December 30
2021 Edition
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First the
good news – the James Web Space Telescope has safely made it into space – now
for the next 6 months to get it all set up and working.
The rest of
the world seems to continue to be gradually swamped by Omicron and we are all
still wondering where it will all end.
Global
tensions with Russia and China continue and are not helping at all!
In OZ we are
heading into the New Year with a feeling of some uncertainty which has not
eased just yet. We are all really sick of this! Worse we are seeing testing demand skyrocket as cases surge and Governments seem to be rather unsure just what to do. You get the feeling COVID is back with a vengance!
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Major Issues.
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https://www.afr.com/policy/economy/big-super-s-offshore-equities-plunge-is-risky-20211219-p59itb
Big super’s offshore equities plunge is risky
Grant Wilson Contributor
Dec 19, 2021
– 2.35pm
When the
pandemic arrived early in 2020, Australian investors were slow to react. They
hit a collective panic button in March, and remained for the most part in
damage limitation mode into fiscal year-end.
The
balance of payments, published each quarter by the Australia Bureau of
Statistics (ABS), provides an instructive and authoritative view of the period.
Flows by residents in and out of overseas equities and investment fund shares
is the best proxy overall.
Through the
first half of 2020, residents (people, banks, corporates, government and mainly,
superannuation funds) repatriated some $36 billion from the sector. This
compares to repatriation of around $14 billion during the global financial
crisis (GFC), when assets held by superannuation funds were approximately 40
per cent of the size.
While the
risk-averse reaction functions were thus comparable, what has happened since is
unprecedented.
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https://www.afr.com/companies/financial-services/short-sellers-lick-lips-as-magellan-flounders-20211219-p59isx
Short-sellers lick lips as Magellan flounders
Jonathan Shapiro and Aleks Vickovich
Dec 19, 2021
– 5.39pm
Hedge funds
betting almost $250 million against Magellan Financial Group are bracing for a
big payday when shares in the besieged fund manager resume trading following
the shock loss of a
material client account.
Magellan is
expected to respond on Monday to widespread speculation that the lost contract,
which sparked a trading halt on Friday, was its $18.6 billion mandate from British
wealth manager St James’s Place.
The London
Stock Exchange-listed, Gloucestershire-based firm is by far Magellan’s largest
corporate client, accounting for one quarter of its institutional funds under
management and contributing an estimated 10 per cent of the group’s base, or
management fee revenue.
A Magellan
spokesman said the company was unable to comment during a trading halt and St
James’s Place did not respond to multiple approaches from The Australian
Financial Review.
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https://www.afr.com/property/residential/follow-the-kiwi-model-to-fix-the-house-price-nightmare-20211220-p59iwy
Follow the Kiwi model to fix the house price nightmare
The New
Zealand government has intervened heavily to fix bottlenecks in housing supply.
There are equivalent things that Australia could be doing.
Brendan Coates
Contributor
Dec 20, 2021
– 12.41pm
Within living
memory, Australia was a place where people of all ages and incomes had a
reasonable chance to own a home. But the great Australian dream of home
ownership is rapidly turning into a nightmare for many young Australians.
Home ownership rates are
falling. Between 1981 and 2016, the share of 25 to 34 year-olds who owned
their own home fell from more than 60 per cent to 45 per cent. Half of the poorest
40 per cent of Australians aged 25-34 owned their homes in 1981. Now it’s just
30 per cent. Increasingly, younger Australians’ best chance of owning a home is
to have parents who already own one.
The growing
gap between the housing haves and have-nots is a big reason that wealth
inequality is on the rise. The average house in Victoria made its owner
$140,000 this year, more than twice what the average Australian worker takes
home each year – and the average house in NSW made its owners more than $200,000.
What should
the federal government do to fix the mess? It could do far worse than look
across the ditch to New Zealand, where a bipartisan bill just passed Parliament
that will make it easier to build more houses in the country’s biggest cities.
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https://www.afr.com/policy/economy/rba-should-stick-to-fighting-inflation-and-nothing-else-20211220-p59iyh
RBA should stick to fighting inflation, and nothing else
Monetary
policy is not a Swiss Army knife. Too many objectives undermine its purpose,
and it is time to rewrite the RBA Act.
Wolfgang Kasper
Contributor
Dec 20, 2021
– 1.07pm
The economic
history of many countries shows that when economies are stimulated by a
blown-up money supply that runs into inelastic supply, the result is serious
and unmanageable price inflation.
Apart from
the Whitlam-Fraser
calamity of the 1970s, when the consumer-price level rose for a while at a
clip of more than 15 per cent a year and “masochistic monetary restraints”
under the Fraser government inflicted pain on businesses and home borrowers,
living Australians have no experience with real inflation.
But history
demonstrates that major waves of inflation – which may last decades – inflict
great pain: unjust wealth redistribution from poor to rich; extreme poverty;
growing homelessness; rises in crime, illegitimate births, and alcohol and drug
abuse; the popular rejection of freedom and other fundamental values; even
insurrections and a greater likelihood of international armed conflict. Credit
for private enterprise becomes unpredictable. Governments often go bankrupt.
Policy-induced recessions “we have to have” inflict repeated hurt, but often
fail to restore stability.
The RBA is
expected to attain three often incompatible economic objectives, plus the
feel-good aim of promoting ‘the welfare of the people’.
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https://www.afr.com/politics/federal/religious-freedom-bill-is-bad-for-business-20211220-p59iyq
Religious freedom bill ‘bad for business’
Joanna Mather
Dec 20, 2021
– 4.58pm
The Diversity
Council of Australia, which brings together some of Australia’s biggest
companies and faith-based organisations, says the Morrison
government’s religious freedom laws are “bad for business”.
The council
says the “statement of belief” provision contained in the Religious
Discrimination Bill 2021 could be used
as a smokescreen for harassment, homophobia and sexism.
A standard
antidiscrimation law designed along the same lines as laws for sex and race
would be a better option, the council has told the Parliamentary Joint
Committee on Human Rights, which is examining the bill.
“The bill
will interfere with the ability of organisations to foster inclusive cultures,
which will be bad for business,” the council's submission says.
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https://www.afr.com/chanticleer/proxy-adviser-reform-rollout-is-a-shocker-20211221-p59j9o
Frydenberg’s action on proxy advice is a shocker
Whatever your
views on the work of proxy advisers, the way the government has rolled out new
regulations for the sector without due process amounts to more than a hit
job.
Dec 21, 2021
– 11.56am
Australia’s
business community might respectfully disagree on the need to reform the work
of proxy advisers, but it should be shocked at the way Treasurer Josh Frydenberg
has damaged these organisations by hurriedly ramming
through new regulations for the nation’s proxy sector.
A week out
from Christmas, Frydenberg has immediately stripped the Australian Council of
Superannuation Investors (ACSI), CGI Glass Lewis, Ownership Matters and ISS of
their financial services licences covering proxy advice.
They have
just 52 days to apply for new ones under conditions that change the financial
footing of these organisations forever – who can ever invest in them, who can
lend money to them, who could ever eventually buy them.
The new
regulations also force these organisations to hand over the intellectual
property for no compensation and with no restrictions.
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https://www.afr.com/wealth/personal-finance/gifts-that-will-keep-on-giving-to-your-smsf-20211118-p599w1
Gifts that will keep on giving to your SMSF
Four
tweaks to your DIY fund will make things easier not just for you but for your
loved ones too.
Meg Heffron Contributor
Dec 22, 2021
– 5.00am
Why wait
until next year to make changes that will take your self-managed superannuation
fund to the next level? Use the holiday break to set time aside to make four
tweaks to your DIY fund – “gifts” to your finances that will keep on delivering
over the long term.
Switch to a
corporate trustee
For anyone
still with individual trustees, make this the time you finally convert your
SMSF to a corporate trustee. Yes, no one likes extra costs and it will cost
money to set up a company. There will also be ongoing fees to ASIC.
But a
corporate trustee is better in every way. One of the many compelling reasons
for a corporate trustee is how much easier it makes things when one of the
members dies. That’s a time when there is just so much administration anyway –
why make the burden on those you leave behind even heavier by also leaving them
with the job of changing the SMSF trustee?
Technically,
someone intending to wind up the SMSF when the first member dies can get away
without making this switch. This is because an SMSF is often allowed to break
the normal rules and have just one individual trustee for up to six months when
this happens.
In theory,
that should be plenty of time to sell all the assets, pay out any benefits and
wind up the fund.
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https://www.afr.com/wealth/personal-finance/14-disruptive-trends-you-need-to-know-about-in-2022-20211214-p59hhl
14 disruptive trends you need to know about in 2022
The choices
facing investors are daunting - to stay on track and miss out or take a leap
into almost unimaginable change.
Tony Featherstone
Contributor
Dec 23, 2021
– 5.00am
In the sci-fi
movie The Matrix, Keanu Reeves is offered a red or blue pill. The red pill
represents an uncertain future and life-changing truth. The blue pill is
contented ignorance.
