Khakimullin Aleksandr
Is the news media using data journalism properly?
Ralf-Juergen/Flickr
A zero rate for business could actually be a progressive move and would reflect the anti-bureaucratic spirit of Brexit.
Balance is an empty term these days.
MilousSK
In a ‘post-truth’ world, presenting both points of view can often be misleading.
PA/Jonathan Brady
A linguistic battle between Brexiteers and Remainers shows how far we’ve come from a clear definition.
Michael Hogan/Flickr
Leadership is an odd thing in a world where people only want their echo chamber defended. The power, and the responsibility, starts to lie elsewhere.
Valeri Potapova/Shutterstock
All the talk about a golden time for UK exporters forgets one crucial point.
There is consistent high-level agreement with the proposition that ‘multiculturalism has been good for Australia’ across Scanlon Foundation surveys.
AAP/Paul Miller
The 2016 Scanlon Foundation survey provides grounds for caution in applying overseas comparisons to shifts in Australian public opinion.
EPA/Giuseppe Lami
The PM came to power as the anti-establishment candidate. Now he could be the next victim of populist ire.
Especially not for a hard Brexit.
PA/Jonathan Brady
Given that a hard Brexit currently looks to be the most likely outcome, the British people need to be given another say.
With Donald Trump, science has entered the political arena.
Mike Segar/Reuters
Is the election of Donald Trump going to reignite a futile war between science and anti-science?
EPA/Shawn Thew
By dismissing the votes in June and November as simple ‘disatisfaction’, the political elites face a long walk in the wilderness.
EPA/Stephanie LeCocq
EU leaders couldn’t pretend to be happy about the result of the US election. It goes against everything they stand for.
Which way forward?
safriibrahim
Nearly six months on from the UK’s shock vote, there looks very little room for manoeuvre in negotiations.
Karl-Josef Hildenbrand/EPA
Do these tumultuous times also mean the end of Bond as we know it?
I’m building a golf course, a beautiful golf course, and I will make Scotland pay for it.
Andrew Milligan/PA
Can concern for the environment survive in the age of Trump and Brexit?
The Nick Page/flickr.com
Immigrants used to be told to make themselves at home. Not any more.
Nivaldo Pereira
Donald Trump doesn’t represent as much uncertainty for markets as you might think.
Michael Vadon
If we’re living in a ‘post-truth’ world, the press must take much of the blame.
Employees of a Japanese foreign exchange company keep a close eye on the progress of the presidential election.
Toru Hanai/Reuters
Some might say that financial markets over-reacted to the Brexit vote and the market reaction to the US election is the same. But Brexit won’t happen till 2019, a Trump victory has already happened.
Australia and Poland could adopt similar policies to protect against economic shocks from China and the EU, respectively.
Kacper Pempel/Reuters
Business Briefing: what Australia can learn from a Polish economist
The Conversation 20.1 MB (download)
Visiting Professor Andrzej Rzonca from the Warsaw School of Economics is in Australia to talk about growth, the European Union, Brexit and much more.