Saturday, 18 May 2019
Where to follow the Australian federal election vote count on Saturday 18 May 2019
Australian
Electoral Commission (AEC) Virtual Tally Room House of Representatives -
from
6pm with progressive ballot tally all night
ABC News live stream online or televised on Channel 24
ABC News on Twitter
You Ask, We Answer ABC online - from 6pm onwards
Labels:
AEC,
Australia,
elections 2019
Tweet of the Week
Labels:
Australian society,
religion
Friday, 17 May 2019
Has U.S. citizen and media mogul Rupert Murdoch overplayed his hand in this Australian federal election cycle?
“It sounds unreal to
say that News Corp is not a media organisation. It sounds outré to say that it
is instead a political propaganda entity of a kind perhaps not seen since the
19th century, one that has climbed to its pedestal through regulatory
capture, governmental favours and menace, and is now applying its energies to
the promotion of white nationalism, even as white nationalists commit scores of
murders.” [Journalist Richard Cooke wiring in The Monthly,
May 2019],
It is your judgement that counts because the right and responsibility to elect the next Australian Government rests with you, the Australian voter, not with an elderly authoritarian U.S. billionaire who rarely visits this country.
Australian society is not as tolerant of Murdoch's sense of entitlement as it once may have been......
— 💧🐟 Lotta Cheek (@lottacheek) May 11, 2019
March 2018 to March 2019 year-to-year data shows News Corp's principal mastheads are losing readership over the 7 day circulation period, according to Roy Morgan.
By its own admission News Corp has been lobbying local government to keep its community papers afloat in South Australia.
Australian economy has grown weaker and workers paypackets leaner under the Abbott-Turnbull-Morrison Government
ABC
News, 11 May
2019:
Australia's "strong
economy" has been the Coalition's mantra throughout the election campaign.
Earlier this month, the
Liberal Party created a meme of a smiling Scott Morrison armed with a
lightsaber and dressed as a Jedi alongside the slogan: "The economy is
strong with this one."
In Treasurer Josh Frydenberg's Budget speech, the
phrase "strong economy" featured 14 times.
And Labor, loathe to
campaign on what it sees as the Coalition's territory, has barely challenged
this proposition.
Yet the evidence
suggests the claim is more rhetoric than reality.
On just about any
measure, the economy is not strong — and any enduring pretensions that it is
have been undermined by no less an authority than the Reserve Bank of Australia
(RBA).
Its latest monetary policy statement has revised
down economic growth for this financial year to just 1.7 per cent — more than
half a percentage point below its previous forecast.
That contradicts
Treasury forecasts in the Budget, which are barely a month old and were
reaffirmed by Treasury even more recently in the pre-election economic and
fiscal outlook.
Wages growth, despite a
recent small pick-up, has been weaker during the past six years than at any time since
World War II.
Home values and
household wealth have plummeted amid one of the biggest property slumps in
Australia's history.
The inflation rate is at a historic low of just 1.3 per
cent and has languished below the Reserve Bank's target range of 2 to
3 per cent for more than three years.
Although employment
growth has been reasonably strong, driven by the public sector and community
services, key sectors that drive the economy are shrinking.
Manufacturing,
construction and retail trade have all shed tens of thousands of jobs over the
past year — the building industry layoffs are a product of a massive slump in
dwelling investment, which the RBA reckons will continue for years.
Some better headline
data mask gloomier realities
Only high rates of
immigration have stopped Australia lapsing into a formal recession.
The continued expansion
— now in its 28th year, the longest period without a recession in recent world
history — disguises a "per capita" recession that is driving down
living standards.
Similarly, an
unemployment rate mired at 5 per cent, which is not high by the standards of
recent decades, disguises the true weakness of the labour market.
More than 13 per cent of
the workforce is underutilised — either unable to secure work at all or the
hours they need — and a disproportionate share of the jobs growth in recent
times has been poor quality: casual and contract jobs in relatively low-wage,
low-productivity sectors.
The Reserve Bank is
betting on the unemployment rate staying where it is, but others are less
optimistic.
Westpac's Bill Evans,
one of the most long-standing and respected market economists, predicts that
developments in the labour market over the next three months will disappoint
the RBA with a "deterioration of the labour market" over the coming six
months and "continued weak inflation".
This downturn in the
economy is largely homegrown — the product of weak wages growth and the
unwinding of an unsustainable property boom that left households saddled with
enormous debts.
If there's also an
external shock, perhaps from a trade war sparked by Donald Trump's tariffs on our largest trading partner
China, it will open up the possibility of a double-whammy.
Yogi Berra, the
legendary US baseball star and coach, famously observed that "it's tough
making predictions, especially about the future", and it's a maxim that's
often born[e] out in economic forecasting.
But you don't need a
crystal ball to realise that whoever forms government after the federal
election will inherit a sluggish economy, not a strong one.
ABC
News, 12 May
2019:
The Reserve Bank's new
line in the sand gets its first big test with the latest reading from the jobs
market this week.
The new line, as set
down in the RBA's latest Statement on Monetary Policy (SOMP),
can be roughly defined as the unemployment rate holding at 5 per cent through
2019 and 2020 before drifting lower.
The persistent
head-winds of low inflation has seemingly blurred, if not blown away, the RBA's
previous markers — parallel lines which were intended to corral inflation
between 2 to 3 per cent for as far as the eye can see, or an economist can
forecast.
Governor Philip Lowe
made it clear a further improvement in the labour market was needed to get the
economy out its rut and back in the groove, growing at its full potential.