For
investors, choosing the red pill in 2022 means speculating in companies exposed
to Web
3.0 (decentralised content), the metaverse
(a three-dimensional internet), non-fungible
tokens (digital uniqueness) and artificial intelligence (AI).
Investors who
take the blue pill will stick with traditional industries. Some will resist the
hype machine on tech disruption. Others know that picking long-term winners
from technology disruption is like catching lightning in a bottle – dangerous
and near impossible.
Many investors
will defer to ignorance, believing disruption is something for the future, even
though it is everywhere today. In doing so, they could miss the megatrend of
megatrends: the digitisation of everything. They could own companies crushed by
disruption.
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https://www.afr.com/companies/financial-services/proxy-advice-reform-is-about-transparency-and-accountability-20211222-p59jkm
Proxy advice reform is about transparency and accountability
The
government’s reforms to proxy advisers may not please everyone, but their
purpose is to increase accountability and transparency in a highly concentrated
industry, Treasurer Josh Frydenberg says.
Josh Frydenberg
Treasurer
Dec 22, 2021
– 6.36pm
It’s no
surprise vested interests, cheered on by the Labor Party, oppose the Morrison
government’s reforms to proxy advisers. Indeed, many of the same voices opposed
moves to introduce Australian Financial Service Licences for litigation funders
and legislate the ‘Your Future, Your Super’ reforms.
But despite
concerted attempts to frustrate these important microeconomic reforms, they
failed, and these changes are now law. Changes that support the economy,
enhance accountability and save consumers, in the case of the superannuation
reforms, more than $17 billion.
So,
too, when it comes to proxy advisers, the government is seeking increased
transparency and accountability in a highly concentrated sector that plays
an increasingly important role in Australia’s corporate governance regime.
There are
four key reforms.
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https://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/legal-affairs/there-are-better-ideas-on-how-to-run-an-icac-and-nsw-could-learn-from-other-states/news-story/94b79075cb2846ec6f1ead7353157ce7
There are better ideas on how to run an ICAC and NSW could learn from
other states
Chris Merritt
7:24PM
December 22, 2021
When the time
comes for NSW to do something about its anti-corruption agency, the nation’s
most populous jurisdiction could do a lot worse than copy a few ideas from
interstate.
South
Australia is now well ahead of NSW in protecting innocent people who are caught
up in inquiries by its Independent Commission Against Corruption.
Both states
have plenty of innocent people who have been hurt by these agencies. Yet South
Australia has made changes while some of those in NSW cannot even understand
the nature of the problem.
South
Australia’s parliament unanimously approved amendments in September that
replace the relatively benign reviewer of ICAC with a powerful independent
inspector who will provide a real check on this agency.
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https://www.afr.com/technology/a-bizarre-force-we-still-don-t-understand-has-led-to-gps-mri-and-usbs-20211102-p5958d
A bizarre force we still don’t understand has led to GPS, MRI and USBs
In his new
book ‘Helogland’, physicist Carlo Rovelli reveals how a young man’s
self-imposed exile on a remote Atlantic island changed the world forever
through quantum mechanics.
Jeff Allan Art director
Dec 23, 2021
– 5.00am
Everything
we call real
is made of things that cannot be regarded as real. ― Niels Bohr, 1952
Matter,
mass, none of it exists. It’s all an illusion. ― US astrophysicist Hakeem
Oluseyi, 2021
It is 1922.
In America, the jazz age is roaring through New York and Chicago, and Charlie
Chaplin’s The
Kid is setting the box-office alight, while in Italy, Mussolini is rallying
the fascists to sweep himself into power.
In Germany,
Franz Kafka begins work on his novel The Castle (Das Schloss), a book that
revolves around a man trying to tackle an elusive, non-transparent system – the
same thought that is troubling Danish scientist Niels Bohr as he heads to the
University of Göttingen to give a series of lectures on atomic physics.
Bohr pulls at
the starched collar around his throat. The talk is going well (but perhaps he
should have passed on that last glass of wine at his honorary lunch just an
hour earlier) when an elfin-faced student with windswept hair springs to his
feet and challenges the Nobel-Prize-winning scientist’s equations.
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https://www.smh.com.au/business/markets/buckle-up-investors-it-could-be-a-wild-ride-in-2022-20211223-p59jqu.html
Buckle up, investors! It could be a wild ride in 2022
Stephen Bartholomeusz
Senior
business columnist
December 23,
2021 — 12.01pm
As 2022
looms, the outlook for economies, and investors, appears likely to be dominated
by the same big influences seen this year. But the nature of those influences
is evolving quickly and unpredictably.
The pandemic
and its flow-on effects will remain a dominant feature of the global economic
and financial markets’ landscapes. So will monetary policies as central banks
start to back out of the unprecedented stimulus they have injected into their
financial systems over the past 21 months.
The contest
between the US and China for economic and geopolitical dominance will continue,
as will the upheavals within China generated by the abrupt changes in its core
economic policies and philosophies. Meanwhile, the divergence in domestic
economic and financial conditions between the US and China, and between the
developed world and developing world, may widen.
Some of the
pandemic’s after-shocks – the supply chain chaos, rising inflation, the energy
shocks – will persist into at least the first half of next year, with the supply-demand
imbalances in energy that have produced crises in Europe and China
potentially becoming entrenched as the effects of COVID on the sector intersect
with the longer-term implications of a world trying to decarbonise.
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https://www.afr.com/world/asia/why-the-aukus-quad-and-five-eyes-pacts-anger-china-20211224-p59k2s
Why the AUKUS, Quad and Five Eyes pacts anger China
Iain Marlow
Dec 24, 2021
– 4.27pm
The newly
sealed Australia-UK-US defence accord, known as AUKUS, reflects rising global
concern over China’s ascendancy. So does renewed activity within two other
groupings of leading democracies, Five Eyes and the Quad.
Aligning
against the world’s largest exporter and possessor of the largest active
military is no easy task, but the effort has been helped by China’s own actions
toward some of its neighbours.
What’s the
point of AUKUS?
It’s a
security pact announced in September with the initial purpose of helping
Australia develop at least eight nuclear-powered submarines, a project that
could take more than a decade.
At the
moment, only six nations - the US, the UK, France, China, Russia and India -
have the technology to deploy and operate nuclear-powered subs, which are
faster than their diesel-electric counterparts, can stay submerged almost
indefinitely and have space for more weapons, equipment and supplies.
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https://www.smh.com.au/politics/federal/climate-the-far-left-and-the-devilish-problem-facing-the-greens-20211222-p59jm9.html
Climate, the far-Left and the devilish problem facing the Greens
Rob Harris
National
Affairs Editor
December 24,
2021 — 5.00am
Rachel
Griffiths, the Golden Globe-winning Australian actress, is no stranger to
prompting public debate through outrageous stunts.
In 1997 the
Muriel’s Wedding star famously paraded semi-naked outside Melbourne’s Crown
Casino in protest of a state government she claimed was “raping” the city of its
dignity, compassion and sense of community. When asked by a journalist why she
felt the need to be topless, Griffiths replied: “If I didn’t flash my tits, you
wouldn’t have put me in the paper.”
It’s what
makes Griffiths’ most recent political commentary all the more interesting.
When the
Australian Greens party announced a proposal to ban horse racing and impose a 1
per cent levy on all bets to fund a transition, Griffiths was outraged.
“When the
planet is melting this will not help you save it. Focus on carbon
emissions/boosting infrastructure and you might make a difference,” she wrote
on Instagram this week.
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https://www.theaustralian.com.au/inquirer/2021-a-year-of-resilience-and-recrimination/news-story/d3deed097c22aaefea6692150c7561ff
A year of resilience and bitter recrimination
It has
been a year of punishment for most Australians – a year even tougher than 2020.
But the catastrophe that started in China has become the ultimate signpost to a
bigger story.
By Paul Kelly
From Inquirer
December 23,
2021
It has been a
year of punishment for most Australians – a year even tougher than 2020 with
Covid running its own course, people rethinking their lives, gaining a better
appreciation of family and personal ties, prioritising health security and
reassessing what matters to them.
This has been
one of the most extraordinary years in Australia’s history. Coupled with 2020,
it has no parallel for the impact it has had on most of today’s Australians – a
pandemic that originated in China has forced home lockdowns, border closures,
testing and tracing regimes, job losses, business hardships and closures,
separation from loves ones, mental stress and isolation.
Covid-19
brought suffering, heartbreak, courage and spiritual rethink in different measures.
In public terms the story is captured in three words – resilience, results and
recrimination. The narrative has been stoic resilience by the public; a
world-leading Australian performance against the pandemic; and a bitter year of
political warfare that compromised the nation, fractured the Australian
federation, damaged the Morrison government and left fissures across the
country.
The pandemic
shaped our personal and public life in a way no other single event has
dominated since World War II. It touched every household and business. But the
impact was greater for the elderly who were vulnerable, the 75 per cent of
people working in the private sector, and residents of Victoria and NSW who
bore the brunt of the sickness and deaths.
