
Isaac Gross
Lecturer at Monash University
Economist and Senior Lecturer at @MonashUni! @EconEconomics & central banker in a previous life. https://t.co/FkVuHNTLqL
Articles
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1 week ago |
businessdailymedia.com | Isaac Gross
The election campaign has erupted into a economic battleground as Labor[1] and the Coalition[2] unveiled major new tax policies at their campaign launches. Each policy package is aimed at addressing the mounting cost-of-living pressures facing millions of Australians. Labor’s flagship announcement is a new standard tax deduction of $1,000 per year for work-related expenses. It represents a permanent reform designed to simplify the tax system and provide consistent, predictable relief.
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1 week ago |
tolerance.ca | Isaac Gross
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1 week ago |
theconversation.com | Isaac Gross
The election campaign has erupted into a economic battleground as Labor and the Coalition unveiled major new tax policies at their campaign launches. Each policy package is aimed at addressing the mounting cost-of-living pressures facing millions of Australians. Labor’s flagship announcement is a new standard tax deduction of $1000 per year for work-related expenses. It represents a permanent reform designed to simplify the tax system and provide consistent, predictable relief.
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1 week ago |
thetimes.com.au | Isaac Gross
Sun Apr 13 Voters have a clear choice. Labor’s long term and equitable tax reform or the Coalition’s big but one-off tax cuts Written by Isaac Gross, Lecturer in Economics, Monash University The election campaign has erupted into a economic battleground as Labor and the Coalition unveiled major new tax policies at their campaign launches. Each policy package is aimed at addressing the mounting cost-of-living pressures facing millions of Australians.
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2 months ago |
publicaccountant.com.au | Isaac Gross
Mortgage holders are cheering the fact their monthly repayments are now slightly lower, while the Albanese government hopes the small easing in the cost of living will lift voters’ moods. This is despite the Reserve Bank’s warnings that further rate cuts may not eventuate, depending on how much further progress is made on taming inflation. But it’s important to remember not everybody benefits from an interest rate cut. Some will be worse off. Not all Australian households are net borrowers.
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Markets remain insanely confident in deep cuts. Unjustified IMO. *Unless there is some private signal that Q1 CPI is going to print very weak again... https://t.co/AZq8HImUIX

RT @Birdyword: The fact that Guzman y Gomez (an Australian Mexican fast food chain set up by two guys named Steven and Robert) is now worth…

Despite it's headline, this is an even handed assessment of both sides housing policy. A mix of good, serviceable and terrible. https://t.co/GWyFuYcY7r