Open the Door and See the Mountain: Reflections from a Recent Trip to China

Source: Airservices Australia

Introduction

Of all the trends shaping the Australian economy over the past half century, one of the most profound has been the long swing towards Asia (Graph 1) and, more specifically in recent years, China – now our biggest single trading partner by a country mile (Table 1). But China is also front and centre in the US administration’s rapidly evolving tariff strategy. How that strategy plays out, and how China responds, are therefore key issues for the economic outlook in Australia, and hence the RBA’s monetary policy.

Table 1: Australian Goods Trade with the United States and China (2023)
Rank in Australian … Australian exports to country as share of … Australian exports from country as share of … Australian trade balance (US$bn)
Exports Imports Australian exports Country imports Australian imports Country exports
US 5 2 4% 0.5% 11% 1.7% −18
China 1 1 37% 7% 25% 2% 71

Sources: Observatory of Economic Complexity; UN Comtrade.

Given the importance of understanding the Chinese economy, the RBA has maintained a small team based at the Australian Embassy in Beijing since 2011, to take the temperature of the economy up close. Their work, together with the work of our Australian-based staff, directly informs our Monetary Policy Board’s deliberations – most recently earlier this week – and our broader analysis.

I recently joined the team to speak with a wide range of organisations drawn from right across the Chinese economy and the Australian export community, in both Beijing and Shanghai. The trip, arranged months earlier, turned out to be auspiciously timed, because it came in the week after so-called ‘Liberation Day’ – when US tariffs on China rose to 145 per cent, and China retaliated in kind.

Tonight, I want to discuss four key themes that we heard that week, and which – despite the further dramatic turn of events since then – seem so far to have stood the test of time.

For anyone wanting to cut to the chase, or, in the words of the Mandarin saying, ‘open the door and see the mountain’, I’ll put it more bluntly: don’t count China out.

Theme 1: People felt the economy was finally turning a corner in early 2025

Nearly everyone we spoke with felt the Chinese economy was at last turning a corner in the months leading up to 2 April:

  • The September 2024 Politburo announcements and subsequent policy pivot were seen as a recognition of the need both for further stimulus and for a more determined switch in emphasis from boosting supply to boosting demand.
  • The DeepSeek announcement, President Xi’s meeting with business leaders in the private sector and his well-publicised handshake with Jack Ma, triggered renewed optimism in support for the private sector and its capacity to innovate and harness the benefits from high technology, after a period of negative government sentiment, declining foreign investment and technology embargoes.
  • Property markets seemed finally to be showing signs of stabilising, at least in larger cities, after years of declining sales, investment and prices.

It’s important to put these points in context. For anyone visiting China, the ever-present abandoned housing developments and stationary cranes provide a potent reminder of the challenges the Chinese economy has been through. But an improvement in sentiment, if it persists, would itself be an important economic development, after such a long period in the doldrums. And harder data also support the view that domestic demand growth had begun to strengthen in the first quarter of 2025.

Theme 2: ‘Liberation Day’ was a genuine shock

Against this backdrop, the eye-popping tariff tit-for-tat escalation in early April came as a genuine shock to most of those we spoke with. Significant increases were of course expected – but there was surprise along three dimensions. On scale, the typical expectation had been for a 25–50 percentage point increase: anything over 60 was judged to be an effective embargo. On speed, expectations of a rolling increase, or a negotiation period, were dashed. And on scope, the huge tariffs on China’s southeast Asian neighbours were seen as being aimed at cutting off trade and production chains that linked China to the United States via third countries. Some also contrasted the scale and immediacy of the Chinese retaliation with the absence of a similar reaction in Europe and elsewhere in the West, disappointing those hoping for a common front.

It is difficult to quantify the economic impact these mega-tariffs could have had on China. But expectations in China appeared to be in the range of 1.5–2 percentage points of GDP in 2025, before accounting for any offsetting policy stimulus.

