In short: Leading economist Ross Garnaut says broader reforms are needed to improve the economic prospects of young people and prevent generational inequality from worsening. Without substantial ...
The war is like a Trojan horse – it’s being used by oil and gas producers to lobby for “energy security” and fight tax rises.
Garnaut's Response reported on Professor Ross Garnaut's public response on 15 September 2010 to The 7.30 Report story, Price of Gold, which had been broadcast on 9 September 2010. After the broadcast, ...
Space to play or pause, M to mute, left and right arrows to seek, up and down arrows for volume. MARK COLVIN: Professor Ross Garnaut chaired the Climate Change Review of 2008, and revised it in 2010.
Ross Garnaut’s Dog Days confronts the issues of productivity and tax reform, but is short on solutions. Lukas Coch/AAP In 1991, Michael Pusey unleashed Economic Rationalism in Canberra: A ...
NUCLEAR electricity generation is unlikely to be economically viable in Australia as solar, wind and other renewable energy becomes cheaper, economist Ross Garnaut has told a royal commission. The ...
A revamped AUKUS agreement has just been tabled in Parliament. Over the past few years, there have been no shortage of critics of the nuclear submarine deal with the US and UK, and there have been ...
Leading Australian economists Ross Garnaut and Rod Sims this week sought to shake up the carbon policy debate in Australia, by proposing a tax on the nation’s fossil fuel production. They claim it ...
Economist Ross Garnaut has predicted “trench warfare” over development projects, given the influence business now has with government. Delivering the John Freebairn lecture in Melbourne, Garnaut said ...
Ross Garnaut was the architect of the Labor government’s carbon pricing scheme, which looks likely to be scrapped this week despite last week’s brinkmanship in the Senate. The Conversation asked ...
Murdoch University provides funding as a member of The Conversation AU. Many people who write for The Conversation like to think of themselves as ‘public intellectuals’, or that they are at least ...
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