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https://www.theaustralian.com.au/commentary/strewth/have-a-go-get-a-gong/news-story/bca6e74ca03d6c8e8426203e49f5eaee
Have a go, get a gong
Alice Workman
1:02PM
December 24, 2021
Roll up, roll
up, to the 2021 Strewth Awards! Relive the highs and oh-so lows, the weird and
wonderful, the shakes and the bakes. Thanks to the judging panel and all who
contributed to the column this year. Without further ado, but some apologies,
here are the winners (and the losers).
• Quiet
Australian Of 2021: Jane Malysiak, the 84 year-old who accidentally gave an
up-yours to the Prime Minister, instead of a peace sign, after getting her jab.
• Bill
Shorten Memorial Lettuce (for the worst interaction with a member of the public):
Scott Morrison for only being able to correctly spell “pariah” when quizzed by
the country’s best young spellers. Highly commended: Anthony Albanese being
baffled by children’s ages. He asked a year 6 student if they were in year 2.
• Down
Periscope Diplomatic Domino: Emmanuel Macron telling Australian journalists
he didn’t think, he knew the PM had lied to him about the $90bn French
submarine contract.
• There’s
A Hole In My Bucket: Whoever it was who leaked that text exchange between
ScoMo and Macron.
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https://www.afr.com/policy/economy/interest-rates-will-be-a-touchy-subject-in-an-election-year-20211220-p59j0x
Interest rates will be a touchy subject in an election year
Australia has
the world’s second-highest household debt, leaving borrowers exposed to rate
rises. The good news is that the rate shocks of earlier decades are unlikely.
John Kehoe Economics editor
Dec 23, 2021
– 5.00am
Australian
households are the second-most indebted in the world, according to new data
published by the International Monetary Fund.
Only Swiss
households are carrying more debt, the IMF’s global debt
database shows.
At 123.5 per
cent of GDP, Australian household debt has almost tripled since the early
1990s.
It’s no
coincidence that during this 30-year period, the official Reserve Bank of
Australia interest rate has fallen from 15 per cent to 0.1 per cent.
Structurally
lower interest rates and deregulation of the banking system have enabled people
to borrow more money and bid up house prices.
And with more
women working, dual-income households have been able to afford to borrow more.
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COVID 19 Information
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https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/how-bad-will-omicron-get-gwnv0pws7
When will Omicron peak?
Tom Calver
, Data
Projects Editor
Saturday
December 18 2021, 6.00pm GMT, The Sunday Times
The World
Health Organisation classified the B.1.1.529 Covid strain, Omicron, as a
“variant of concern” on November 26.
That same day
two travellers who had recently returned from South Africa — one in Brentwood,
the other in Nottingham — took tests that would confirm them as the first cases
in Britain.
Omicron’s
takeover needed under three weeks. On Tuesday it became the dominant variant in
England. London has been an Omicron city since Sunday.
For evidence
of its daunting growth, look no further than daily case numbers. Since “freedom
day” in July, we have become used to tens of thousands of infections — but last
week 59,610 daily cases became 78,610, then 88,376, then 93,045. For months
cases were bumpy; now we are in exponential growth, where the language of
“doubling times” takes over.
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https://www.afr.com/policy/health-and-education/experts-call-for-masks-and-pause-on-crowded-events-20211220-p59iw4
Experts call for masks and pause on crowded events
Tom Burton Government
editor
Dec 20, 2021
– 9.23am
Three leading
medical specialists have called for a two-week pause on big indoor events and a
return to mask-wearing to stem a major spike in COVID-19 cases, saying the
national reopening plan needs adjusting for the more infectious omicron
variant.
The head of
the Doherty Institute, Sharon Lewin, and UNSW epidemiologists John Kaldor and
Greg Dore called for a rethink of the reopening plans. The Doherty Institute
led a consortium of modellers that underpinned the original national reopening
plan.
“The
combination of greatly increased transmission rates and uncertain levels of
disease severity and vaccine protection means that for the next few weeks, and
until the uncertainties are resolved, we must rethink our opening-up plans,”
the professors said in an opinion article in The Age and The Sydney Morning
Herald.
“Ramping up
the booster program must continue, but will take months to implement fully and
cannot be our sole weapon.
“Nationwide,
restrictions that have not been removed must be reinforced, and some of those
that have been removed must be reimposed.
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https://www.theage.com.au/national/omicron-demands-we-bring-back-some-restrictions-20211219-p59ite.html
Omicron demands we bring back some restrictions
By John Kaldor, Sharon Lewin and Greg Dore
December 19,
2021 — 5.00pm
We should
bring back some restrictions on how people mix for a few weeks, while we get
more information on Omicron’s severity and its ability to evade vaccines.
The
combination of greatly
increased transmission rates and uncertain levels of disease severity and
vaccine protection means that for the next few weeks, and until the
uncertainties are resolved, we must rethink our opening-up plans. These plans
were based on modelling using the Delta variant, not Omicron, which is
suspected to be the strain responsible for most of the positive cases reported
in NSW on Sunday.
Ramping up the
booster program must continue but will take months to implement fully and
cannot be our sole weapon. Nationwide, restrictions that have not been removed
must be reinforced, and some of those that have been removed must be reimposed.
Most straightforward
is the return
of indoor mask requirements, which represent a minimal imposition and cost
virtually nothing. Cancelling or at least heavily restricting large indoor
events at which people gather in close proximity and alcohol is served will be
unpopular, particularly over the Christmas New Year period, but must be
understood as a temporary measure.
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https://www.afr.com/policy/health-and-education/nsw-could-have-100-000-active-cases-by-new-year-s-eve-20211221-p59j92
NSW could have 100,000 active cases by New Year’s Eve
Aaron Patrick Senior
correspondent
Dec 21, 2021
– 12.41pm
The total
number of COVID-19 cases in NSW may hit 100,000 by New Year’s Eve, according to
a Melbourne University forecast, adding to pressure on the state government to
impose extra health restrictions during the summer holidays.
Infections in
the state will double in less than five days and by December 31 there will be
87,363 to 105,239 cases, up from 18,667 now, according to a predictive model
created by Associate Professor Ben Phillips from the school of biosciences.
The model
assumes that 40 per cent of the infections are not being identified among
people without COVID-19 symptoms, which often include fever, cough, tiredness
or loss of taste or smell.
Even though
the NSW government has said that it is focused on the number of people in
intensive care units, heavy media coverage of a surge in cases over the
otherwise quiet Christmas holiday could put pressure on Premier Dominic
Perrottet to reverse last week’s relaxation of restrictions. Long waits for
test results could compound the problem.
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https://www.smh.com.au/politics/federal/omicron-cases-could-hit-200-000-a-day-next-year-without-tougher-restrictions-doherty-modelling-warns-20211221-p59ja0.html
Omicron cases could hit 200,000 a day next year without tougher
restrictions, Doherty modelling warns
By Dana Daniel
December 21,
2021 — 5.01pm
Surging
Omicron infections will overwhelm the health system unless some restrictions
return, according to modelling prepared for national cabinet that also
recommends bringing coronavirus vaccine boosters forward.
The Doherty Institute
modelling predicts that without low-to-medium restrictions such as density and
visitor limits, waning vaccine protection against the Omicron variant puts
Australia on track to hit about 200,000 cases a day by late January or early
February.
“Boosters
alone will not be fast enough to halt the spread of Omicron,” the modelling,
seen by The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age, says.
The modelling
by a team of researchers including professors Jodie McVernon and James McCaw
says rapidly growing case numbers would lift hospitalisation rates to 4000 a
day. This would push emergency departments to capacity and fill the nation’s
intensive care units, with between 8000 and 10,000 patients expected to be
admitted to ICUs.
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https://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/economics/covid-slams-door-shut-on-old-ways-of-the-world/news-story/cf6487c343a21bd080d9fb2b428e19c6
Covid slams door shut on old ways of the world
The Economist
11:45PM
December 21, 2021
Is it nearly
over? In 2021 people have been yearning for something like stability. Even
those who accepted that they would never get their old lives back hoped for a
new normal. Yet as 2022 draws near, it is time to face the world’s predictable
unpredictability. The pattern for the rest of the 2020s is not the familiar
routine of the pre-Covid years, but the turmoil and bewilderment of the
pandemic era. The new normal is already here.
Remember how
the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 began to transform air travel in
waves. In the years that followed each fresh plot exposed an unforeseen
weakness that required a new rule. First came locked cockpit doors, more armed
air marshals and bans on sharp objects. Later, suspicion fell on bottles of
liquid, shoes and laptops. Flying did not return to normal, nor did it
establish a new routine. Instead, everything was permanently up for revision.
The world is similarly unpredictable today and the pandemic is part of the
reason. For almost two years people have lived with shifting regimes of
mask-wearing, tests, lockdowns, travel bans, vaccination certificates and other
paperwork. As outbreaks of new cases and variants ebb and flow, so these
regimes can also be expected to come and go. That is the price of living with a
disease that has not yet settled into its endemic state.