Theme 3: China feels it has a strong economic hand in responding to tariffs

Those are big numbers. But for every expression of surprise, we also heard a striking confidence that China was going into this trade war with a strong hand. Judged solely in economic terms, that view rested on four main planks:

  • First, a deep belief in the authorities’ commitment to deliver the growth target of ‘around 5 per cent’ a year. This goal may attract scepticism in some quarters –10-year bond yields in the 1.5–2 per cent range certainly suggest market participants have doubts over the medium term. But the commitment to the goal had a seemingly totemic status amongst most of those we spoke with.
  • Second, a confidence that the Chinese authorities had the policy tools, the space and the will to inject the domestic stimulus needed to compensate for any weaker growth in trade. There are limits to this of course. Past efforts to boost domestic consumption have had mixed success. Many of the authorities’ existing policy tools are best suited to boosting supply, which diverts resources from consumption and adds further to production capacity, bearing down on inflation. And the barriers to a more persistent rise in consumption are arguably as much structural as cyclical, reflecting a limited social safety net, and constraints on the use of capital markets to manage savings. There are questions too about how much headroom is left for further stimulus. Public debt is elevated, particularly at local government level; nominal interest rates are already quite low, and focused on exchange rate and financial stability as well as demand management; and the central bank has made it clear it does not favour quantitative easing. This may be one reason why the authorities bided their time in the immediate aftermath of 2 April, spurning the ‘big bazooka’ policy package that some in the financial markets hoped for. But a range of monetary and financial easing measures have subsequently been announced, and the authorities have underscored their commitment to expand fiscal policy if needed to support the growth target.
  • Third, we heard a general expectation that a large share of the economic costs of US tariffs would fall on the United States itself, and a determination not to cushion that impact. Nearly half China’s exports to the United States are products for which the United States has limited alternative external suppliers, including lithium batteries, computers, smartphones and video game consoles (Graph 2, lower right quadrant). Indeed, the massive advance in technology use is one of the most striking impressions to any outside visitor. The pass-through of US tariffs to US consumer prices for such goods is likely to be high – perhaps explaining why many were quickly exempted. Much of the rest of China’s exports (Graph 2, lower left quadrant) are products for which the United States is not a dominant source of demand, so could to some degree be divertible to other markets. There are far fewer products in the upper part of Graph 2, where the United States accounts for a large share of Chinese imports.

    The inflationary impact of US tariffs on US consumers could, of course, be reduced if the Chinese currency were devalued substantially, as happened in 2018–2019. But we detected little expectation that this would happen, because China would want to avoid: insulating the United States from its own tariffs; provoking retaliation from other countries; triggering capital outflow of the kind seen around the 2015 devaluation; or undermining the political and social gains (including recognition of China’s economic and technological advance) perceived to flow from a stronger exchange rate. Some noted that, according to simple measures of purchasing power parity such as the Economist’s ‘Big Mac Index’, the Chinese currency was more likely to appreciate rather than depreciate against the dollar, if left to its own devices.

    Graph 2

    There was of course a recognition that Chinese exporters would face real economic costs if high tariffs persisted. It was too early to see any of that at the time of our visit. But we did hear a determination to face into it, if it came.

  • Fourth, we heard real doubts about how much manufacturing currently done in China would relocate to the United States. Elevated labour costs, and a finite stock of advanced manufacturing skills, were thought to make it impossible to produce many goods at the prices US consumers expected to pay – as would the absence of the highly integrated, co-located supply chains that had developed within China as well as across Asia. And there were doubts about the viability of long-term investment in factories while the volatility of US policy settings remained so elevated.

Recent weeks have walked us back from the precipice a little. The rapid reductions in US tariffs on China’s Asian neighbours saw a pick-up in production and export via third countries, as was evident from the April trade data. And the threat of ‘mutual assured (economic) destruction’ provided the context for the rapid, if ostensibly temporary, reduction of United States and China tariffs. Those tariffs still remain well above historical levels, of course – and future increases, or other trade barriers, cannot be ruled out. But in view of the near-term de-escalation, China’s seemingly strong negotiating position and its scope to inject further stimulus, our baseline projection for Chinese GDP growth in the May Statement on Monetary Policy is 4.8 per cent in 2025 and 4.4 per cent in 2026 – only modestly changed on three months ago.

Theme 4: Australian companies see opportunities amidst the risks

As part of our trip, we held a roundtable discussion, organised by Austcham Shanghai, with a large group of Australian firms active in China, across retail, agriculture, banking, finance, law, steel, health care, manufacturing and commercial property. What really struck me about that session was how upbeat most, if not all, of the firms were about the outlook for their businesses. The recovery in sentiment in early 2025, and confidence that the authorities would ‘do what it takes’ to sustain the economy was part of it. But there was also a sense that recent developments in trade policy could enhance their competitive position in Chinese markets.

