Chủ Nhật, 28 tháng 4, 2013

Dollar back below 103 US cents

THE Australian dollar has dropped back below 103 US cents following weakness on global share markets and commodity prices.

At 0700 AEST TOday, the currency was trading at 102.82 US cents, down from 103.10 US cents on Friday afternoon.

Westpac New Zealand senior market strategist Imre Speizer said the Australian dollar weakened during Friday night's European and US sessions as equities markets moved lower.

Mr Speizer said markets were disappointed after European Central Bank (ECB) official Joerg Asmussen warned of the side effects of low interest rates.

His comments undermined widespread expectations the ECB will cut its key interest rate when it meets later in the week.

Mr Speizer said the currency was likely to continue to move lower over the next few days, possibly dropping below 102.20 US cents.


"It looks like it wants to test those levels," he said.

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Whiz kid investors putting banks at risk

factory workers

Political doubts spook business

MANUFACTURERS, small business operators and builders have shut-up shop and stopped hiring with growth flatlining.

Digital divide widens in business

fibre optical

AUSTRALIA'S small businesses are falling at the first hurdle of digital literacy, with more than half without even a website.

Construction can be fatal: Grocon boss

Building site

CONSTRUCTION sites are risky environments and incidents such as Melbourne's fatal wall collapse can occur, head of Grocon says.

Why bush towns are dying

Barellan

ONCE thriving country towns across NSW are battling for survival as growing unemployment and rising costs turn many into ghost towns.

Sacked for 'not moving fast enough'

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THE chairman and chief executive of French hotel group Accor Denis Hennequin has been sacked after a major rift with his executive board.

Rivals take a bite out of Apple profit

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UPDATE: Apple's quarterly profit has dipped for the first time in nearly a decade despite a rise in revenue from the same period a year earlier.

Aussie wine lovers, the Germans want you

Henkell

AUSSIE wine lovers, we have been told - our stuff is good but as far as the Germans are concerned theirs is just that little bit more special.

The industries cashing in on your heartbreak

aussie cash

SPLITTING up is a huge, costly and emotional expense that's fast becoming big business. Find out which ones are benefiting from your divorce.

Cutting out online business threats

Betrina Hill

THE online world was a no-go zone for Betrina Hill - but then she realised her business wouldn't survive without it.

Retailers missing out on web hit

computer mouse

DESPITE all the hype, online retail sales grew only 19 per cent compared with the same period last year, according to the NAB's Online Retail Sales Index.

Consumer watchdog brought to heel

Michael Schaper

FRANCHISING abuses have been ignored by the competition watchdog for a lack of resources, submissions to the Federal Parliament claim.

Hubby helps flesh out online business

Belinda Smith

IT TOOK some wise words from her husband for Belinda Smith to start her online homewares and furniture store, White Coconut.

Sickies causing ill will

headache

FRIDAY sickies are costing the nation up to $36 million a year, with small businesses copping the brunt of the the "three-day weekend".


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Leonie's $35,000 bill is bad medicine

Leonie Havnen Medical Bills

Leonie Havnen, aged 52, is a breast cancer survivor, but she faces hefty medical bills as a result of fighting the disease. Picture: Sam Ruttyn Source: The Daily Telegraph

SURVIVING breast cancer was the first fight, paying the bills was the next.

Leonie Havnen is one of thousands of Australians forced to dip into their superannuation when faced with medical bills and expensive prescription drugs.

In her case it was after she was diagnosed with an aggressive form of breast cancer in November 2011.

"I took out about $35,000 for medical costs and medication," the 52-year-old single mum, from Drummoyne, said. "I feel like I'm going to have to work for an extra three years to make up for what I had to take out."

Ms Havnen has been free of the stage three cancer for 18 months, but the financial strains have continued. She spends about $200 a month on medications and another $40 for vitamins to minimise side effects.

The cost burden has become so significant Ms Havnen was forced to drop some medicines from her treatment.


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Apple boss cooks salary package

factory workers

Political doubts spook business

MANUFACTURERS, small business operators and builders have shut-up shop and stopped hiring with growth flatlining.

