Categories
Business

Simple way to fix Australia’s east coast energy crisis

Slowly but surely, the story of the greatest rip-off in Aussie history is coming out. It’s not a great train robbery. Not a Sydney wealth management fraud. It is an investment boom that miraculously turned east Australian resources bounty into a pair of concrete boots for the broader economy.

This is the sorry tale of how foreign cartels stole Australian gas reserves and fed them to China while the local economy was starved of it.

It began during the GFC-period when advances in unconventional gas extraction (fracking, shale, coal seam etc) made huge reserves in Queensland viable for extraction. Three conglomerates of largely multinational firms built infrastructure systems across the east of the state to extract, pipe and freeze that gas for export.

They spent some $80 billion doing so, in a mad race that duplicated everything, over-invested in production and crashed the global gas price, forcing them to write off tens of billions on their investment.

Meanwhile, in poor little Australia, which actually owned the gas, the moment the export trains opened the price began to rise because there was not enough left over for locals.

The price rose from $4Gj relentlessly until we were paying $20Gj in 2017 – more for our own gas than our Asian customers.

Worse, because gas sets the marginal cost of electricity on the east coast, whenever its cost rises, power prices go mad as well, hugely multiplying the negative impacts on the economy.

The Turnbull government recognized the folly of this in 2017 and installed the Australian Domestic Gas Security Mechanism (ADGSM). That crashed the gas price back under $10Gj, though it remained much higher than it had been traditionally.

But that was not the end of it. Whenever there has been cold weather, or coal or other outages in the power market, or international shortages, the gas cartel has popped up again to squeeze local prices higher.

This serial debacle most recently came to a head with the war in Ukraine and Russian sanctions which have left the world short of gas and Australian prices have gone to as high as $65Gj, the market has been suspended and electricity prices have been driven up by 600 per cent to boot.

This is a $50 billion gouge by the energy cartels that are effectively war-profiteering at every Australian’s expense. Soon, these price rises will deliver an extra 6 per cent CPI inflation, ensuring the RBA has to drive interest rates higher than many households can bear.

And for what? The gas cartel will not invest anymore. There’ll be no jobs created. Governments will receive no tax dividend owing to broken laws and the massive writedowns on the projects.

Indeed, this episode will be recounted by economic historians as the worst case of the “resources curse” ever. (It’s sometimes called Dutch Disease after the Netherlands’ broader economy suffered in the ’70s with the development of North Sea oil resources that lifted its currency and falling competitiveness hollowed out the industry.)

If Dutch Disease is a national cold, then Australian Disease is like an inoperable brain tumour. It has allowed miners to steal the resource, pay no tax, force scarcity pricing on the extractive nation, and raise the currency. All of which have already decimated industry, hobbled national income, and will soon begin to deflate household wealth as well.

how to fix it

The new Labor Government has been forced to confront this reality to some extent. Untenable energy prices have triggered a review of the Turnbull domestic reservation mechanism. This is all to the good, but what should it look like?

First, the reformed ADGSM must include a price trigger. As it stands, it is a volume measure that is too unwieldy to be effective. The ADGSM should automatically divert gas from export the moment the price goes over $7Gj. This is plenty high enough for the gas cartel to make money out of it. The reserves are quite cheap and since they’ve written off so much investment, the gas has become even cheaper on a cash basis.

The new ADGSM should apply to all three conglomerates. Although it is the Santos-led GLNG that has come to be most short of gas and openly lied about it, all three joint ventures knew what they were doing when they overinvested to leave Australia short of gas. Besides, as Bass Strait gas bleeds out, the shortage will only get worse and the future will require as much as 15 per cent of the gas currently exported to remain at home. That’s a burden best shared by all three projects.

A second option is to use export levies. If we set a baseline for profits at pre-Ukraine war prices around $7Gj, then levy the gas cartel for every export dollar above that price, then the local price of gas would collapse and Australians collect the war windfall instead of firms that have no right to it.

Third, we could install a super-profits tax on the cartel and recycle that revenue as energy subsidies for everybody else. That is a pretty clunky solution but it delivers the same end.

With any and all of these solutions, the cartel will scream “sovereign risk”. But so what? It was its mistakes that created this untenable situation. Australians should not have to pay for them.

Moreover, export gas contracts are renegotiated all the time. Just a few weeks ago, one member of the gas cartel, Shell, declared force majeur (that is undelivered but contracted gas) over something as trivial as a maritime labor dispute.