And Covid-19
may not be the only such infection. Although a century elapsed between the
ravages of Spanish flu and the coronavirus, the next planet-conquering pathogen
could strike much sooner. Germs thrive in an age of global travel and crowded
cities. The proximity of people and animals will lead to the incubation of new
human diseases. Such zoonoses, which tend to emerge every few years, used to be
a minority interest. For the next decade, at least, you can expect each new
outbreak to trigger paroxysms of precaution.
-----
https://www.afr.com/politics/nsw-virus-cases-doubling-every-four-days-amid-testing-crunch-20211222-p59ji5
NSW virus cases doubling every four days amid testing crunch
Michael Read Reporter
Dec 22, 2021
– 12.37pm
COVID-19 case
numbers in NSW are doubling every four days, but the state’s testing system is stretched and pathology labs
may not have the capacity to identify very high caseloads.
Cases in NSW
are doubling every 4.3 days, according to University of South Australia
epidemiologist Professor Adrian Esterman. Each positive COVID-19 case in the
state is, on average, infecting 1.9 other people.
The state
reported a record 3763 cases on Wednesday, up from 1360 a week earlier. The number
of people in hospital increased to 302 from 284, with 40 people in intensive
care.
Deakin
University chair of epidemiology Catherine Bennett told The Australian
Financial Review the state would be “heading towards 20,000 cases a day by
mid-January” at current rates, assuming nothing were to change.
-----
https://www.afr.com/companies/healthcare-and-fitness/omicron-hospitalisation-risk-is-far-below-delta-s-20211223-p59jqr
Omicron hospitalisation risk is far below delta’s
Naomi Kresge
Dec 23, 2021
– 8.47am
London | The
omicron variant of COVID-19 may be less likely to land patients in the
hospital than the delta strain, according to a trio of studies of preliminary
data.
Researchers
in Scotland suggest omicron is associated with a two-thirds reduction in the
risk of hospitalisation when compared with the earlier variant, though omicron
was 10 times more likely than delta to infect people who’d already had
COVID-19.
An Imperial
College London team working with a larger set of data from England found that
people with omicron were 15 per cent to 20 per cent less likely to visit the
hospital and 40 per cent to 45 per cent less likely to require an overnight
stay.
The fresh
data add to earlier findings Wednesday showing that South Africans contracting
COVID-19 are 80 per cent less likely to be hospitalised if they catch the new
variant, compared with other strains. Omicron infections are also associated
with a 70 per cent lower risk of severe disease than delta, the study by the
National Institute for Communicable Diseases showed.
-----
https://www.smh.com.au/politics/nsw/gps-at-breaking-point-as-covid-patients-told-to-self-manage-care-20211222-p59jiv.html
GPs at breaking point as COVID patients told to self-manage care
By Lucy Carroll
December 22,
2021 — 6.20pm
General
practitioners say they are at breaking point with thousands of COVID-19
patients in NSW being shifted into their care as millions become eligible for
boosters within weeks.
With almost
20,000 people in NSW testing positive to coronavirus in the past seven days,
the state’s Chief Health Officer Kerry Chant has notified general practitioners
that low-risk patients diagnosed with the virus will need to “undertake
self-care at home” and GPs will be responsible for managing symptoms and
treatment.
But NSW
Australian Medical Association president Danielle McMullen said doctors will
struggle to cope with thousands of patients needing care as Omicron infections
surge.
“Shifting
care of COVID-19 patients to general practice will have huge ramifications.
Practices will need to hire extra staff for virtual care and triage patients,
and this is on top of running booster clinics,” Dr McMullen said.
On Wednesday,
the federal government announced GPs and pharmacies would receive an extra $10
per patient for administering booster shots.
-----
https://www.smh.com.au/business/companies/stretching-the-limits-pathology-stocks-soar-amid-record-covid-tests-20211222-p59jhi.html
‘Stretching the limits’: Pathology stocks soar amid record COVID tests
By Emma Koehn
December 22,
2021 — 1.00pm
Pathology
operator Healius says pre-travel COVID screening requirements are stretching
the limits of available testing capacity as the sector struggles to meet demand
in the lead-up to Christmas.
The nation’s
largest listed pathology operators, Sonic Healthcare, Healius and Australian
Clinical Labs, all recorded their highest closing share prices for the year on
Wednesday as travellers line up for hours to get PCR tests.
Private
operators have received
significant subsidies to complete COVID tests throughout this year, with
the major players processing tens of thousands of tests a day as new strains of
the virus have emerged.
Amid
projections that the country could be facing hundreds of
thousands of positive cases by the new year, a Healius spokeswoman
said the company was investing further to improve turnaround times. Healius
operates clinics including Dorevitch and Laverty.
“As the
positivity rate increases it requires more equipment to maintain the current
capacity. Healius is currently investing in further expansion of capacity to
meet demand and improve turnaround times,” she said.
-----
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/the-wall-street-journal/two-studies-show-big-fall-in-hospitalisation-with-omicron/news-story/98aefad9f1c3bf40edcfb3da5aa85e41
Two studies show big fall in hospitalisation with Omicron
By Jason
Douglas and Denise Roland
Dow Jones
December 23,
2021
New data from
Scotland and South Africa suggest people infected with the Omicron variant of
coronavirus are at markedly lower risk of hospitalization than those who
contracted earlier versions of the virus, promising signs that vaccines remain
effective at warding off severe illness with the fast-spreading strain.
The findings
begin to fill in unknowns around the severity of the disease caused by Omicron,
a major variable critical to health authorities around the world as they gauge
how to react to the new variant.
Scientists
are still unsure how the positive findings around hospitalizations will stack
up against another major variable: Omicron’s much increased transmissibility.
Both variables are likely to change depending on local conditions, such as the
proportion of the population that has been vaccinated against Covid-19.
“This is a
qualified good news story,” said Jim McMenamin, incident director for Covid-19
at Public Health Scotland, and one of the authors of the Scottish study, at a
briefing. “It’s important we don’t get ahead of ourselves. A smaller proportion
of a much greater number of cases can still mean a substantial number of people
that might experience severe Covid infections that could lead to
hospitalization.” The University of Edinburgh study, drawing on the health
records of 5.4 million people in Scotland, found the risk of hospitalization
with Covid-19 was two-thirds lower with Omicron than with Delta. The new
variant became dominant in Scotland last week.
-----
https://www.afr.com/world/europe/omicron-alarmism-defies-the-science-most-of-us-can-get-on-with-life-20211223-p59jqg
Omicron alarmism defies the science. Most of you can get on with life
The high
probability is that omicron will disappoint the alarmists and frustrate those
of a hairshirt puritan character who almost seem to want lockdowns as a form of
self-flagellation.
Ambrose
Evans-Pritchard
Dec 23, 2021
– 10.02am
The COVID-19
modellers at Imperial College in London have
begun to back down. About time, too. Over the past few weeks, they have
made extreme
claims about the omicron variant that cannot be fully justified by
fundamental science, let alone by clinical observation.
Academic
etiquette restrains direct criticism, but immunologists say privately that
Professor Neil Ferguson and his team breached a cardinal rule by inferring
rates of hospitalisation, severe disease, and death from waning antibodies, and
by extrapolating from infections that break through the first line of vaccine
defence.
The rest are
entitled to question whether they can legitimately do this. And we may
certainly question whether they should be putting out terrifying claims of up
to 5000 deaths a day based on antibody counts.
“It is bad
science and I think they’re being irresponsible. They have a duty to reflect
the true risks, but this is just headline grabbing,” says Dr Clive Dix, former
chairman of the UK Vaccine Task Force.
-----
https://www.smh.com.au/politics/federal/interval-between-booster-shots-cut-to-four-months-20211224-p59jyy.html
Wait for booster shot cut to four months
By Cassandra Morgan, Timna Jacks and Melissa Cunningham
December 24,
2021 — 9.39am
The federal
government has cut the recommended interval between the second and booster
doses of a coronavirus vaccine.
The interval
will be slashed to four months on January 4, and then to three months on
January 31.
The change
follows advice from the expert vaccination group, the Australian Technical
Advisory Group on Immunisation, and is in response to the recent spread of the
Omicron variant.
On Friday,
Victoria recorded 2095 new cases and eight deaths as NSW confirmed a record
5612 new infections and one new death.
-----
https://www.smh.com.au/politics/federal/interval-between-booster-shots-cut-to-four-months-20211224-p59jyy.html
Wait for booster shot cut to four months
By Timna Jacks, Cassandra Morgan and Melissa Cunningham
December 24,
2021 — 9.39am
The head of
the nation’s expert vaccination group said the risk of rising hospitalisations
and new research on the effectiveness of booster doses guided the committee’s
recommendation to fast-track Australia’s coronavirus booster shot program.
The federal
government announced on Friday the interval between the second and third
vaccination doses would be slashed
from five to four months on January 4, and then to three months on January
31, based on the Australian Technical Advisory Group’s advice.
The decision
followed pressure earlier in the week from the Victorian
and NSW premiers to bring boosters forward, and comes less
than two weeks after the interval was shortened from six to five months.
