google.com, pub-8701563775261122, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0
Australia

Productivity to dominate agenda as symposium begins

17 August 2025 12:00 | News

One of the leading events in the economic calendar will consume the federal parliament as the best minds of the country for a solution to productivity in which Australia collapses.

Treasurer Jim Chalmers will finally meet the economic reform round table meeting after weeks.

The heavy weights in the field, former Treasury Secretary Ken Henry, Consumer Keeper President Gina Cass-Gottlieb, Australian Unions Council Secretary Sally McMmanus, Australian Executive Officer Bran Black and others will gather in Canberra for three days to discuss the living standards of Australians.

Efficiency will be the primary focus, but the forum will also discuss ways to create flexibility and strengthen the budget.

Federal government, stakeholders offer ideas to revive the economy, while mocking the activity for weeks.

Heavy weights will join Jim Chalmers for three days to discuss ways to remove living standards. (Mick Tsikas/AAP Photos)

From the deductions to the property investor tax cuts, AI, environmental law reform, everything has swim, but Dr Chalmers has released with expectations, which will cause the economy to be shaken immediately.

“The best way to think about this reform round table meeting is three days to help inform the next three budgets, Aap said AAP.

“This is not an opportunity to make a decision. This is an opportunity to inform the cabinet’s decisions.”

Prime Minister Anthony Arbanese said that his government was “embarrassing open, although he ignored major changes in some areas such as tax policy.

The meeting is expected to dw on all other economic activities in Australia, but another side of the world on the other side of the world will still be heard.

Dozens of central bankers, policy -making, academicians and economists from all over the world are expected to gather in the US for their own round table.

The three -day Jackson Hole Economic Symposium begins on Thursday, because it closes in the Australian Forum and is expected to discuss productivity and labor markets.

Federal Reserve Board Chairman Jerome Powell (File)
Jerome Powell will manage an annual symposium on global economy and fiscal policy at Jackson Hole. (AP Photo)

During the ditch, the New Zealand Reserve Bank will decide to take an interest rate a week after the Australian Central Bank has chosen to receive 25 basis points.

Australia’s corporate reporting season will continue as a company with companies like Ampol. Woodside, Santos, Bega Cheese, Whitehaven Coal and Inghams were ready to reveal their earnings throughout the week.

In the meantime, Wall Street investors seemed to have a slight Jitters case on Friday with mixed data that blur the Fed’s next monetary policy. Blue chip Dow Jones ended higher, but other indices record.

President Donald Trump’s meeting with Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin, not only paved the way for making a decision to make a decision to make a Ukrainian conflict, but also to determine the appearance of raw prices.

Dow rose to 44.946.12 with a score of 34.86 points or 0.08 %, increased to S&P 500, 18.74 points or 0.29 % to 6.449.80 % and Nasdaq Composite increased to 87.69 points or 0.40 percent, 21.622.98.

Traders on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (File)
Wall Street ended the week with a slight Jitters case. (AP Photo)

Australian stocks fell to 7,713 by 53 points or 0.59 percent.

The S&P/ASX200 wobble at noon for a fee of 8.938.6, 64.8 points or 0.73 percent higher than a wage of 1.4 percent during the week.

The wider all ordinarys were 63 points higher than 9.212.1, with an increase of 0.69 percent, Australia was best closed for the top 500 stocks, now it had a total value of more than $ 2.9 trillion.


AAP News

Australian Associated Press is a beating heart of Australian news. AAP has been the only independent national Newswire of Australia and has been providing reliable and fast news content to the media industry, the government and the corporate sector for 85 years. We inform Australia.

Last stories from our authors

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Back to top button