The larger truth is that the cartel is a risk to the sovereign and everyone within it.

Read related topics:Cost Of Living

.

Categories
Sports

Rival club flags interest in Dons skipper as Collingwood big man hits games trigger

Essendon captain Dyson Heppell could be enticed north to finish his career, while a Collingwood big man has secured a new contract for 2023.

AFL Media’s Cal Twomey joined SEN Breakfast on Thursday morning to provide updates on several players.

One of those was Bombers skipper Heppell, who remains unsigned late in the 2022 season.

The 30-year-old has an offer on the table to stay at The Hangar, but is yet to make up his mind given interest from the Gold Coast Suns.

“We reported several weeks ago that rival clubs were looking at him as a veteran free agent option when he was out of contract at the Bombers,” Twomey said on SEN Breakfast.

“Now, he got a contract offer shortly after that, a one-year extension was put to him, but he hasn’t signed it and Gold Coast has an interest in Heppell as an unrestricted free agent.

“His form has spiked in the last couple of months, I think he’s been playing more on the wing, he was good again against North Melbourne last week, one of Essendon’s best players, so the Suns are having a look at him.

“I think Essendon opened the door to this possibility by taking until so late in the year to offer their skipper an extra year.

“So it will be fascinating to see what Heppell does from here. Take the year at the Bombers or head to Queensland to close out his career.”

Despite looking a step off the pace at times, Heppell has played an important role in 2022 off half-back, averaging 22.7 disposals, 6.8 marks and three rebound 50s a game.

Club legend Tim Watson was asked if he wanted Heppell to stay at Essendon for 2023.

“Under the right circumstances, yes,” he replied.

“He’s a great club man, very popular player, great around the team and I can see why he would attract interest from the Suns for that purpose.”

Meanwhile, Twomey also reported Collingwood ruck/forward Mason Cox will be at the Pies next year.

The 31-year-old found himself out of the team early in the year but has recaptured some of his best form as the season has progressed, playing 12 games.

“He’s locked in now for next year at Collingwood,” Twomey stated on Cox.

“He was almost out of the club this time last year, he signed a one-year deal with a games trigger for 2023 which he’s now hit.

“(There is) obviously a lot happening in the Collingwood ruck space, plenty of interest in Brodie Grundy.

“I think a lot of clubs will be weighing up the Grundy chase… Port Adelaide, GWS, some Melbourne-based clubs too (have some interest).”

That contract means all three of Cox, Darcy Cameron and Brodie Grundy are contracted to Collingwood for next season, as is young ruckman Aiden Begg.

Cox, Cameron and Grundy have only played together once this season, in Round 5.





.

Categories
Australia

Perth weather: Worst of storms over but more rain on the way

With the worst of the storms over, the rain certainly isn’t and Perth has been warned to brace for showers until the end of the week.

The severe weather warning has now been canceled for the metro area but wild winds and showers are still to come.

Emergency services spent another day on Wednesday fighting the brunt of Perth’s severe storm as calls continued to rise, with several regions across the State breaking wind gust records.

The living room ceiling of a Joondalup home collapsed on 13-year-old Dominic Vaughan who was watching TV with his father.

“We heard it crack…I thought it would collapse then but then we heard a crack again and after that the roof just fell,” he told Nine News.

“It was so scary.”

.

Categories
US

Cal pauses construction at People’s Park due to ‘violence’

UC Berkeley said Wednesday afternoon that it was pausing construction that started this morning of a student housing project at People’s Park due to “the destruction of construction materials, unlawful protest activity, and violence.”

Police in riot gear descended on the block-square plot of land just off Telegraph Avenue before sunrise to clear out a small homeless encampment and put fencing around the area. A work crew showed up at the site as soon as the sun came up, bringing in construction equipment and felling trees.

A worker fells a tree at People's Park in Berkeley, Calif., on Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022

A worker fells a tree at People’s Park in Berkeley, Calif., on Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022

Jungho Kim/Special to SFGATE

“They are currently cutting down trees in the park with chainsaws,” said Ramon Mendoza, who is part of a movement to preserve the park. A video posted on Twitter at 9:36 am showed the tree work underground.

KRON posted a video at 9:23 am of protesters blocking construction trucks “to stop them from clearing any trees.”

As the day progressed, more protesters descended on the area, pulling down the fence and flooding the park.