Australia is
now in line with the UK, which has reduced the interval between doses from six
to three months. New Zealand has chosen a four-month interval, while the US has
stuck with a six-month waiting time between vaccines.
-----
https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/millions-set-for-early-fourth-covid-vaccination-3wng3drhx
Millions set for early fourth Covid vaccination
Data
confirms Omicron is less severe but warns of fading booster protection after
ten weeks
Rhys Blakely, Science
Correspondent | Oliver
Wright, Policy Editor
Thursday
December 23 2021, 10.30pm GMT, The Times
Millions of
Britons face having an earlier fourth Covid jab next year after data suggested
that protection against Omicron from booster shots starts to wane within three
months.
An official
analysis of real-world cases confirmed that people infected with the new
variant were up to 70 per cent less likely to be admitted to hospital — a similar
finding to other studies this week.
However, the
data also showed that booster protection was beginning to fade more rapidly
against Omicron than for the Delta strain. Among those who received an initial
two doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine, protection was about 60 per cent two to
four weeks after a Pfizer or Moderna booster. It then dropped to 35 per cent
with a Pfizer booster and 45 per cent with Moderna ten weeks after the jab.
Officials
stressed that this decline was only seen against mild symptomatic cases.
Scientists expect protection against severe disease, which draws on different
parts of the immune system, to be significantly higher and long- lasting.
-----
https://www.afr.com/world/europe/one-in-10-londoners-infected-as-british-pm-urges-caution-20211224-p59k42
One in 10 Londoners infected as British PM urges caution
Alex Morales
Dec 25, 2021
– 12.04am
London |
Boris Johnson urged Britons to take care at Christmas as he considers whether to
tighten pandemic regulations, as government data indicated about 10 per
cent of Londoners were infected with COVID-19.
An estimated
1 in 25 people across England -- more than 2 million people -- had coronavirus
on December 19, according to Office for National Statistics modelling released
Friday that also showed about one in 10 Londoners were infected as the
fast-spreading omicron variant takes hold. A record 119,789 new confirmed
COVID-19 cases were logged Thursday, while minutes of a meeting of Johnson’s
scientific advisers said omicron hospitalisations are doubling every four to
five days.
“As
infections move into older age groups, a large wave of hospital admissions
should be expected,” the government’s Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies
said.
“Such a wave
should be expected soon given infections are increasing rapidly in all age
groups and regions, and earlier in London.
Johnson has
already introduced new light-touch restrictions to try to limit the spread of
omicron. He’s said he won’t do more before Christmas, while warning further
measures are possible after the holiday -- a move that would likely anger
rebels in his ruling Conservative Party.
-----
https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2021/12/24/denmark-coronavirus-omicron-variant/
Europe
Denmark sees initial signs that dire omicron surge can be avoided
By Chico Harlan
Today at
11:19 a.m. EST
Early
benchmarks from Denmark on infections and hospitalizations are providing
grounds for guarded optimism that highly vaccinated countries might be able to
weather the omicron wave.
The
developments, coupled with Denmark’s speedy rollout of booster shots, have
raised hopes the country can avoid the dire coronavirus surge for which it has been bracing.
Europe
faces its second covid Christmas with lockdowns, cancellations and rising cases
“It’s too
early to relax, but it’s encouraging that we are not following the worst-case
scenario,” said Tyra Grove Krause, the chief epidemiologist at Denmark’s State
Serum Institute.
Denmark’s
detailed, nationwide program for coronavirus testing and analysis gives its
scientists a trove of real-time data about the pandemic. Because of that — and
because it was one of the first countries outside of Africa to witness
omicron’s explosive potential — it has turned into a European bellwether for
what to expect with the omicron variant.
-----
Climate Change.
-----
No entries in this section,
-----
Royal Commissions And The Like.
-----
No entries in this section,
-----
National Budget Issues.
-----
https://www.afr.com/companies/financial-services/mum-and-dad-investors-are-being-scammed-by-clone-financial-firms-20211220-p59j23
Mum and dad investors are being scammed by clone financial firms
Criminals are
using sophisticated online tools and fake prospectuses to swindle millions of
dollars from investors – and a Melbourne businessman and lawyer are alleged to
be part of the scheme.
Michael Roddan and Jonathan Shapiro
Dec 22, 2021
– 10.12am
The email
from esteemed global investment company Nomura’s fixed income and savings
division hit Melbourne robotics specialist Rodrigo Garcia’s inbox at 3.19pm on
January 11, this year.
Attached was
a slick, 23-page prospectus for Nomura Australia’s Fixed Rate Active Plus Bond.
After some consideration, Garcia decided it was the perfect place to park
$200,000, a sum that represented a significant chunk of his life savings.
It had taken
Philippines-born Garcia many years to build his nest-egg over a long career
that included stints at Telstra and NBN Co.
With interest
rates plumbing new lows amid COVID-19, Garcia was one of thousands of retail investors
scouring the internet to compare options that would deliver higher yields
with relatively conservative risks.
-----
Health Issues.
-----
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/science/childhood-cancer-breakthrough/news-story/cb11132b92831146def4009e5f62d7ea
Genetic breakthrough for cancer kids
Nicholas Jensen
7:00PM
December 20, 2021
A landmark
study of children with high-risk cancer has revealed how more personalised and
better-targeted drug treatments can help improve therapy options and increase
survival rates among children aged up to 14.
The new
research, published in the Molecular Medicine journal on Tuesday, outlines the
clinical results of 56 patients who participated in the Zero Childhood Cancer
Program, which was designed by a group of Australian specialists at the
Children’s Cancer Institute and Sydney Children’s Hospital to help identify the
precise make-up of each child’s cancer by using genomic tests.
“We began a
program about five years ago using genetic analysis to see whether we could
better match the gene driving the cancer to targeted drugs,” said the program’s
clinical lead Glenn Marshall, who co-authored the publication along with more
than 50 researchers.
“Today there
are about 1500 young adults and children with cancer in Australia and about 200
of them will have a relapse. At the moment we don’t have very good tools to
predict that or to treat it, so the majority of those people will die. And
that’s unacceptable to us,” Professor Marshall said.
-----
https://www.smh.com.au/politics/federal/health-insurance-premiums-to-rise-by-2-7-per-cent-next-year-20211223-p59jrf.html
Health insurance premiums to rise by 2.7 per cent next year
By Dana Daniel
December 23,
2021 — 10.43am
Australians
with private health insurance will pay more for their premiums next year, but
some funds will defer the increase.
Federal
Health Minister Greg Hunt has approved an average 2.7 per cent increase across
all health funds, saying the government worked to secure a “record low premium
change” because it “understands the importance of the cost of living for
Australian families”.
The change
means the average single person will pay an extra $1.12 per week, and a family
$2.42.
While
premiums are scheduled to rise in April, Mr Hunt said “under proposed
arrangements, many consumers will not receive a premium change until later in
2022” as some insurers have agreed to defer their premium rises.
The 2022
average premium increase is the lowest in 21 years, down from 2.74 per cent
this year.
Many funds
have given members partial refunds on premiums paid during the pandemic, when
lockdowns and elective surgery bans prevented them from using their insurance
to pay for medical treatment.
-----
International Issues.
-----
https://www.afr.com/policy/foreign-affairs/indo-pacific-allies-agree-there-s-no-countering-china-without-america-20211216-p59i3u
Indo-Pacific allies agree there’s no countering China without America
The US
alliance is boosting Canberra’s strategic agency, enhancing its regional
standing and helping to forge constructive coalitions to push back against
Beijing.
John Lee Contributor
Dec 19, 2021
– 12.05pm
The United
States and China have oversized impacts on the fortunes and policies of
Australia for obvious reasons. The year began with the indecorous exit of
Donald Trump and the swearing in of a far more conventional administration led
by Joe Biden. Regardless, US-China relations hardly improved, while Beijing’s
standing with almost every advanced economy and democracy deteriorated over the
past year.
It is
evidence that the greater challenge and disruption to Australian foreign policy
and the world as we know it in recent years was never the election of Trump but
the stridency
and menace of Xi Jinping’s China. This reality is what Australian external
policy had to respond to and will continue to define what we can expect in
2022.
Australian
actions over the past year have been based on two assessments: Beijing will
persist with its coercive and expansionary plans in the absence of significant
resistance and there can be no effective balance or counter without the US.
China
continued its economic and diplomatic offensive against Australia. While
Beijing knows Canberra is not for turning, the former is seeking to ward off
other countries from pursuing a similarly proactive and defiant mindset. After
all, the more countries persuaded to remain strategically neutral or inactive,
the easier it is for China to divide, rule and conquer.
-----
https://www.afr.com/world/asia/succession-vacuum-quietly-dogs-singapore-s-politics-20211219-p59iru
Succession vacuum quietly dogs Singapore’s politics
Prime
Minister Lee Hsien Loong appears as a visibly tired place-holder, occupying the
seat of power but not really leading.
