Economics
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Greg Jericho, Katharine Murphy, Gareth Hutchens and the West Australian’s economics editor, Shane Wright, look back at the year in economics on politics live
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Treasurer says he would prefer policy changes were accepted before economic emergency, but Labor blames shrinking growth on Coalition’s lack of strategy
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Letters: Colin Hines of the Green New Deal Group on job-creating QE | James Taylor of Scope on disabled people in poverty | Dr Malcolm Torry of the Citizen’s Income Trust on a basic income | Anita Deshmukh on older women’s unemployment
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Northern Europe dominates Indigo Index of countries likely to thrive by harnessing innovation and human capital
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New figures show GDP receded in the third quarter raising prospect of recession and also likely to put pressure on federal government revenue
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Office for National Statistics revises gap down to 6% from 7% after uncovering major mistake in import and export data
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Consumer spending and retail growth are stronger but manufacturing is falling back, figures show
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You’d need to go back 150 years to find the last time wage growth was this stagnant, according to the governor of the Bank of England. But even then there were a few reasons to be cheerful
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With eurozone authorities willing to bend their own rules, a solution could be at hand – though it would fix few long-term issues
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Mark Carney's history lesson shows we haven't learned on globalisation
Larry Elliott Economics editorThe Bank of England governor’s look back at previous crises suggests action needs to be taken to stop capitalism from eating itself -
Italian bank shares volatile, but euro recovers after Matteo Renzi loses Sunday’s constitutional referendum
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Chancellor and Brexit secretary say meeting aimed to examine impact of UK vote to leave the EU on financial sector
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Sector regaining ground after sluggish 18 months but will still contract in 2017, industry report says
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Economics viewpoint Like a football manager, remainers can only see the other team's fouls
Larry ElliottBoth sides in the Brexit debate embellished and misrepresented, so those who wanted to remain should stop calling for a replay
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Sunday’s referendum has become a vote on a cocktail of problems and pressing national issues. But its most far-reaching impact will be a financial one
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The government is hoping low inflation will keep the electorate from getting restive. But it will only be achieved thanks to feeble consumer and public spending
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Theresa May is leading the country towards a total and economically calamitous EU divorce in 2018
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He made the company a punchbag during his anti-globalisation election crusade, and now takes credit for saving jobs. But how did it happen, and who really won?
Live Markets soar as ECB extends QE programme until December 2017 – business live