Protesters try to push down a fence at People's Park in Berkeley, Calif., on Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022.

Protesters try to push down a fence at People’s Park in Berkeley, Calif., on Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022.

Jungho Kim/Special to SFGATE

UC Berkeley said several arrests were made, but couldn’t provide detailed information about numbers and charges as of 2 pm


The group Defend People’s Park said early this morning that several forklifts, large moving vehicles and trucks with fencing were at the park before sunrise.

“They are throwing residents’ items away,” the group wrote on Twitter.

The university said in a statement that when work began this morning, two or three unhoused people were in the park who had been “previously offered shelter, repeatedly notified that the park was soon to be closed, and informed that overnight camping in the park is not permitted.”

“Last night, alternative shelter, transportation, and storage for belongings was offered again to each and every person when the park was closed, an offer that remains available for all who need and want it,” the university said.

People block contractors and their equipment used for cutting down trees from leaving People's Park in Berkeley, Calif., on Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022.

People block contractors and their equipment used for cutting down trees from leaving People’s Park in Berkeley, Calif., on Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022.

Jungho Kim/Special to SFGATE

An Alameda County Superior Court judge ruled on Friday that UC Berkeley can start construction on a 16-story building that will house more than 1,100 students.

Activists and student groups stood on the sidelines protesting the park’s closure. They have long disputed the university’s project and called for keeping the site that’s listed on the National Register of Historic Places a public green space.

Heavy machinery is seen pushing down a redwood tree at People's Park in Berkeley, Calif., on Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022.

Heavy machinery is seen pushing down a redwood tree at People’s Park in Berkeley, Calif., on Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022.

Jungho Kim/Special to SFGATE

Located in the center of the Bay Area’s high-priced and famously tight real estate market, UC Berkeley faces a student housing shortage; according to a 2017 survey, it “has the lowest percentage of beds for its student body of any campus in the UC System.” The survey also found that 10% of respondents self-identified as having experienced homelessness at some point while attending UC Berkeley.

In addition to student housing, the People’s Park housing complex would provide up to 125 apartments offering supportive housing with onsite services for unhoused and low-income residents, as well as open landscaped areas.

Protesters sit on top of a structure at People's Park in Berkeley, Calif., on Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022.

Protesters sit on top of a structure at People’s Park in Berkeley, Calif., on Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022.

Jungho Kim/Special to SFGATE

“More than 60% of the 2.8-acre site will be preserved as open space and revitalized into a renewed park space that reinforces the site’s history,” the university said. The site will also feature “a memorialization of the park’s past and historical significance.”

The university’s plans also include providing interim housing to individuals living in People’s Park, with services to support a transition to permanent housing, a website dedicated to the project says.

This is a developing story and details will be added as they emerge.

A lone protester sits in the last standing redwood tree at People's Park in Berkeley, Calif., on Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022.

A lone protester sits in the last standing redwood tree at People’s Park in Berkeley, Calif., on Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022.

Jungho Kim/Special to SFGATE

Police monitor an entrance previously used by contractors to enter the fenced area at People's Park in Berkeley, Calif., on Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022.

Police monitor an entrance previously used by contractors to enter the fenced area at People’s Park in Berkeley, Calif., on Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022.

Jungho Kim/Special to SFGATE

A sign proclaiming "53 years of resistance" is seen at People's Park in Berkeley, Calif., on Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022.

A sign proclaiming “53 years of resistance” is seen at People’s Park in Berkeley, Calif., on Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022.

Jungho Kim/Special to SFGATE

A person shakes his finger at a California Highway Patrol officer during a protest at People's Park in Berkeley, Calif., on Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022.

A person shakes his finger at a California Highway Patrol officer during a protest at People’s Park in Berkeley, Calif., on Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022.

Jungho Kim/Special to SFGATE

A protester is led away by police after being detained during a protest at People's Park in Berkeley, Calif., on Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022.

A protester is led away by police after being detained during a protest at People’s Park in Berkeley, Calif., on Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022.

Jungho Kim/Special to SFGATE

Protesters talk with one another as California Highway Patrol officers police a protest at People's Park in Berkeley, Calif., on Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022.

Protesters talk with one another as California Highway Patrol officers police a protest at People’s Park in Berkeley, Calif., on Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022.