Digital divide widens in business

fibre optical

AUSTRALIA'S small businesses are falling at the first hurdle of digital literacy, with more than half without even a website.

Construction can be fatal: Grocon boss

Building site

CONSTRUCTION sites are risky environments and incidents such as Melbourne's fatal wall collapse can occur, head of Grocon says.

Why bush towns are dying

Barellan

ONCE thriving country towns across NSW are battling for survival as growing unemployment and rising costs turn many into ghost towns.

Sacked for 'not moving fast enough'

Denis Hennequin

THE chairman and chief executive of French hotel group Accor Denis Hennequin has been sacked after a major rift with his executive board.

Rivals take a bite out of Apple profit

Apple Dow

UPDATE: Apple's quarterly profit has dipped for the first time in nearly a decade despite a rise in revenue from the same period a year earlier.

Aussie wine lovers, the Germans want you

Henkell

AUSSIE wine lovers, we have been told - our stuff is good but as far as the Germans are concerned theirs is just that little bit more special.

The industries cashing in on your heartbreak

aussie cash

SPLITTING up is a huge, costly and emotional expense that's fast becoming big business. Find out which ones are benefiting from your divorce.

Cutting out online business threats

Betrina Hill

THE online world was a no-go zone for Betrina Hill - but then she realised her business wouldn't survive without it.

Retailers missing out on web hit

computer mouse

DESPITE all the hype, online retail sales grew only 19 per cent compared with the same period last year, according to the NAB's Online Retail Sales Index.

Consumer watchdog brought to heel

Michael Schaper

FRANCHISING abuses have been ignored by the competition watchdog for a lack of resources, submissions to the Federal Parliament claim.

Hubby helps flesh out online business

Belinda Smith

IT TOOK some wise words from her husband for Belinda Smith to start her online homewares and furniture store, White Coconut.

Sickies causing ill will

headache

FRIDAY sickies are costing the nation up to $36 million a year, with small businesses copping the brunt of the the "three-day weekend".


View the original article here

The budget cuts Swan must make

Wayne Swan

Treasurer Wayne Swan faces some tough choices if he wants to reduce the Budget deficit, say top economists. Picture: Kym Smith Source: News Limited

CUTS to airport security, axing the baby bonus, boosting petrol excise and lifting the age at which people qualify for the aged pension are just some of the of controversial savings measures economists say are needed to balance the federal budget.

Amid predictions the budget will be in deficit for a decade, News Limited asked some of the nation's top economists to nominate where the budget savings are hidden.

The economists expect a budget deficit of about $20 billion this financial year, and about $10 billion the next.

They want the government to focus on cutting spending and closing tax loop holes and are hesitant about increasing tax rates.

Scroll down to see the complete list of suggested savings

"I do not want to see any increases in rates of tax," the chief economist at Bank of America Merrill Lynch Australia Saul Eslake said.

The chief economist at AMP Capital, Shane Oliver, agrees: "Given the need to boost the economy's productive potential, budget savings should be focussed on spending cuts, not tax increases."

Dr Oliver wants the government to cut middle class welfare, industry subsidies, broadband spending and encourage greater private sector involvement in infrastructure projects.

"It is clear that total Government spending does need to be cut," Dr Oliver said.

Mr Eslake wants the government to tighten tax concessions on negative gearing, capital gains, family trusts, superannuation payouts for over 60s and abolish the Senior Australians' Tax Offset.

Airport security screening

Economist Saul  Eslake says  the cost of airport security measures must be weighed against the hassle caused to travellers. File picture: Jane Hansen

He also wants the GST applied on food and a Medicare-style levy to pay for the National Disability Insurance Scheme. "What sort of insurance scheme has no premiums?" he said.

Mr Eslake said the Boston bombings showed that huge spending on homeland security was no guarantee against terrorism. And the cost of airport security measures must be weighed against the hassle caused to travellers.