No back-tracking on this
one for the RBA. Lower unemployment and underemployment — where workers are
searching for more hours to make ends meet — will soak up the spare capacity
sloshing around the economy, inflation gets back to where the RBA wants it and
GDP grows at its long term trend, or better.
That's still a long way
off, even using the RBA's recently updated and far from pessimistic forecasts......
According to
the Australian
Bureau of Statistics, over the twelve months to the March quarter 2019
the living costs for self–funded retiree households fell by -0.2%, while the
living costs for age pensioner households and other government transfer
recipient households rose by 0.3% and 0.2% respectively. Employed households living
costs remained unchanged over the same time period at 0.1% above CPI.
It should be noted that penalty rates for retail workers will be further reduced by 15% of the base wage rate on 1 July 2019 and 1 July 2020 as per Fair Work Commission 2017 decision.
Labels:
economy,
Finance,
jobs,
Reserve Bank,
under employment,
unemployment,
wages,
welfare recipients
Thursday, 16 May 2019
First global assessment of the ecological health of the world's "wild" rivers has found only about one third of the longest rivers are still free-flowing
As the Queensland flood waters finally make it down the Dimantina and Georgina rivers and Cooper's Creek and spread out over the Eyre Basin and into Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre, it is well to remember three things.
The first is that; The Lake Eyre Basin is one of the largest and most pristine desert river systems on the planet, supporting 60,000 people and a wealth of wildlife.
The second is the fact that the Morrison Government has a stated policy to dam and divert more water from Australia's river systems if it is re-elected.
The third is that water sustainability into the future is dependent on wild rivers running free.
The first is that; The Lake Eyre Basin is one of the largest and most pristine desert river systems on the planet, supporting 60,000 people and a wealth of wildlife.
The second is the fact that the Morrison Government has a stated policy to dam and divert more water from Australia's river systems if it is re-elected.
The third is that water sustainability into the future is dependent on wild rivers running free.
ABC Radio,“RN”, 9 May 2019:
The first global
assessment of the ecological health of the world's "wild" rivers has
found only about one third of the longest rivers are still free-flowing.
The report warns the
disruption is harming ecosystems, with 3,700 new large dams either under
construction, or planned.
Listen to interview with Dr. Gunter Gill here https://abcmedia.akamaized.net/rn/podcast/2019/05/bst_20190509_0635.mp3
Nature, 8 May 2019:
Gill,Gunter et al,
(2019) Mapping the world’s free-flowing rivers
ABSTRACT
Free-flowing
rivers (FFRs) support diverse, complex and dynamic ecosystems globally,
providing important societal and economic services. Infrastructure development
threatens the ecosystem processes, biodiversity and services that these rivers
support. Here we assess the connectivity status of 12 million kilometres of
rivers globally and identify those that remain free-flowing in their entire
length. Only 37 per cent of rivers longer than 1,000 kilometres remain
free-flowing over their entire length and 23 per cent flow uninterrupted to the
ocean. Very long FFRs are largely restricted to remote regions of the Arctic
and of the Amazon and Congo basins. In densely populated areas only few very
long rivers remain free-flowing, such as the Irrawaddy and Salween. Dams and
reservoirs and their up- and downstream propagation of fragmentation and flow
regulation are the leading contributors to the loss of river connectivity. By
applying a new method to quantify riverine connectivity and map FFRs, we
provide a foundation for concerted global and national strategies to maintain
or restore them.
At least 13 local government authorities around Australia have formally recognised a climate emergency
Clarence Valley Council,
media release, 8 May 2019:
Mayor: Jim Simmons LOCKED BAG 23 GRAFTON NSW 2460
General Manager: Ashley Lindsay Telephone: (02) 6643 0200
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Council recognises a climate emergency
ADDRESSING
climate change has become a core issue in the Clarence Valley following a
council decision to recognise there is a climate emergency that requires urgent
actions by all levels of government and the community.
Council
has joined a number of local councils that have recognised the urgency needed
to implement actions to mitigate and adapt to projected climate change impacts.
Australia’s
climate has warmed by 1°C since 1910 and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change (IPCC) September 2018 report on global warming highlights the serious
risks of not containing global warming to 1.5°C or below. Current projections
are tracking for more than 3°C of global warming by 2100.
To
stay below 1.5°C the IPCC concludes the world must embark on a World War II
level of effort to transition away from fossil fuels and start removing carbon
dioxide from the atmosphere at large scale.
Council
has previously decided to fast track a strategy of cutting Council emissions by
40% and increase the use of renewables to 50% before 2030.
At
its last meeting, council adopted a five-point resolution aimed at addressing
climate change urgently, including making “climate change” a sub heading in all
council reports and continuing to carry out actions in an earlier “100%
Renewables” strategy.
Waste
and sustainability coordinator, Ken Wilson, said there were cost savings for
council from its energy efficiency gains and onsite solar, with an average
payback period of 6.5 years.
He
said council’s recognition of a climate emergency provided an opportunity to
lobby other levels of government on the urgency of cutting emissions.
“Council’s
work to date and the ambitious strategy for increasing renewable energy and
reducing emissions is doing well, however the community Climate Change Advisory
Committee considers council should engage our local community and other levels
of government to communicate there is a climate emergency and we all need to do
more,” he said.
At
least another 12 local government authorities around Australia have formally
recognised a climate emergency, including Upper Hunter Shire Council, Blue
Mountains, Hawkesbury and Bellingen councils in NSW. The British parliament has
also just resolved to declare a national climate emergency.
*
NSW Government projections about the impact of climate change on the North
Coast are available here
Release ends.
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