Jungho Kim/Special to SFGATE

Categories
Business

Honda HR-V, CR-V and Accord prices rise by up to $2000

The Honda HR-V hybrid has been hit with a $2000 price rise, alongside cost increases for other models – but existing orders are protected at the previous RRPs.


honda australia has increased prices across three of its four models by between $100 and $2000 – but buyers who signed on the dotted line before 1 August 2022 will be “price protected” and the original RRPs will be honored.

Since this month, prices across 10 of the 13 Honda model grades in the HR-V small SUV, CR-V mid-size SUV and Accord mid-size sedan have risen in price, due to “current market conditions.”

Hardest hit is the HR-V e:HEV L hybrid, which received a $2000 price increase from $45,000 to $47,000 drive-away – after arriving in showrooms in April.



Meanwhile, the Accord VTi-LX petrol has risen by $500, to $57,900 drive-away – one month after the hybrid version was hit with a $1500 price increase, to $61,900 drive-away.

Hybrid versions of the HR-V and Accord are facing wait times of about 10 months, a Honda Australia spokesperson told Drivedue to a “build-up of customer orders”.

Prices of the CR-V mid-size SUV, have risen by between $100 and $300 for August depending on model grade. These compounds earlier increases of similar amounts – though no variant is more than $800 dearer than it was when Honda Australia adopted fixed prices last July.



While prices have risen, Honda Australia says customers who signed a contract prior to 1 August 2022 will be protected from the price rises – even though models such as the HR-V and Accord hybrids may not be delivered until mid-2023.

“A number of models/grades in the Honda line-up received pricing adjustments as of August 1, which are reflective of the current market conditions, with demand continuing to exceed forecast production levels and the global supply chain continuing to be impacted by parts shortages , rising raw material and energy prices, and other logistics challenges,” Honda Australia said in a media statement.

“Honda’s price protection policy will apply to any contracts signed prior to the change, where the vehicle is yet to be delivered. This means there will be no change for customers who signed a contract prior to August 1 – the drive-away price will remain unchanged at the pre-price-rise level.



“With a build-up of customer orders resulting in extended lead times on a number of vehicles, such as HR-V hybrid and Accord hybrid (both currently at 10 months), [some of] the recent price changes would only come into effect on vehicles to be delivered well into 2023.”

The Honda Civic hatch continues to be priced from $47,200 drive-away, with no changes to its price applied since it went on sale in December 2021. The HR-V Vi X petrol – as well as the CR-V VTi 7 +Luxe special edition – are not affected by the August price rises.

The price rises for Accord, CR-V and HR-V – as well as Accord Hybrid last month – represent the first major price increases since Honda Australia adopted a fixed-price “agency” business model on 1 July 2021.



2022 Honda HR-V Australian pricing

  • HR-V Vi X – $36,700 (unchanged)
  • HR-V e:HEV L – $47,000 (up $2000)

2022 Honda CR-V Australian pricing

  • CR-V Vi five-seater – $35,900 (up $300)
  • CR-V VTi five-seater – $38,900 (up $100)
  • CR-V VTi 7 seven-seater – $40,900 (up $200)
  • CR-V VTi X five-seater – $41,900 (up $200)
  • CR-V VTi 7 +Luxe seven-seater – $43,700 (unchanged)
  • CR-V Black Edition five-seater – $44,900 (up $200)
  • CR-V VTi L AWD five-seater – $46,200 (up $200)
  • CR-V VTi L7 seven-seater – $49,500 (up $300)
  • CR-V VTi LX AWD five-seater – $53,600 (up $200)

2022 Honda Accord Australian pricing

  • Accord VTi-LX petrol – $57,900 (up $500)
  • Accord VTi-LX hybrid – $61,900 (unchanged)

alex misoyannis

Alex Misoyannis has been writing about cars since 2017, when he started his own website, Redline. He contributed for Drive in 2018, before joining CarAdvice in 2019, becoming a regular contributing journalist within the news team in 2020. Cars have played a central role throughout Alex’s life, from flicking through car magazines as a young age, to growing up around performance vehicles in a car-loving family.

Read more about Alex Misoyannis LinkIcon

Categories
Sports

Warriors coach Stacey Jones says Nelson Asofa-Solomona should have been charged for head-rattling hit

Storm hardman Nelson Asofa-Solomona is getting away with too much according to Warriors interim coach Stacey Jones who remains “baffled” he wasn’t charged by the NRL match review committee for an incident which left Wayde Egan with two cracked teeth.

