Search Results | Showing 31 - 40 of 1782 results for %22GDP%22 |
| | ... tests. With Australia on course for 25 straight years of deficit, estimated to total about $50 billion a year by 2030 or 2% of GDP, Grattan Institute said the government must cut wasteful spending and raise taxes as soon as possible, adding the problem ... |
| | | ... disease," Naughtin said. "When we look across healthcare expenditure within Australia, we see that a greater share of our GDP is dedicated towards healthcare, relative to what we see across other OECD countries. "Of course, this is still less than what ... |
| | | ... women from the current 73% to 85% (on par with Sweden, the highest labour force participation rate in the world) could boost GDP by as much as $186 billion per year, based on PwC estimates. "Businesses achieve better results when there is gender balance. ... |
| | | ... report said Australia's government pension expenditure is relatively low and expected to decline from 2.6% to 2.1% of GDP by 2060. Oppositely, many OECD retirement income systems have poor system design, population ageing, and elevated inflation ... |
| | | ... indicate the Lucky Country will evade a highly anticipated global recession. High-level economic data shows that Australia's GDP has remained steady and outperformed major economies like the US and EU. Other than the recently released December retail ... |
| | | ... strongly, fueled by the recovery of the tourism and educations sectors, particularly with the resumption of visitors from China. GDP growth is projected to remain steady until mid-2025, before showing a slight pick-up. As economic growth slows, the unemployment ... |
| | | ... program is $55.3 billion. They also equate to more than the total cost of the NDIS ($35.5bn), with the cost rising to 2% of GDP, up 0.5% since the turn of the century. "Super tax concessions now rank in the top three expenditure programs in Budget 2022-2023 ... |
| | | ... continued: "Now I don't say avoiding recession means growth is okay, it's not. The Fed's own forecast is for 0.5% GDP growth in 2023, and that's not inconsistent with a shallow recession. "We're going to have a slowdown, and I think a ... |
| | | ... Rynne noted that the RBA remains concerned about the immediate economic outlook, despite confirming that its recently revised GDP forecast of 1.5% growth over 2023 remains current. Rynne said the RBA could be thinking that the probability of a domestic ... |
| | | ... Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) is forecasting Australia to outperform many other advanced economies, predicting GDP to grow around 2.5%. "On the one hand, you have energy prices which will have a major impact on outgoings; but on the other ... |
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