Michael Barr Contributor
Dec 19, 2021
– 1.10pm
Singapore’s
politics appears confused, directionless and overwhelmingly defensive on nearly
every front.
The
leadership transition – choosing the next prime minister – has dragged into its
fifth year without resolution, and has now creaked to a halt that leaves Prime
Minister Lee Hsien Loong, at 69, as a visibly tired place-holder, occupying the
seat of power but not really leading.
Widely
publicised instances of provocative, racist behaviour shocked the government
and perceptions of economic injustice and insecurity are worrying it, too, but
neither have prompted serious revision of policy settings and the issues
continue to fester.
There are
only two areas of policy where the government appears energised and focused:
harassing critics and the opposition; and managing
COVID-19 and its economic challenges.
-----
https://www.smh.com.au/world/north-america/a-correspondent-farewells-the-madness-and-sadness-of-america-20211213-p59h7j.html
A correspondent farewells the madness and sadness of America
As a human
being, I was alarmed by much of what I was witnessing. As a journalist, I was
electrified.
By Matthew Knott
December 19, 2021
Melania Trump
had just finished speaking when the gunshots rang out. It was August 2020, the
second night of the Republican National Convention. In a normal election year,
I would have been covering the event in a battleground state, mingling with fellow
reporters and political operatives in a packed arena. But this was no normal
year in America and no normal presidential election.
Much to
Donald Trump’s annoyance, the original plan for him to officially accept the
Republican Party’s presidential nomination in North Carolina had to be
abandoned because of coronavirus restrictions. A fallback attempt to hold a
traditional convention in Florida was ditched when infections started soaring
there.
Instead,
Trump’s re-election pitch was held at the White House: the first time in
American history the presidential residence had been used for such blatant
electioneering. I covered the virtual convention at home alone in my Washington
apartment, just a 12-minute drive away.
Focused on
filing an online news story on the first lady’s speech, I didn’t pay much
attention to the sound of gunfire on the street below. I still didn’t think
much of it when two police officers knocked on my door and asked if I’d noticed
anything outside my window. It was only when I went downstairs the next morning
that I discovered the glass front doors of my apartment building were smeared
in blood. The concierge informed me that someone had been shot dead there the
night before.
-----
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/world/rebel-democrat-torpedoes-joe-bidens-reform-package/news-story/d950c3f175a9f2d4613df53cc198390c
Rebel Democrat torpedoes Joe Biden’s reform package
Adam Creighton
December 20,
2021
Joe Biden’s
reform agenda is in tatters after a key senator declared he wouldn’t vote for
the Democrats’ signature ‘build back better’ reform, throwing the party’s
political strategy into disarray leading into the 2022 elections.
After months
of tense negotiations, West Virginia Senator Joe Manchin revealed on Sunday he
wouldn’t support the roughly US$2 trillion build back better package,
signalling he would use his balance of power vote in the 50-50 senate to
torpedo the most ambitious piece of legislation in fifty years.
“When you
have these things coming at you the way they are right now … I cannot vote to
continue with this piece of legislation,“ the Senator said, speaking on Fox
News on Sunday morning and alluding to a jump in inflation and large and
growing federal budget deficits.
The
legislation, passed by the Democrat-controlled House of Representatives a month
ago, would have made sweeping changes to the US welfare, health and climate
change policy, including ‘free’ childcare and preschool, expanded child welfare
payments, four weeks of paid leave, and massive electric car and renewable
energy subsidies.
-----
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/world/something-has-broken-as-boris-johnsons-leadership-loses-its-way/news-story/48158015ccad5290256b9faf680e752e
Something has broken as Boris Johnson’s leadership loses its way
THE ECONOMIST
4:34PM
December 17, 2021
Two years
into their terms, governments often languish. But any supporters of Boris
Johnson who may be tempted to fall back on that excuse for the increasingly
feeble grip of his premiership would be guilty of self-delusion. Britain’s
Prime Minister is facing a double crisis. One half of this is the growing sense
that he is temperamentally unfit to hold the highest office in the land. The
other is the fear that his government will be incapable of bringing about the
reforms it has promised – some of which Britain badly needs.
The depths of
Johnson’s difficulties became clear on Tuesday, when 99 Conservative MPs voted
against his “Plan B” to deal with the Omicron variant. It was one of the
largest rebellions against a Conservative prime minister and it put Johnson in
the unsustainable position of depending upon the opposition Labour Party for
one of his government’s central policies.Things only got worse on Friday AEDT
when voters had their say in a by-election in North Shropshire, the truest of
blue seats. The seat fell to the Liberal Democrats by nearly 6000 votes.
Even before
the poll result, Johnson was looking personally wounded. He has always been
accident-prone, but he has usually matched this with an extraordinary knack for
wriggling out of trouble. When lesser politicians bluster and contradict
themselves, voters sneer at their sleaze, lying and hypocrisy. By contrast,
Johnson has had an uncanny ability to make them feel as if they are in on the
joke.
But his
greatest political gift is failing him. First, sleaze cut through to ordinary
voters. Last month Johnson tried to save Owen Paterson, then MP for that North
Shropshire seat, from being censured for breaking the rules over paid lobbying.
(The Prime Minister said that to punish him would offend natural justice.) The
next to cut through was lying. This month it emerged that, whereas Johnson had
claimed to know nothing about who paid for a renovation of his Downing Street
flat, which cost £112,549 ($209,000), he had in fact been asking for money from
the man who turned out to be the donor. (No. 10 says that appearances are
deceptive.) And most recently it was hypocrisy. A video showed senior aides
joking about one of several parties held in Downing Street last Christmas, when
the rest of the country was locked down with only the television for company.
(Johnson said he knew nothing of it.)
-----
https://www.afr.com/policy/economy/the-fed-remains-well-behind-the-curve-in-fighting-inflation-20211219-p59ir3
The Fed remains well behind the curve in fighting inflation
There are
serious reasons for concern at the US Federal Reserve’s moves to restrain
inflation as history shows a recession could be looming.
Lawrence H.
Summers
Dec 19, 2021
– 2.53pm
The Federal
Reserve’s recognition that inflation is not transitory, that the US labour
market is very tight and that priority now must be given to price stability is
welcome, if belated. Without this pivot, entrenched inflation followed by a
recession would be likely.
A recognition
of the need to change
direction, as manifest in the Federal Open Market Committee statement and
Chair Jerome Powell’s news conference Wednesday, was necessary but not
sufficient for successfully achieving price stabilisation and sustained growth.
I see grounds for substantial concern in both the intrinsic difficulty of the
task at hand and in misconceptions that the Fed still seems to hold.
There have
been few, if any, instances in which inflation has been successfully stabilised
without recession. Every US economic expansion between the Korean War and Paul
Volcker’s slaying of inflation after 1979 ended as the Federal Reserve tried to
put the brakes on inflation and the economy skidded into recession. Since
Volcker’s victory, there have been no major outbreaks of inflation until this
year, and so no need for monetary policy to engineer a soft landing of the kind
that the Fed hopes for over the next several years.
The
not-very-encouraging history of disinflation efforts suggests that the Fed will
need to be both skilful and lucky as it seeks to apply sufficient restraint to
cause inflation to come down to its 2 per cent target without pushing the
economy into recession. Unfortunately, several aspects of the Open Market
Committee statement and Powell’s news conference suggest that the Fed may not
yet fully grasp either the current economic situation or the implications of
current monetary policy.
-----
https://www.afr.com/markets/debt-markets/investors-scramble-for-inflation-protection-as-worries-mount-20211220-p59iwi
Investors scramble for inflation protection as worries mount
Richard Henderson
Reporter
Dec 20, 2021
– 2.10pm
Investors
have ploughed a record $US70 billion ($98 billion) into inflation-protected US
bond funds this year, in a global rush to shelter fixed-interest portfolios
from the effects of sharply rising consumer prices, which can sap the value of
bonds.
Last week
marked the 63rd week of consecutive positive inflows into funds that invest in
US Treasury inflation-protected securities, or TIPS, sending the amount since
the year began to $US70.2 billion, according to data from EPFR Global.
The tally
since the start of 2021 is drastically more than any year tracked by EPFR going
back to 2004 and includes a monthly record for November this year of $US8.8
billion – the same month US inflation reached a four-decade high.
In November,
the US
consumer price index shot 6.8 per cent higher, the biggest year-on-year
increase since 1982.
-----
https://www.afr.com/world/asia/low-turnout-the-true-measure-of-hong-kong-voter-sentiment-20211220-p59iyn
Low turnout the true measure of Hong Kong voter sentiment
The low
voter turnout in Sunday’s Legislative Council elections is a more accurate
barometer of the political mood in the city than the results themselves, which
are stacked in Beijing’s favour.
Michael Smith North Asia
correspondent
Dec 20, 2021
– 5.40pm
Tokyo | It
was a last-ditch attempt to boost voter numbers in an “election” stacked in the
favour of pro-Beijing “patriots”.
Millions of
people piled onto Hong Kong’s trains and buses on Sunday after the government
offered free transport on the day of the city’s
Legislative Council elections.