"We employ a small army of people to do such utterly pointless tasks as confiscating shaving cream and duty free booze, waving magic wands over laptops, making female passengers remove and replace their boots, and harassing old folks with hip replacements, none of which have ever been shown to have posed the slightest risk to the travelling public."

The chief economist at JP Morgan, Stephen Walters, expects the budget will return to surplus in 2015-16, but says Australia would not lose its AAA credit rating if it did not. However, "from a fiscal credibility perspective ... there needs to be a plan that shows the Budget path is a return to surplus," he said.

Mr Walters would cut middle class welfare, reduce concessions on super, cut the bureaucracy, increase the rate of the GST, reinstate indexation of the fuel excise and lift the Medicare surcharge to encourage people to take out private health insurance.

An economist at The Eureka Report, Adam Carr, said paying off debt would save the budget $12 billion a year in interest charges. Mr Carr would remove all industry assistance, cut social security and welfare and increase the GST, the mining tax and the petroleum resource rent tax.

The author of Debunking Economics, Professor Steve Keen, thinks the budget won't be back in surplus until 2025. But this, he says, is not a problem.

"We have a surplus fetish in this country, and obsess about a deficit that is substantially smaller than applies in most of the developed world," he said.

Professor Keen wants to abolish negative gearing, axe first home buyer grants and tax capital gains at a person's income tax rate.

The chief economist at HSBC, Paul Bloxham, also does not expect a surplus in the next four financial years and is calm about the prospect. In the longer term, Mr Bloxham would lift the rate of the GST and apply it on more things like food. He would also increase the mining tax and the age of qualification for the pension.

Labor has already announced the eligibility age for the age pension will rise from 65 would rise to 67, phased in between 2017 and 2023.

CUT THE FAT: Budget savings measures recommended by economists

Welfare:

BIN the baby bonus

AXE the Schoolkids bonus

TIGHTEN eligibility for social security and welfare payments

RAISE the eligibility age for the age pension

EXTEND the income test for the age pension to include super earnings

ABOLISH the Senior Australians Tax Offset which discriminates by age, not income

Health:

INTRODUCE a Medicare-style levy to fund the disability insurance scheme

END the private health insurance rebate

INCREASE the Medicare Levy Surcharge to encourage people to take up private insurance

Industry & Infrastructure:

SCRAP industry assistance

SAVE on infrastructure costs by encouraging greater private sector involvement

Property:

ABOLISH negative gearing of property

GET RID OF first home owners grants

DITCH the discount on capital gains

Public sector:

REDUCE bureaucracy

CUT spending on security, including airports and security agencies

TRIM interest payments by retiring debt

Tax:

RAISE the rate of the GST and apply it to a wider range of goods like food

BOOST the rate of the mining tax and apply to a wider range of commodities

UP the rate of the Petroleum Resources Rent Tax.

REINSTATE indexation of the fuel excise

CRACKDOWN on use of family trusts to avoid tax

TIGHTEN tax concessions on super.

Email: jessica.irvine@news.com.au Twitter: @Jess Irvine


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All Black sells juice to Asahi for $101m

factory workers

Political doubts spook business

MANUFACTURERS, small business operators and builders have shut-up shop and stopped hiring with growth flatlining.

Digital divide widens in business

fibre optical

AUSTRALIA'S small businesses are falling at the first hurdle of digital literacy, with more than half without even a website.

Construction can be fatal: Grocon boss

Building site

CONSTRUCTION sites are risky environments and incidents such as Melbourne's fatal wall collapse can occur, head of Grocon says.

Why bush towns are dying

Barellan

ONCE thriving country towns across NSW are battling for survival as growing unemployment and rising costs turn many into ghost towns.

Sacked for 'not moving fast enough'

Denis Hennequin

THE chairman and chief executive of French hotel group Accor Denis Hennequin has been sacked after a major rift with his executive board.

Rivals take a bite out of Apple profit

Apple Dow

UPDATE: Apple's quarterly profit has dipped for the first time in nearly a decade despite a rise in revenue from the same period a year earlier.

