15 Feb2019

Rudd’s tangle over broadband legacy

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

Now that we are almost as abundantly endowed with ex-prime ministers as we are with coal, it is perhaps unsurprising that emissions from the former have grown to rival those from the latter. But even in a crowded field, Kevin Rudd’s claim that “it was never ­envisaged that the NBN generate a commercial rate of return” merits a special place in the greatest moral challenge facing mankind.

08 Feb2019

Why fill the tumbrels with middlemen?

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

Even those who delight in life’s ­little ironies will have been troubled to see the major culprits, in this case the banks, emerge from the ­financial services royal commission with what so far is barely a scolding, while the mortgage brokers and financial advisers, who were bit players in the drama, are hauled to the guillotine.

Click here (login required) to read the oped at The Australian's website or check back here next week for a pdf. 

01 Feb2019

China might dance to Trump’s tune – for a while

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

As US and Chinese negotiators struggle to reach agreement ­before higher American tariffs on Chinese goods come into effect on March 2, it is increasingly clear that the Trump administration has two distinct, and potentially inconsistent, goals.

Click here to read the oped at The Australian's website or (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf.
 

 

25 Jan2019

We came, we saw, we made the very best of it

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

We came, we saw, we made the very best of it
As long ago as January 26, 1817, only a few years after the colony of NSW had come into existence, some 40 guests celebrated its founding at the Sydney home of Isaac Nichols, a former convict who was the settlement’s postmaster.

Click here to read the oped at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week rto download a pdf.

18 Jan2019

Are we headed towards high noon for democracy?

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

In 1923, as the Weimar Republic struggled with chaos, the German polymath Carl Schmitt wrote a short but enormously influential book, The Crisis of Parliamentary Democracy. Schmitt later destroyed his reputation through his collaboration with the Hitler regime. But if his work is increasingly cited, it is because its contemporary resonance is undeniable.

Click here to read the oped at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week for a pdf version.

04 Jan2019

Donald Trump wall is a tall order, but migrant issue is heating up

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

Lost in the shouting match over the partial shutdown of the US government were the striking findings of a study released late last year. The study, carried out by demographers from Yale University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, concludes that the number of illegal migrants in the country has been greatly ­underestimated.

Click here to read the oped at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week for a pdf.


 

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