But instead
of heading to the polling booths, which are typically within walking distance
of a voter’s home anyway, they flocked to country parks, food fairs and
Disneyland.
The Hong Kong
government’s efforts to encourage voting was the latest example of the Mickey
Mouse policies that are now part of daily life for people living in a city run
by administrators willing to overcompensate to keep Beijing happy.
-----
https://www.afr.com/world/north-america/washington-s-fear-and-loathing-matched-only-by-beijing-s-confidence-20211221-p59j7x
Washington’s fear and loathing matched only by Beijing’s confidence
While
American analysts worry about civil war, China’s big thinkers dream of global
ascendancy.
Gideon Rachman
Columnist
Dec 21, 2021
– 10.25am
Greg
Treverton used to be America’s forecaster-in-chief. As chairman of the National
Intelligence Council, he oversaw the US government’s quadrennial Global Trends
report.
His 2017
report contained a cautious acknowledgment of America’s own weaknesses. It
noted “rising inequality” and “highly polarised politics”.
But the
report concluded optimistically that America’s “inclusive ideal ... remains a
critical advantage”.
Four years on
Treverton, now in academia, takes a dramatically more pessimistic view. Last
week, he published an article, co-written with Karen Treverton, headlined Civil War is Coming.
It argues that the divisions between red and blue America are now so extreme
that some sort of split is inevitable.
-----
https://www.afr.com/world/asia/xi-jinping-s-dangerous-2022-20211221-p59j7s
Xi Jinping’s dangerous 2022
A cult of
personality has been built around Chinese President Xi Jinping while he rallies
patriotic support for an unprecedented third term as supreme leader.
Geoff Raby Columnist
Dec 21, 2021
– 12.53pm
As President
Xi prepares for the most significant year in his ten-year tenure, political,
social, and economic controls will continue to be tightened. Rigorously
pursuing a zero-COVID policy, sustaining economic growth, managing debt,
deleveraging in the real estate sector, will all challenge the skill and
political will of the central leadership group.
Official,
clayton’s boycotts of the Winter Olympics by some liberal democracies, and a
more confronting international environment led by the West are assets Xi will
use to rally patriotic support as he seeks an unprecedented, in the reform era,
third term as supreme power.
At the
Twentieth Party Congress which will be held after the National Day holidays in
October next year, Xi Jinping is widely expected to be elected by the Party
delegates for a third term as president. The Party’s massive propaganda and
ideological machinery has been directed at shoring up this ambition for some
time.
Over the
course of Xi’s current, second, lustrum a cult of the personality
has been built up around Xi. Daily newspapers in print and on-line, for
example, report on Xi’s musings on everything from science, economics, culture
and even parenting. As was the case for Mao, Xi is portrayed in official media
also as the “great helmsman”. The “chairman of everything” as many quip
privately in China.
-----
https://www.smh.com.au/business/markets/us-regulators-display-a-degree-of-paranoia-towards-crypto-assets-20211221-p59j6p.html
Crypto paranoia: US regulators catch stablecoin jitters
Stephen Bartholomeusz
Senior
business columnist
December 21,
2021 — 12.00pm
US financial
regulators are so concerned about the perceived threat to financial stability
and investors of stablecoins that they are warning they will act unilaterally
if Congress doesn’t legislate.
Last week the
US Treasury’s key body for monitoring the financial system, the Financial
Stability Oversight Council, issued its annual report. Digital assets, and
stablecoins in particular, were one of the key concerns it identified.
It said the
rapid growth of digital assets, including stablecoins and lending and borrowing
on digital assets trading platforms, was an important potential emerging
vulnerability for the system.
In relation
to stablecoins – crypto assets backed by traditional financial assets, most
commonly the US dollar -- the council said that while they might be marketed
with the claim that they will maintain a stable value they might be subject to
widespread redemption and asset liquidations if investors doubted the
credibility of the claim.
-----
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/commentary/distrust-born-from-watergate-still-lingers/news-story/d2e71c491683a3447125c7d3b734e596
Distrust born from Watergate still lingers
Stephen Loosley
11:00PM
December 21, 2021
Next year
marks the 50th anniversary of an extraordinary episode in Western politics.
On the
evening of June 17, 1972, a group of burglars penetrated the offices of the Democratic
National Committee in the Watergate complex in Washington DC. It was a
presidential election year and incumbent Richard Nixon, as paranoid as ever he
had been since first elected to the House of Representatives from California in
November 1946, was concerned about the possibility of an “October surprise”.
Nixon had
been outmanoeuvred in 1960 when he narrowly had lost the presidential contest
to John F. Kennedy. The burglars, who were an offshoot of the White House
Plumbers, created to combat leaks in Nixon’s administration, were aiming to
penetrate the office of the Democrats’ national chairman, Larry O’Brien, on an
intelligence-gathering mission.
Now they were
the employees of the Committee to Re-elect the President, which made their
Republican loyalties intriguing. The links of some to the CIA, sometimes as far
back as the Bay of Pigs, made the burglars’ history even more beguiling.
The burglars
were caught because of their own incompetence and an alert security guard,
Frank Wills. Arrested by the DC police, the burglars and their handlers,
including G. Gordon Liddy, E. Howard Hunt, and James McCord Jr, appeared the
next morning before a Republican judge named John Sirica.
-----
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/the-wall-street-journal/the-slow-meltdown-of-the-chinese-economy/news-story/9bf6771e0920b3a8a20317de69d11a26
The slow meltdown of the Chinese economy
Thomas J.
Duesterberg
December 22,
2021
China is
experiencing a slow-motion economic crisis that could undermine stability in
the current regime and have serious negative consequences for the global
economy. Despite the many warning signs, Western analysts and policy makers are
optimistic that Xi Jinping is up to the task of managing the crisis. Such
optimism is misplaced.
The U.S. and
its allies have many tools to influence China’s economy and need to weigh the
consequences of an acute crisis against the threat its current trajectory poses
to the U.S. Policy makers should be thinking of how best to deploy these tools,
instead of passively assuming the rapid growth and stability of the Chinese
economy will continue.
In December
real-estate developers China Evergrande and Kaisa joined several other
overleveraged firms in bankruptcy, exposing hundreds of billions in yuan- and
dollar-denominated debt to default. Real estate represents around 30% of the
Chinese economy, nearly twice the levels that led to the financial crisis of
2008-09 in the U.S., Spain and England.
The
real-estate industry has been key to keeping annual growth above 6%. Yet a debt
bubble has inflated by 20% annually between 2014 and 2018. Originally intended
to accommodate rapid urbanization for the industrial economy, the urban
property market is now overbuilt. Some 90% of urban households own their own
properties and enough vacant units are available to accommodate 10 years of
urban immigrants. Sales and prices have tumbled this year, and overleveraged
builders and creditors are suffering the consequences.
-----
https://www.afr.com/world/europe/why-bojo-has-some-lessons-for-scomo-20211222-p59jix
Why BoJo has some lessons for ScoMo
British
Prime Minister Boris Johnson is in trouble mostly because he has lost the
Conservative base. It’s a key principle of politics.
Alexander Downer
Columnist
Dec 22, 2021
– 12.07pm
No matter how
popular you are in politics, it’s hard to maintain the pace. Boris Johnson won
a huge
majority just two years ago and was on top of the world. Since then, he has
successfully taken the UK out of the European Union – or to use the phrase
Tories like – “got Brexit done”.
But in the
last few weeks, his popularity has collapsed. His Conservative Party has fallen
behind the opposition Labour Party in the opinion polls and his personal
approval has plunged. There is now Australian-style discussion about whether
the party should choose a new leader.
Why has this
happened? Well, first there is COVID-19. The government has had to focus on
that for the best part of two years. It hasn’t done a bad job. Its rollout of
vaccines has been close to the fastest of any country in the world and now the
rollout of booster
jabs is running apace.
The
government has tried to balance the crackdown on civil liberties with Johnson’s
understandable commitment to his libertarian principles. It’s been, and it
still is, hard to get the balance right, and it’s not that which is responsible
for his sudden decline in popularity.
-----
https://www.smh.com.au/business/banking-and-finance/will-the-end-of-the-world-s-most-important-number-be-a-y2k-moment-20211222-p59jhb.html
Will the end of ‘the world’s most important number’ be a Y2K moment?
Stephen Bartholomeusz
Senior
business columnist
December 22,
2021 — 12.15pm
A Y2K moment
is imminent for the world’s funding and derivatives markets as the benchmark
for global interest rates is effectively and compulsorily retired from use.
The London
Interbank Offered Rate - used as the reference rate for short-term unsecured
loans, and the pricing of almost all floating rate financial markets from
corporate debt to home loans and complex derivatives for half a century – will
essentially be regulated out of existence on December 31.
LIBOR’s
withdrawal from service has been flagged and enormous work to prepare for this
has been done from the middle of the last decade. But the ubiquity of the rate
as the reference rate for loans and derivatives contracts, some of which extend
well beyond 2021 and even in perpetuity, means there is potential for
unintended and potentially very costly consequences.