Jones went even further and said given Asofa-Solomona’s record of four charges in 2022, which have all resulted in fines, he could be due to a suspension if only to make him think more about his behaviour.

Egan was “rattled” by the incident in which Asofa-Solomona came down on top of him in a tackle last Friday which forced him from the field but was missed as only “minor contact by match review committee manager Luke Patten.

Stream every game of every round of the 2022 NRL Telstra Premiership Season Live & Ad-Break Free During Play on Kayo. New to Kayo? Start your free trial now >

Asofa-Solomona, who is yet to be suspended this season despite being charged three times for high tackles and one for making dangerous contact with a defender using his forearm, wasn’t even fined for landing his elbow on Egan’s face.

Patten said it was just a case of “two big men on a smaller man” in a prerecorded video shown at football boss Graham Annesley’s weekly media briefing on Monday and there was “no force applied to Egan’s neck”.

Jones, however, saw things differently and thought a chance was missed to send a signal to players about making contact in tackles.

“It’s not a good message,” Jones said, “It’s baffled me a little bit, like everyone else.

“We’re all about protecting our players. The game is so tough and physical.

“Wayde was really rattled. It could have been worse but I thought (Asofa-Solomona) could have at least been charged.”

‘KNOW WHAT YOU BLOKES ARE SAYING’: O’Brien blow-up exposes Knights divide

Carrigan cops 4-game ban for tackle | 02:14

Jones said Asofa-Solomona, a New Zealand international, might need to be shown, though a suspension, that he needs to change his ways when tackling.

“It’s about protecting Nelson too, in some sort of way,” he said.

“He plays a physical game and the size of his body and the damage he could do to someone, it could turn out very nasty.

“I’m sure Nelson doesn’t want to have that on him.”

Jones confirmed both departing playmaker Chanel Harris-Tavita and Jazz Tevaga are unlikely to play again this season.

Harris-Tavita has suffered an MCL injury in his knee while Tevaga has a shoulder injury.

.

Categories
Australia

Half of NSW teachers plan to leave profession in the next five years

Surging workloads and pay are the major flashpoints in the industrial relations dispute between teachers and the NSW government, with thousands of public and Catholic school teachers walking off the job twice this year.

The latest NSW Department of Education data shows that instances of merged or uncovered classes are worse in regional and rural areas: at Canobolas Rural Technology High School in Orange there have been more than 1500 merged or uncovered classes in the past six months. At Merriwa Central School in the Hunter region there has been almost 4000 instances of minimal and merged classes since the start of 2021.

Lauren McKnight, vice president of the Science Teachers Association of NSW, said a survey of more than 300 NSW science teachers conducted in June found eight in 10 science classes were taught by teachers without expertise in the subject.

“We are going backwards. We are jeopardizing the future of the STEM workforce and it’s a vicious cycle. We can adjust policy to train mid-career professionals, but this is not an immediate solution,” McKnight said.

Their survey found 48 per cent of respondents said there was at least one permanent vacancy for science teachers in their school, and 84 per cent of respondents said that science classes had been taught by a non-science teacher in the week they were surveyed.

“Evidence shows the teacher shortage crisis has been building for years. The pipeline of new teachers entering the profession is inadequate, and attrition rates are high,” the Science Teachers Association’s submission said. “Out of field teaching is common, and particularly problematic in science and STEM subjects, which require significant subject matter expertise.”

McKnight said major reforms were needed, including reducing administration and workloads of teachers, combined with additional funding for schools to access lab tech and administration staff.

loading

In another submission, a head teacher at a northern beaches public high school said: “I have been teaching for nearly 15 years and have never seen a teacher shortage like the one we are currently experiencing. On a regular basis we have senior classes uncovered and at times have junior classes collapsed as we cannot find enough casual teachers,” they said.

Minister for Education and Early Learning Sarah Mitchell said the median tenure for teachers is 11.4 years, which is the second highest in the public service in NSW.

Categories
US

Republicans could soon be put on the spot about endorsing efforts to reform the Electoral Count Act

CHICAGO — A resolution going before the Republican National Committee this week would endorse a bipartisan effort in Congress to prevent future attempts to subvert the will of the voters.

It also presents a dilemma for a party that former President Donald Trump still largely commands.