Aussie wine lovers, the Germans want you

Henkell

AUSSIE wine lovers, we have been told - our stuff is good but as far as the Germans are concerned theirs is just that little bit more special.

The industries cashing in on your heartbreak

aussie cash

SPLITTING up is a huge, costly and emotional expense that's fast becoming big business. Find out which ones are benefiting from your divorce.

Cutting out online business threats

Betrina Hill

THE online world was a no-go zone for Betrina Hill - but then she realised her business wouldn't survive without it.

Retailers missing out on web hit

computer mouse

DESPITE all the hype, online retail sales grew only 19 per cent compared with the same period last year, according to the NAB's Online Retail Sales Index.

Consumer watchdog brought to heel

Michael Schaper

FRANCHISING abuses have been ignored by the competition watchdog for a lack of resources, submissions to the Federal Parliament claim.

Hubby helps flesh out online business

Belinda Smith

IT TOOK some wise words from her husband for Belinda Smith to start her online homewares and furniture store, White Coconut.

Sickies causing ill will

headache

FRIDAY sickies are costing the nation up to $36 million a year, with small businesses copping the brunt of the the "three-day weekend".


View the original article here

Staff not carbon tax pushes bills up

Bill shock

Man in home office using computer holding paperwor Picture: Cathy Yeulet/Thinkstock Source: Supplied

  • Australia Institute says extra admin costs driving prices up
  • Extra 54,000 desk jobs created but only 23,000 tech workers hired
  • Over 6,000 in sales alone for major power companies

POWER giants are employing too many pen-pushing desk staff, driving up household electricity bills by more than the carbon tax, a new analysis claims.

An Australia Institute report reveals power companies have hired twice as many desk staff as front line techies over the past 15 years and consumers are paying the price.

Electricity prices have surged three times faster than inflation over the past 15 years, it shows.

At the same time, the number of managers has tripled to 19,000 while the sales force has grown six-fold to 6000 workers.

The number of technicians and trade workers grew just 28 per cent to 32,000 - matching the number of clerical and administrative staff.

The report's author, David Richardson, blamed privatisation of government-owned power companies for an increase in the number of backroom workers.

"It seems remarkable that a sales force of 6000 people is necessary to sell a product which everyone needs," he said.

"The managers are growing at five times the rate of the people who actually do the work in producing electricity."

The analysis of Australian Bureau of Statistics workforce data shows the industry has hired an extra 54,000 managers, professionals, clerical staff and sales workers since the privatisation push began 15 years ago.

In contrast, it has hired only 23,000 technicians, trade workers, laborers and machinery operators and drivers.

The management ratio has grown from one manager for every 13 workers in 1997, to one for every nine workers in 2012.

"On the face of it that seems very wasteful," the report says.

Mr Richardson said productivity in the power industry has fallen by one-quarter since 1995, while all other Australian industries have increased productivity by one-third.

"Competition may well be beneficial in theory but it means the firms themselves have had to put resources into selling a product," he said.

"The large increase in clerical and administrative workers may reflect such things as the duplication of billing systems, human resource sections and so on as government enterprises are broken up into smaller `businesses'."

The policy think-tank calculated that the extra backroom staff have added $1.5bn to the industry's costs.

It found power prices from publicly-owned utilities have risen an average of 134 per cent over the past 20 years, compared to 182 per cent for privatised power utilities.

Mr Richardson said proposals to sell power stations in NSW and Queensland were "unlikely" to ease cost-of-living pressures.

"It might even slug consumers with higher bills and worse service," he said. The report shows that power prices have tripled in Sydney - which has both privatised and government-owned utilities - over the past 20 years.

Prices have surged 181 per cent in Melbourne since the Kennett government privatised power utilities 20 years ago.

In Brisbane, where power stations remain publicly owned, prices have grown 167 per cent - the same as in Adelaide, where utilities have been privatised.Prices have roughly doubled in Perth and Darwin, whose utilities are government-owned.

Hobart has publicly-owned utilities but power prices have risen 181 per cent.


View the original article here