In the country’s most expensive housing markets, family help and the ‘bank of mum and dad’ is increasingly necessary for younger people to buy homes. But could this entrench and perpetuate lasting advantage for those already part of the property-owning class?
Guests
Dr Julia Cook: Senior lecturer, Sociology, University of Newcastle
Dr Laurence Troy: Senior lecturer in Urbanism, University of Sydney
Dr Monique McKenzie: Post doctoral research associate, University of Sydney
Sophie Renton: Managing Director at social research firm, McCrindle.
The pandemic, protectionism and paying for the downturn
Melbourne's CBD economy and plans for recovery
Build back better - jobs in services that communities need
Houses outstrip wages and could WFH lead to more urban sprawl?
Vaccine costs and how the pandemic will make permanent changes to our economy
How can we improve aged care?
Logistics - a $7 trillion global industry you probably haven’t thought about until the pandemic
Hyper growth for local telehealth start-up and the paradox of thrift
'Harsh numbers' - deficit hits record high and unemployment to grow
Rethinking deficits and what's the future of city office space?
Survival in the arts sector and Melbourne's bitter economic blow
Tourism sector looks to locals to survive
Hospitality sector struggles with downturn and more Australians out of work
At the shops
Made in Australia
Study to work: 2.6 years to get job after uni
The passion economy
Cost of living
Counting the costs of Australia's bushfires
The economic and social turning points of the 2020s
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
The Modern West
Conversations
All In The Mind
What’s That Rash?
ABC News Daily
Unravel