnation, mortgage stress and youth pessimism all point to an economy that is leaving many behind. Unless these issues are addressed with urgency, something terrible will indeed continue to happen in the Australian economy.
Fentanyl trade unravels
Russia’s dollar pivot
Israel riled by US-Iran pact
Red sea gambit with Eritrea
US China race hits 2027
Brussels misreads Magyar
Scandic Coin, (SNC) and Trust
Global finance in few hands
AI's 18-month Job disruption
Iran war fuels terror risks
Bitcoin slump stirs doubt