There’s always a risk of survivor and recency bias in such discussions, of course – and the firms involved varied considerably in size (and hence macro-economic impact). But we heard something similar in separate discussions with companies active in steel and iron ore – the latter, of course, being Australia’s largest export to China by some distance. They saw few threats to the scale and cost advantages of Australian ore relative to other producers in the near term (longer term challenges from the energy transition are of course a different matter). Their central expectation was for Chinese steel output to remain relatively robust, remaining at or near one billion tonnes a year in the near term. A large majority of Chinese steel is consumed domestically; and demand has been sustained in recent years by a pivot from property-related uses towards manufacturing and infrastructure. Further Chinese policy stimulus was expected to continue to involve (steel-intensive) infrastructure investment, despite the pivot to consumption. Chinese steel exports were obviously seen as more vulnerable to a slowdown in global demand. But direct exports account for a little more than a tenth of Chinese steel output (very little of which goes to the United States). And indirect exports via steel-intensive products, like machinery, ships and cars) are roughly the same again.

Conclusion

Let me conclude.

My goal this evening was deliberately narrow – to set out what I heard in China in the immediate aftermath of ‘Liberation Day’.

That narrative, at that time, was pretty positive: that the Chinese economy was seen as picking up in early 2025; that China felt it had a strong hand in responding to the economic impact of tariffs; and that Australian companies in China saw opportunities amidst the risks.

But, just as clearly, it was also partial – in four important ways.

First, it was just a moment in time – and as Jay Powell reminded us recently, life moves pretty fast. Tariff settings have already moved on dramatically, and will doubtless change further, whether up or down. And we’ll soon start to see data on just how the existing tariffs – still high by historical standards – are affecting the Chinese and global economies.

Second, it was just one set of views, from one country with a story to tell. Some of the judgements may prove wide of the mark – the tolerance for bearing economic costs may prove lower; domestic stimulus may prove to be harder to deliver; and so on.

Third, no in-the-moment assessment can hope to capture the ‘general equilibrium’ effects of such dramatic changes. An example of this is the possibility that Australian firms might in time face more intense competition, at home and overseas, from Chinese firms discounting output diverted from US markets. It’s unclear how big an effect this would be, given the limited overlap between Chinese and Australian outputs. But it’s clearly on the minds of others in the Asia–Pacific region.

Last, but not least, is perhaps the elephant in the room: how purely economic factors of the kind I’ve discussed here will interact with more strategic considerations, and where that leaves Australia. I’ve neither the competence nor the authority to discuss such issues – but I know that others on the panel and in the audience tonight here do! So I look forward to our discussion.

Thank you.

City thanks volunteers during National Volunteer Week

Source: New South Wales Ministerial News

To mark National Volunteer Week, approximately 100 City of Greater Bendigo volunteers were acknowledged at a celebratory morning tea held today at Ulumbarra Theatre.

Mayor Cr Andrea Metcalf said the event was a wonderful opportunity to recognise the vital contributions of volunteers and to celebrate the spirit of National Volunteer Week.

“We are incredibly fortunate to have such a passionate and dedicated group of volunteers, many of whom have been with us for years,” Cr Metcalf said.

“This year’s theme, ‘Connecting Communities’, truly reflects the power of volunteering to bring people together. Volunteering fosters meaningful relationships, enriches lives, and builds a sense of connection and belonging.

“Through these connections, our volunteers play a key role in creating inclusive and thriving communities.”

The City currently has around 445 volunteers supporting a wide range of services and activities that benefit the community.

“Whether it is welcoming visitors at our Visitor Centres, ushering guests at our theatres, sharing knowledge at the Gallery or Town Hall, helping run events for all ages, caring for the environment, or contributing through advisory groups—our volunteers’ time, energy, and enthusiasm are deeply appreciated,” Cr Metcalf said.

“We simply couldn’t achieve all that we do without them. Their passion, commitment, and generosity are invaluable, and we’re always looking for more people to join our volunteer team.

“Volunteering not only strengthens our community—it’s also proven to boost mental wellbeing. It’s a chance to connect with others, be part of a team, learn new skills, and build confidence.

“The City offers a well-established volunteering program with excellent training and support. If you’re considering volunteering, I encourage you to visit our website and explore the many opportunities available. I encourage you to give it a go.”

Volunteers support the City across a variety of services, including:

  • Bendigo Animal Relief Centre
  • Bendigo Art Gallery
  • Bendigo Venues & Events
  • Bendigo Visitor Centre
  • Heathcote Visitor Centre
  • Bendigo Writers Festival
  • Bendigo Easter Festival
  • Community Grants Advisory Panel
  • Disability Inclusion Reference Committee
  • Heritage Advisory Committee
  • Intercultural Ambassador Program
  • Yo Bendigo
  • Positive Ageing Advisory Committee
  • Youth Council

The City also partners with numerous volunteer groups to deliver events and deeply values this important collaboration in the community.

