Hundreds of BYD vehicles wait at a port in Suzhou, China, to ship out.
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The early timing of Biden’s move, changing supply chains and national security fears suggest the tariffs might work this time, at least for a while.
Headline inflation is cooling, too.
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Investors, homebuyers and central bankers all have reason to be irritated by the latest data, and inflation isn’t licked just yet. But the numbers also show reason for optimism.
Months before winter arrives, traders are watching for clues in the long-range weather forecasts.
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Option price swings show how much traders believe seasonal climate and weather matters for all sorts of industries, not just the ones you might expect.
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Which departments are the biggest winners and losers in this year’s budget? We’ve broken the budget documents down to show you where the money’s going - and where it isn’t.
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The treasurer has juggled the economics and the politics by going big on spending while keeping a firm eye on inflation.
Mick Tsikas/AAP
If the Reserve Bank is genuinely prepared to cut interest rates as inflation moves back towards its target, we can expect a rate cut within the year.
Wes Mountain/The Conversation
A $300 energy rebate and an increase in rent assistance headline Treasurer Jim Chalmers’ third budget.
Mick Tsikas/AAP
This budget contains not only foreshadowed tax cuts, but a range of new spending measures in health, education, infrastructure and aged care.
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell speaks to reporters on May 1, 2024.
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The Federal Reserve doesn’t appear eager to cut rates.
Just how ‘open’ is the U.S. after all?
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As of 2022, only Nigeria and Sudan had lower trade-to-GDP ratios.
Service sector jobs have unique risks.
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Conservatively speaking, workplace violence costs hundreds of millions of dollars each year.
Canada should be making room for measures of personal and collective well-being other than GDP, including price stability, lower levels of inequality and happiness.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld
Drawing on insights from their recent book, two academics shed light on why Canada’s anemic growth should be a cause for concern.
A raven lands on the roof of a barn as thick smoke from wildfires obscures the sun near Cremona, Alta., in May 2023.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jeff McIntosh
Mainstream economics has been complicit in the climate change crisis as it falsely treats climate change as a mere side-effect of production or a minor aberration.
Nobel prize winner Daniel Kahneman made his mark in many fields (1934-2024).
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Remembering his immense contributions to psychology and economics.
Not famously laid-back.
Mary Altaffer/AP Photo
Wall Street and big law firms are famous for their hard-charging, cutthroat work cultures. Here’s one reason they should reconsider.
Warehouse employees frequently lack control over their own schedules.
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The way jobs are structured affects employee mental health, an analysis of more than 18,000 workers shows.
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The Albanese government in its yearly submission to the Annual Wage Review will argue that real wages of low paid workers should not go backwards.
For love or money?
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A growing number of Republicans say that you shouldn’t be able to divorce simply because you’ve fallen out of love. It’s an idea with a long history.
As more homes like these in Folsom, Calif., add solar power, electricity pricing becomes more complicated.
AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli
California is considering a controversial proposal for utilities to charge customers for electricity based partly on household income. Two scholars explain how this approach could benefit everyone.
Not even she can keep everyone happy.
Matt Rourke/AP Photo
Sometimes, good news for investors is bad for consumers.