Y2K, or the
“Millenium Bug”, was feared at the turn of the century amid concerns that the
widespread use of only two digits for years in computer programs would create a
global IT crash as clocks ticked over at midnight December 31, 1999 to 2000.
-----
https://www.smh.com.au/world/europe/russia-us-agree-to-security-talks-in-january-20211223-p59jqt.html
Russian foreign minister: Talks with US, NATO to start next month
By Maria
Kiselyova
December 23,
2021 — 8.55am
Moscow:
Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Russia will enter talks with US negotiators
on the security guarantees it wants from the West at the start of next year,
amid concerns over a Russian military build-up near Ukraine’s border.
Ukraine and
the West have accused Russia of considering a new attack on Ukraine as early as
next month. Russia denies that, despite moving tens of thousands of troops to
staging posts closer to Ukraine.
President
Vladimir Putin said on Tuesday that Russia had no room to retreat in its
standoff with the United States over what Moscow views as Washington’s
unacceptable military aid for Ukraine and would be forced into a tough response
unless the West dropped its “aggressive line”.
He said that
Moscow wants legally-binding security guarantees that certain offensive weapons
will not be deployed to countries that neighbour Russia and for NATO to halt
its eastwards expansion.
-----
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/world/russia-is-ready-to-fight-says-putin/news-story/9327cd5815dbee5b06cab54d87c8d127
Russia is ready to fight, says Putin
By Evan
Gershkovich
AFP
6:17PM
December 22, 2021
Russian
President Vladimir Putin has warned he is prepared for a military response to
“unfriendly” Western actions over the Ukraine conflict.
Ramping up
his vitriol against the US, NATO and other European countries, Mr Putin said
Russia “will react toughly to unfriendly steps”, adding that he wanted to
underscore that “we have every right to do so”.
He also
accused the US of planning to deploy hypersonic weapons to Ukraine.
“We are
extremely concerned that elements of the US global missile defence system are
being deployed next to Russia,” he told a meeting of military leaders on
Tuesday (Wednesday AEDT).
Mr Putin
called for “serious negotiations” on Russian security demands put to the US
and NATO during his first call with new German Chancellor, Olaf Scholz, who in
turn called for “de-escalation”.
-----
https://www.smh.com.au/world/asia/japan-us-create-taiwan-emergency-plan-report-20211224-p59jyn.html
Japan, US create Taiwan emergency plan: report
By Kiyoshi
Takenaka
December 24,
2021 — 9.01am
Tokyo:
Japanese and US armed forces have drawn up a draft plan for a joint operation
for a possible Taiwan emergency, Japan’s Kyodo news agency said on Thursday,
citing unnamed Japanese government sources, amid increased tensions between the island
and China.
China claims
democratically governed Taiwan as its own “sacred” territory and in the past
two years has stepped up military and diplomatic pressure to assert its
sovereignty claims, fuelling anger in Taipei and deep concern in Washington.
Taiwan’s
government says it wants peace, but will defend itself if needed.
Under the
plan, the US Marine Corps will set up temporary bases on the Nansei island
chain stretching from Kyushu, one of the four main islands of Japan, to Taiwan,
at the initial stage of a Taiwan emergency, and will deploy troops, Kyodo said.
-----
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/world/solomons-turns-to-china-for-riot-help/news-story/5afc62178bab72ce723c4d412a0c1da9
Solomons turns to China for riot help
Jess Malcolm
5:06AM
December 24, 2021
The Solomon
Islands has accepted China’s help in defusing months-long riots on the streets
of Honiara, a move that threatens to inflame domestic tensions and spark
diplomatic troubles for Australia.
The Solomon
Islands government announced on Thursday that Chinese police officers and
equipment would be installed to help train members of the Solomon Islands
police force.
China’s
involvement comes after the Australian government deployed 73 Australian
Federal Police and 43 Australian Defence Force personnel to the country in
November, following a request from the nation’s Prime Minister, Manasseh
Sogavare.
Ongoing civil
unrest in Honiara is understood to be fuelled by economic issues and the Sogavare
government’s decision to break diplomatic ties with Taiwan in favour of China
in 2019.
-----
https://www.afr.com/world/europe/amid-fears-russia-will-invade-ukraine-putin-slams-west-20211223-p59jxf
Amid fears Russia will invade Ukraine, Putin slams West
Isabelle
Khurshudyan and Mary Ilyushina
Dec 24, 2021
– 1.05am
Moscow | In
an annual, marathon news conference, Russian President Vladimir Putin, facing a
television audience across Russia, said the West was to blame for tensions on
the Ukraine border and fears of war.
Russia has
massed some 100,000 troops, along with military hardware, on its border with
Ukraine, preparing what Western officials have warned could be a full-scale
attack on its southwestern neighbour. In one of Putin’s highest-profile,
public-facing events of the year, an opportunity to sway his domestic audience,
Putin said Russia would rather not fight a war, and doubled down on his claim
that Russia is facing a threat from the West - and not the other way around.
He was twice
given the opportunity to state his military intentions toward Ukraine. He did
not say definitively that Russia would not invade. He instead reiterated his
demand for a promise in writing that NATO would not seek to expand eastward.
“We need to
think about how Russia is going to live,” he added, ominously. “Are we supposed
to always look behind our shoulder and wait?”
Russia’s
Foreign Ministry last week published sweeping demands it presented to the
United States and NATO that would effectively bar all other former Soviet
republics - including Ukraine - from joining or cooperating with the alliance.
-----
https://www.news.com.au/world/europe/satellite-pics-show-russia-bolstering-forces-along-ukraine-border-report/news-story/9640602baf25aace702192f312482899
Satellite pics show Russia bolstering forces along Ukraine border: report
Satellite
images have outed thousands of Russian tanks amassing, an escalation that the
US believes is an indication of an imminent invasion.
Mark Moore,
New York Post
December 25,
2021 - 4:44PM
Russia
continues to bolster its forces along the Ukrainian border, adding hundreds of
tanks and armored vehicles even as President Vladimir Putin demands security
guarantees from the United States, according to a report.
Reuters
reported Friday that new satellite images from US-based Maxar Technologies show
an increased buildup of forces in Crimea, which Russia illegally annexed in
2014.
Russia began
sending forces and heavy military equipment to its western border with Ukraine
in April and has amassed as many as 175,000 troops, an escalation that the US
believes is an indication of an imminent invasion.
The images
Maxar released Thursday show a base in Crimea filled with armored vehicles and
tanks as of Dec. 13, according to Reuters.
-----
https://www.afr.com/world/north-america/the-most-powerful-telescope-ever-built-launches-to-see-the-dawn-of-starlight-20211226-p59k5w
The most powerful telescope ever built launches to see the dawn of
starlight
Dennis
Overbye and Joey Roulette
Dec 26, 2021
– 7.16am
The dreams
and work of a generation of astronomers headed for an orbit around the sun
Saturday in the form of the biggest and most expensive space-based observatory
ever built.
The James
Webb Space Telescope, a joint effort of NASA, the European Space Agency and the
Canadian Space Agency, lifted off Saturday morning (US time) from a spaceport
near the equator in Kourou, French Guiana.
“The world
gave us this telescope, and we’re handing it back to the world today,” Gregory
Robinson, the Webb telescope’s program director, said during a post-launch news
conference in French Guiana.
In Baltimore
at the Space Telescope Science Institute, the flight operations team watched as
Webb deployed its solar array, then its communications antenna minutes later.
Roughly 100
mission personnel will command the spacecraft’s deployments, alternating
between 12-hour shifts, 24 hours a day throughout the process, as it begins its
journey to a point beyond the moon.
-----
https://www.smh.com.au/world/south-america/nasa-launches-revolutionary-space-telescope-to-give-glimpse-of-early-universe-20211226-p59k5q.html
NASA launches revolutionary space telescope to give glimpse of early
universe
December 26,
2021 — 2.05am
NASA’s James
Webb Space Telescope, built to give the world a glimpse of the universe as it
existed when the first galaxies formed, was launched by rocket early Saturday
from South America’s northeastern coast, opening a new era of astronomy.
The powerful
infrared telescope, hailed by NASA as the premiere space-science observatory of
the next decade, was packed inside the cargo bay of an Ariane 5 rocket and
blasted off at 7:20am from the European Space Agency’s (ESA) tropical launch
base in French Guiana.
The flawless
Christmas Day launch, with a countdown conducted in French, was carried live on
a joint NASA-ESA webcast.
“From a
tropical rain forest to the edge of time itself, James Webb begins a voyage
back to the birth of the universe,” a NASA commentator said as the two-stage
launch vehicle, fitted with double solid-rocket boosters, roared off its launch
pad into cloudy skies.
The $10
billion Webb telescope will then take a month to coast to its destination in
solar orbit roughly 1.6 million kilometres from Earth - about four times
farther away than the moon. And Webb’s special orbital path will keep it in
constant alignment with Earth as the planet and telescope circle the sun in
tandem.
-----
I look
forward to comments on all this!
-----
David.