Sponsored by Bill Palatucci, a New Jersey committee member who believes Trump “disqualified” himself from being president again, the resolution calls for revamping the Electoral Count Act, the 19th century law whose ambiguities helped trigger the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol that disrupted the transfer of power.

The measure doesn’t mention Trump by name or refer to his efforts to dissuade then-Vice President Mike Pence from certifying Joe Biden’s victory. Nor does it discuss the House Jan. 6 committee hearings’ laying out an interlocking effort by the Trump forces to retain power.

Instead, the resolution urges Congress to reform or replace the Electoral Count Act “to prevent a repeat of the tragedy of January 6, 2021,” and safeguard “important American institutions in the minds of most Americans and our allies around the world.”

Even though the resolution is written in a way that doesn’t explicitly fault Trump, RNC members might still balk at the language pointing to a “campaign of misinformation” that Congress could “overturn the election.”

A major theme of the House Jan. 6 committee’s hearings have been that Trump and his outside advisers misled his supporters into believing that widespread fraud robbed him of victory. Recounts and court cases have failed to turn up evidence of fraud on a scale that would have nullified Biden’s win. But Trump still commands enough loyalty within the RNC — chaired by Ronna McDaniel, whom he chose for the job in 2016 — that it may be praised to validate one of the House panel’s core arguments.

The RNC is holding its summer meeting this week in Chicago. Palatucci said he plans to present the resolution at a panel on Thursday. I have previewed the argument he plans to make at the closed-door session.

“I don’t care what you think of Donald Trump. I don’t care what you think of Liz Cheney,” he said, referring to the vice chairwoman of the House Jan. 6 committee. “The peaceful transfer of power is so important to American democracy that we should eliminate the confusion that happened. You can blame whoever you want, but that to me has nothing to do with urging Congress to fix what was obviously a problem last year.”

The Senate Rules Committee held a hearing Wednesday on the Electoral Count Act and changes to election law. A bipartisan group of senators recently introduced bills to overhaul the 1887 law and make it clear that the vice president can’t reject electors. The measures would also raise the threshold for objecting to a state’s electors from one member of the House and the Senate to one-fifth of each chamber.

The aim is to close loopholes in election law and prevent future attempts to overturn an election. The negotiations, led by Sens. Susan Collins, R-Maine, and Joe Manchin, DW.Va., were backed by Senate leaders of both parties. It’s unclear when the Senate will vote on the bills.

Collins told the Rules Committee that the “process for counting electoral votes has been abused” and that it “took the violent breach of the Capitol on January 6 to really shine a spotlight on how urgent the need for reform was.”

She said the Senate group that crafted the proposals — which includes Republicans like Thom Tillis of North Carolina, Mitt Romney of Utah and Ben Sasse of Nebraska — is “united in our determination to prevent the flaws in this 1887 law from being used to undermine future presidential election.”

“Nothing is more essential to the survival of a democracy than the orderly transfer of power,” she said. “And there is nothing more essential to the orderly transfer of power than clear rules for affecting it.”

House Democratic leaders have also signaled interest in overhauling the Electoral Count Act, but they say they want to wait to see the Jan. 6 committee’s legislative recommendations — expected later this year — before they endorse any legislation.

Palatucci’s resolution tracks the work of the bipartisan group of senators. He, too, wants to clarify the role of vice presidents so there would be no confusion about their limited powers when Congress tallies the electoral votes every four years.

“We’ve got to do everything to avoid the repeat of Jan. 6, 2021,” Palatucci said. “And a big part of that is removing the confusion that lots of people simply had about the role of Congress and the electors and the vice president.”

Categories
Business

Australia’s economy is set to grow slower than it ever has outside of recession. This is bad news for our standard of living | Greg Jericho

The Reserve Bank of Australia has slammed on the brakes harder than it has for 28 years, and now anticipates over the next two years the economy will grow slower than it ever has in a non-recessionary period. That is bad news for people’s standard of living.

Back in April the average home loan rate was 2.65%, the cash rate was at 0.1% and monthly repayments on a $500,000 home loan were $2,015.

And yet, just four months later, the cash rate is up to 1.85% and those monthly repayments are now $2,504.

Just a lazy 24% increase.

In its April monthly statement, the RBA said that while inflation was rising “growth in labor costs has been below rates that are likely to be consistent with inflation being sustainably at target”.

This was in line with what the RBA had long been saying.