Generous benefactors lead Bendigo Art Gallery philanthropic campaign

Source: New South Wales Ministerial News

A dedicated philanthropic fundraising campaign has ensured the Bendigo Art Gallery redevelopment can proceed.

Led by the Sidney Myer Fund and The Ian Potter Foundation, contributing $4M and $3M respectively, together with a number of private donors, the philanthropic campaign has achieved a total of $9.35M to date. The largest private donation of $1.5M has come from arts philanthropist, Dr Mark Nelson, who has connections to the Bendigo region.

The campaign, driven by the Gallery and a philanthropic fundraising committee chaired by Andrew Myer AM, has generated the largest-ever private investment in the development of civic infrastructure owned and operated by the City of Greater Bendigo.

Mayor Cr Andrea Metcalf said this incredible financial support reflected the value of the Gallery to Greater Bendigo and to the state of Victoria.

“Two of Australia’s most respected philanthropic foundations connected to the arts have embraced the opportunity to support our redevelopment, recognising the vital connection of culture and creativity to our community and the local economy,” Cr Metcalf said.

“In particular, we are delighted to have the support of the Sidney Myer Fund, a name that has had a long connection to Bendigo and also to the Gallery, including the Sidney Myer Work on Paper Gallery added in 2014.

“We sincerely thank Andrew Myer for chairing the fundraising committee and for his incredible enthusiasm for this project and the legacy it will leave.

“Philanthropy is an incredible, living gift for those in the fortunate position to contribute in this way, and the City and Gallery are truly grateful to the foundations and individuals who have kindly chosen to contribute to this next chapter in the history of our esteemed Gallery.”

Sidney Myer Fund Chairman Andrew Myer AM said his grandfather, Sidney Myer, opened the first Myer store in Bendigo 125 years ago and the city had been part of his family’s DNA ever since.

“My grandfather believed strongly that art, culture and creativity were vital to a good life, and that everyone in the community deserved to have access. Bendigo Art Gallery puts that belief into action and the Sidney Myer Fund is delighted to be able to support this major redevelopment that will serve the people of Bendigo for decades to come,” Mr Myer said.

The Ian Potter Foundation CEO Paul Conroy said the Foundation was delighted to support a regional gallery with such a strong reputation.

“The redevelopment plans are impressive and focus on the Gallery’s ability to grow visitation and participation, including education programs. Investing in this project strengthens this community asset that will provide further benefits for the wider Bendigo community through access to the arts, increased tourism and subsequent economic growth,” Mr Conroy said.

Bendigo Art Gallery Director Jessica Bridgfoot said this level of philanthropic support was unprecedented for Bendigo Art Gallery.

“It is an acknowledgement of the transformative impact arts and culture can have on a regional community and we truly appreciate our donors’ investment in the Gallery and Greater Bendigo,” Ms Bridgfoot said.

“During the construction phase, residents and patrons of the Gallery will have the opportunity to be part of this exciting project and make a philanthropic contribution of their own, with further details to be shared on how these funds will be used.

“At the heart of this project has been a vision to ensure the redevelopment delivers ‘The People’s Gallery’ – a space that is dynamic, inviting, accessible and inspiring for all who visit.

“We know the Gallery is treasured by our community and there will be many people, no matter the size of their donation, who will want to contribute to this transformative project for the Gallery and Greater Bendigo.”

The construction budget is made up of $21M from the Victorian Government, $9M from the City of Greater Bendigo, $4M from the Gallery Board and $9.35M from philanthropic donations, and is enough for the project to proceed. 

Green light for Bendigo Art Gallery redevelopment to start in early 2026

Source: New South Wales Ministerial News

The Bendigo Art Gallery redevelopment, the largest-ever construction project to be led by the City of Greater Bendigo, will proceed.

A flythrough video released today highlights stage one of the redevelopment and how it will transform the Gallery and deliver on the original scope of the project, which includes a second floor blockbuster exhibition space, an innovative learning centre, theatrette and Traditional Owner Place of Keeping for Dja Dja Wurrung cultural materials.

The City is seeking to deliver stage one for $45M and will call for expressions of interest in June for a head contractor for the project.

The Gallery is expected to remain open until November this year while the procurement process takes place. Construction is expected to start in early 2026 and take approximately two years to complete, with the aim of re-opening in early 2028.

