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.
Cybersecurity a top concern for CEOs; how to increase productivity and a book about money
How wages actually increase; the finances of aged care and the importance of economic history
RBA predictions; aged care and Economic Weapons
Sorting through economic indicators to determine where we are going and how has vaccine nationalism affected the global economy
Indigenous business sector worth billions
The Taliban economy
Reflections on poverty in SA, and what's cuckoo smurfing?
Estate duties: a good but unpopular tax
China's 2021 economy and Mariana Mazzucato's mission
Localising exam questions lifts scores and potentially, economic prospects
Surge in wealth transfers and vale Geoff Harcourt
Big data and social housing to break disadvantage cycle and record investments in Australian start ups
Rising rents and the power price comparison challenge
Financial stress v poverty
More legitimacy to crypto?
Fast chargers: how to speed up the net zero transition
Philanthropy and poverty: reflections on a 135 year history
"Climate risk is investment risk"
Is inflation creeping back?
Expectations of net-zero commitment, but policy lags behind
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
The Modern West
Conversations
All In The Mind
What’s That Rash?
ABC News Daily
Unravel