A year ago, the bank stated it would “not increase the cash rate until actual inflation is sustainably within the 2 to 3 per cent target range. The central scenario for the economy is that this condition will not be met before 2024.

“Meeting this condition,” the statement concluded, “will require the labor market to be tight enough to generate wages growth that is materially higher than it is currently.”

And now the cash rate has risen 175 basis points in four months – the fastest increase since 1994:

If the graph does not display click here

So that means wages are now “materially higher” than they were a year ago?

Well… sort of.

In Tuesday’s statement, the governor merely noted that the bank’s “liaison program and business surveys continue to point to a lift in wages growth from the low rates of recent years as firms compete for staff in the tight labor market”.

Cryps.

If all you can say when unemployment is 3.5% is that there has been “a lift in wages growth” from the record low growth of the previous years, then clearly the labor market is broken.

But with inflation growing at 6.1% the RBA has slammed on the monetary policy brakes.

Just how hard has the bank gone?

This is already the fastest rates have initially gone up in 12 months since the late 1980s.

And more rises are on the way:

If the graph does not display click here

But the circumstances have changed.

In 2007 for example, when the RBA increased rates the standard variable rate went from 8.1% to 9.6%.

If the graph does not display click here

Back then the average new mortgage was around $250,000. It meant mortgage repayments increased $278 a month from $1,847 to $2,215 – a 15% increase.

Right now the market is factoring in another 135 basis point rise by next March.

If that happens the standard variable rate would have gone from 4.52% to 7.62%.

The actual average rate held by mortgage holders is lower than the “standard rate”, but a 310 basis points rise from the April average of 2.65% would still see it go to 5.75% by March.

That would cause monthly repayments on a $500,000 loan to go from $2,015 to $2,918 – a 45% increase.

Little wonder the market is getting nervous about its previous rate rise predictions and is now predicting rates will have to be cut next year.

Six weeks ago, the market priced in a cash rate of 4.25% by May next year; now it expects rates to top out at 3.2% before falling to 2.85%:

If the graph does not display click here

A 4.25% cash rate would in my view absolutely cause a recession. Could you imagine what home loan repayments rising 60% in one year would do to the economy?

I also think the current expectation of 3.2% is too high and would be more likely than not to produce a recession. I am much more in line with the Commonwealth Bank’s estimate of a 2.6% peak.

But even still that would have a massive impact on the economy.

Sign up to receive the top stories from Guardian Australia every morning

The Reserve Bank already expects the economy to grow by just 1.75% next year and in 2024.

That is truly saying.

Since 1980 there have only been six calendar years with GDP growth below 2%. If the RBA is right this would be the first time since the 1990s recession it has happened two years in a row:

If the graph does not display click here

That might not be a recession, but it would not be anything good.

GDP growth is closely linked with unemployment. As a rule, over the past 40 years to keep the unemployment rate stable GDP needed to grow at least 2.75%:

If the graph does not display click here

Two years of 1.75% growth would likely see unemployment rise – the RBA expects to 4%. But as unemployment rises, wages growth falls, all at a time where the RBA is also estimating inflation growth of “a little above” 4% in 2023 and “around” 3% in 2024.

If the graph does not display click here

Given that at this current state of 50-year low unemployment we are only seeing “a lift in wages growth” above record lows, that does not bode well for people’s standard of living.

Categories
Sports

Evan O’Hanlon shows he still has what it takes at Commonwealth Games, Brandon Starc pushes through pain for high jump silver

It is the middle of the European winter, and sprinter Evan O’Hanlon is shoveling snow off a track in the Czech Republic, where he lives, so he can train in -8C weather.

The Australian four-time Paralympian has no coach by his side, his long-time mentor Iryna Dvoskina coaches him by correspondence.

But he just keeps on running – he does not know how to stop.

“I guess one way to explain it is I’m a problem gambler, and I like coming out here and gambling two years of funding on 11 seconds of running,” he said after winning the men’s T37/38 100m at the Commonwealth Games.

O’Hanlon’s career could have ended two years ago after he broke his foot badly.

Not only did he define his doctor’s expectations to run again, he also embarked on a new mission to represent Australia at this year’s Beijing Winter Olympics in bobsled.

While he just missed out on qualification for the two-man event, he was determined to come back to the Commonwealth Games, and his persistence has been vindicated.

“It’s really nice, mostly because I could do it in front of my four-year-old daughter and my two-year-old son, Ursula and Alfred,” he said.

.