Highlights from interesting research or insightful analysis, particularly in the areas of policy, strategy, economics, agriculture and governance
Tuesday, April 18, 2017
Budget explainer: has there been a blowout in social security and welfare spending?
It is difficult to reach the conclusion that the share of the population receiving social security payments has been increasing significantly, or that spending has been growing at an unsustainable rate relative to the size of the economy. Peter Whiteford (Australian National University) explains.
Labels:
policy,
social policy
Location:
Canberra ACT 2601, Australia
Monday, April 10, 2017
The need for new housing solutions for low-income groups is clearly a pressing requirement
Growth in the national housing stock has kept pace with population growth for almost a decade. However, the picture differs across state and territory capitals. Official figures (June 2015) reveal there were 154,000 households on state housing authority waiting lists for public housing, but it is likely that the length of these waiting lists underestimates the need for public housing. The need for new housing solutions for low-income groups is clearly a pressing requirement. Gavin Wood (RMIT University) and Rachel Ong (Curtin University) explain.
Location:
Canberra ACT 2601, Australia
Mortgage stress isn’t as bad as we are told
The debate about housing affordability has recently drifted into the issue of systemic financial system risk. However, the risk of people not being able to repay their home loans appears small and
there is no clear case that the household sector has borrowed excessively.
A lot of the confusion about housing arises because people make inappropriate comparisons. One common mistake is to compare the amount of housing debt with national income - this is highly misleading. Rodney Maddock (
Monash University) explains
.
Labels:
financial sector,
housing
Location:
Canberra ACT 2601, Australia
Friday, April 7, 2017
Australian politics explainer: the writing of our Constitution
Ryan Goss (Australian National University) explains the development of Australia's Constitution, its impact at the time, and its relevance to politics today.
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