28 Jan2017

Donald Trump’s protectionism won’t make America great again

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

There was good news this week for Donald Trump, with a poll by Politico finding that the “America First” message of his inaugural address resonated with 65 per cent of Americans. Yet the new President’s bellicose economic nationalism is as dangerous for the US as it is for the world.

23 Jan2017

Trump’s tariffs deny reality of golden age

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

“Protection will lead to great prosperity and strength.” With those eight words, placed at the heart of his inaugural address, Donald J. Trump, 45th President of the US, ended America’s long-standing commitment to an open, rules-based, trading system.

09 Jan2017

Who’ll pay for our long lives and pensions?

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian
There was good news late last year for governments struggling with soaring pension costs: according to a study published in the prestigious journal Nature, it may not be possible to extend the human lifespan beyond the ages already attained by the oldest people on record.

02 Jan2017

Courageous must stand up to proponents of ‘post-truth’ world

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

It is a truth universally acknowledged that we now live in a “post-truth” world. But the notion that there was a golden age in which political truth readily triumphed over falsehood is so fanciful as to exemplify the very phenomenon the term “post-truth” describes.

19 Dec2016

Asset lottery makes it a merrier Christmas for some

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

Little wonder Donald Trump swept the rural states: this year’s Christmas Price Index, which calculates the cost of buying the full basket of goods and services specified in The Twelve Days of Christmas, shows America’s milking maids are doing it tough, as are the country’s suppliers of swans, geese and partridges in pear trees.


05 Dec2016

Malcolm Turnbull must beware the whims of the promiscuous voter

Posted in Op eds

In The Australian today:

Last Thursday, when he ­announced he would not stand for re-election, French President Francois Hollande became merely the latest victim of the year of political head-rolling. Hollande’s fall at the guillotine of politics follows a string of errors and miscalculations that saw his satisfaction rating plummet to barely 4 per cent. But with the ­National Front fracturing the political equilibrium, it also reflects the difficulties both France’s Socialist Party and its centre-right opponents have had in regaining their hold on the country’s political system.



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