To complete the project in its entirety, the City and Gallery will continue to seek $15M from the Federal Government to deliver stage two. An application for $15M still sits with the Regional Precincts and Partnerships Program, as the process was not completed before the Federal election.

Stage two includes a dedicated gallery for Australian art (an additional 400m² of gallery space that was not part of the original project scope) and an elevated hospitality offering, featuring an improved café/restaurant incorporated into a redesigned sculpture annex and second floor function facility and terrace.

To deliver stages one and two during the planned construction period, Federal funding would need to be confirmed by the end of this year. Although any additional funding secured would always be accommodated.

The total project cost remains $54M. All funds raised to date have been put towards construction, however if Federal funding is secured it would mean some of the already committed funds can be reallocated to future programming for the new gallery spaces.

City Chief Executive Officer Andrew Cooney said the Gallery redevelopment was an investment in the cultural and economic future of the region.

“It is exciting to make this announcement today and confirm this city-defining project is going ahead. Over the past several months we have worked to refine the project scope and I am so pleased we can move forward with the budget available and deliver a fantastic outcome, with the option of a second stage should additional funding be secured,” Mr Cooney said.

“Today’s announcement intends to give certainty to our community, particularly the many businesses that benefit from the tourism generated by the Gallery. The project will cement the Gallery’s reputation as a leading cultural institution in Australia and will trigger increased visitation to our region.

“This news is also expected to encourage greater private sector investment in our city centre. Business owners can now be confident about the project’s future, factoring this into their current operations or potentially plan for other complementary business ventures.”

Gallery Director Jessica Bridgfoot said a number of small changes to the design had achieved important savings for the project.

“This project will meet key objectives and realise our original vision to deliver ‘The People’s Gallery’ – a place that empowers the Bendigo and broader Victorian community through accessibility, education, shared economic benefit and celebrating Traditional Owners. The redevelopment will establish the Gallery as an international, world-class cultural facility for future generations,” Ms Bridgfoot said.

“Savings were achieved by rearranging some of the features of the redevelopment, reducing back of house areas and locating offsite storage. Other minor structural changes also helped save on material and engineering costs.

“The project was granted the necessary planning permits from the City and Heritage Victoria in 2024 to proceed, and has been reviewed favourably by the Office of the Victorian Architect.”

As part of the redevelopment, the Gallery will become a trusted Place of Keeping for Dja Dja Wurrung cultural material and the façade of the building will feature a design by a Dja Dja Wurrung artist.

Dja Dja Wurrung Group Chief Executive Officer Rodney Carter said he was excited by the opportunities presented by the redevelopment.

“The Gallery’s commitment to celebrating and preserving Dja Dja Wurrung culture and art is a significant benefit that supports outcomes across the Closing the Gap framework. We look forward to continuing our partnership with the Gallery through a dedicated Place of Keeping, and fully support additional funding for the redevelopment to be fully realised,” Mr Carter said.

It is widely recognised the Gallery is an important economic driver for Greater Bendigo and both the City and Gallery continue to plan for event attraction that will support tourism and businesses during the closure.

“In the coming months, the City and Gallery look forward to announcing a family-friendly exhibition that will be staged in partnership with the Discovery Science and Technology Centre from March to November next year, as well as sharing highlights of the 2026 major events and activation calendar,” Ms Bridgfoot said.

“Gallery staff are also planning now for how they will continue to deliver a public program that allows residents, visitors and students to engage with the arts in other locations while the Gallery is closed.

“For now, it is business as usual and residents and visitors are encouraged to visit the Frida Kahlo – In her own image exhibition before it closes on Sunday July 13.”

The construction budget is made up of $21M from the Victorian Government, $9M from the City of Greater Bendigo, $4M from the Gallery Board and $9.35M from philanthropic donations, and is enough for the project to proceed.

A family guide to Woden, Weston Creek and Molonglo

Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

Kids of all ages can play the day away at a destination playground.

  • Duffy Primary School.

These are open to the community outside school hours.

There are two skate parks in the region:

There are also mini skate ramps in Rivett and Stirling.

University of Canberra Stromlo Forest Park

For the ultimate cycling experience, head to Stromlo. Here you’ll find the ACT’s best network of bike trails, loops and paths.

There’s a track to suit all riding abilities:

  • a purpose-built pump track
  • designated kids’ learn-to-ride area
  • the Playground, complete with obstacles, see-saws and jumps

There are also walking and running trails.

Activities

The National Arboretum

The National Arboretum is a must for locals and visitors alike.

There’s so much to do and learn, from guided forest walks to kite-flying on windy days.

