Columns
Alan Mitchell
Tax cuts for environment
Alan Mitchell
Christine Milne celebrates her role in stopping a cut in the company tax rate but complains about the decision to scrap green building subsidies.
Asia-Pacific observed
Japan confronts a nuclear void
Greg Earl
A battle over nuclear and renewable energy will determine Japan’s future but has also broader global implications.
Bassanese
Bias on interest rates is to the downside
David Bassanese
The upshot of commentary from both the Federal Treasury and Reserve Bank of Australia is that the bias on official interest rates remains very much to the downside, and the Gillard government will have a very hard time meeting its budget surplus commitment.
Canberra observed
Surplus a lifebuoy Labor can cling to
Laura Tingle
“When you are on the high wire,” one Labor figure said yesterday, “it doesn’t matter how high it is, and there is no point looking down.”
Capital idea
Compensation, too much too soon
Brian Toohey
The government has locked itself into spending more on compensation than the carbon tax will raise at $23 a tonne.
Chanticleer
Profit downgrade takes its Toll
MICHAEL SMITH
Most of the sharemarket gains in Toll Holdings since Brian Kruger started in the top job in January were wiped out following a profit downgrade and asset writedowns.
China observed
Red-hot property market long gone
Robert Guy
Shanghai’s real estate agents have time to hone their texting and online shopping skills as a chill sweeps across a once red-hot market.
Cornell
Battle front moves to deposits
Andrew Cornell
The intensifying battle for deposits involves a double-edged sword for the banks and politicians.
Due diligence
Narev bets on smart banking
Michael Smith
Technology is the buzzword in banking at the moment. In a world where you can exchange cash by bumping two smartphones together, chequebooks are gathering dust in drawers and it is rare to see anyone under 30 in a bank branch.
Hands on
A lot of unappy Joes and Janes out there
Peter Moon
The boundary between deceived and dullard consumers of software applications isn’t fixed or certain.
Hearsay
Judges conflicted over Hardie case
Alex Boxsell
The NSW Court of Appeal will be without some of its most senior judges when it decides the penalties for former James Hardie directors.
Market monitor
Rebalancing hides bleak signs of global slowdown
Glenn Mumford
Looked at in isolation, what’s been happening with global trade over recent months could be viewed as a big success.
The Prince
Meet our magnanimous magnate
If you pay the entry price you get to say your piece time and time again. Nevertheless, Andrew Forrest’s decision to devote his keynote address at the Boao Forum in China to the subject of corporate philanthropy seemed to surprise some delegates who expected some big-picture thinking about China or perhaps smaller-picture thinking about the mining tax.
Property observed
REITs pass baton to unlisted funds
Robert Harley
Australian REITs are no longer the dominant owners of the nation’s office towers, shopping centres and warehouses.
Relativities
Plenty of room to penalise inertia
Deirdre Macken
If the government wants empty-nesters to move out of their huge houses, it needs to make it unattractive to stay.
Shoebridge
Magazine sales figures make for grim reading
No matter how magazine industry executives try to spin them, the sales figures released on Friday are ugly. Very ugly.
What China's papers are saying
Home appliance sales boosted
Lucy Gao
China plans to subsidise energy-efficient home appliances to boost sluggish sales of home appliances.

