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.
Credit card debt; reducing the fiscal gap and the risky business of insurance
RBA's decision, international banks and a manufacturing revival
Interest rates, university incentives and CPI comparisons
Bank contagion, submarines and jobs and the future of the workplace with AI
How to improve the future for young Australians and central bankers are talking
Re-thinking insurance and improving migration systems for all
A financial crisis in the aged care sector
Mariana Mazzucato on the Big Con and an economic view of the Russian invasion
Could the RBA be getting it right?
Medicare reform; the great inflation debate and the fuel tax credit scheme
Sustainable financial taxonomies and buy now, pay later regulation
International trade and China's growing loneliness economy
Beyond GDP: the health of a nation
The big business of online sports betting
Streaming Services both video and music
Economics and the environment
Sanctions and Oligarchs
Energy caps; Christmas spend and edible economics
Energy prices; affordable housing and The World Ahead report
Inflation, jobs, and tax and government
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