Kids love running up and down the manicured hills and checking out the bonsai collection.

There’s a twice-weekly nature playgroup for kids aged between 18 months and five years.

School holidays are also covered with plenty of workshops and activities.

You’ll also find:

  • Forest Sculpture Gallery
  • tracks and trails
  • picnic spots

Stromlo Leisure Centre

One word: waterslides. The splash park at Stromlo Leisure Centre is a year-round favourite.

As well as two slides, it features water sprays, geysers and waterfalls.

There’s a leisure pool, program pool and 50m pool too. Plus, a café for that important after-swim ice-cream.

Southside Farmers Market

This smaller market is held at Canberra College in Phillip.

There’s a strong community feel, with smiling stallholders eager to have a chat.

Don’t forget to pick up a coffee and something delicious to eat.

It’s on every Sunday from 7am until 11am.

National Zoo and Aquarium

Who can pass up a zoo visit? With a wide variety of native and exotic animals, there’s something for everyone at the National Zoo and Aquarium.

As well as lions, tigers and bears, there’s also an epic playground with something for all ages.

Mount Stromlo Observatory

Treat yourselves to spectacular views over Canberra and the Brindabellas.

You can take an interactive heritage walk, have a picnic or even a bbq.

If you have a budding astronomer in the family, why not book a private stargazing session?

Forest Park Riding School

Horse-mad kiddos can turn dreams to reality at Forest Park.

Depending on their age, kids can book in for a one-off pony ride or trail ride.

Helmets and boots are available to borrow.

Weston Creek Tennis Club

What could be more wholesome than a hit of tennis with the family?

This popular club hires out its synthetic grass courts.

It also often runs ‘come and try’ days complete with jumping castle, face painting and a bbq.

Read more like this:

Serious Crash at Blackwood

Source: New South Wales – News

Emergency services are at the scene of a serious crash at Blackwood.

Just after 3.30pm today (Thursday 22 May), police were called to Shepherds Hill Road after reports of a two-vehicle collision.

Traffic is being diverted for west bound traffic from the Blackwood roundabout.

One lane eastbound remains open at reduced speed.

The roads will be closed for some time and whilst Major Crash assess the scene.

Please avoid the area and take an alternative route.

Stay ahead by keeping good records

Source: New places to play in Gungahlin

As the end of the financial year approaches it’s a good time to check if your record keeping is in order.

There are many benefits to maintaining good record keeping habits for your self-managed super fund (SMSF). It’s also a legal requirement.

The benefits of good record keeping include:

  • making it easier for you to provide information to your SMSF professionals for independent audit and annual return preparation
  • helping reduce audit and administration costs
  • avoiding the risk of receiving administrative penalties which are personally payable by each individual trustee or the corporate trustee of the fund.

Remember, even if you use a super or tax professional to administer your SMSF, each trustee is still responsible for good record keeping.

You can watch our video on record keeping requirements to better understand your obligations and the benefits of ensuring good record keeping is maintained.

Looking for the latest news for SMSFs? You can stay up to date by visiting our SMSF newsroom and subscribingExternal Link to our monthly SMSF newsletter.

UPDATE #2: Charges – Fatal pedestrian strike – Palmerston

Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

Detectives from Major Crash Investigations Unit have now charged a 43-year-old male in relation to a pedestrian strike that occurred last Thursday.

He has been charged with Drive motor vehicle cause death, Careless drive cause death and Drive with drug in body. He has been bailed to appear in Darwin Local Court on 3 June 2025.

Notify us of changes to your details

Source: New places to play in Gungahlin

To meet your obligations as a trustee of a self-managed super fund (SMSF) you must notify us if you make any changes to your SMSF.

Regardless of how big or small the changes are, it’s important to notify us within 28 days.

These changes could include:

  • contact details (contact person, phone or email address)
  • change of structure within your SMSF
  • change in fund status
  • bank account details.

If you change your contact details, but don’t notify us, then you run the risk of missing out on important correspondence from us.

When you inform us of any changes, we’ll send you an alert via SMS, email (or both) to safeguard you against potential fraud or misconduct. Please note our SMS alerts no longer contain hyperlinks.

Learn more on changes to your SMSF on our website.

Looking for the latest news for SMSFs? You can stay up to date by visiting our SMSF newsroom and subscribingExternal Link to our monthly SMSF newsletter.

Interview with Michelle Grattan, Politics podcast, The Conversation

Source: Australian Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for Industry

Michelle Grattan:

The Reserve Bank has given homebuyers a small bit of good news this week – a modest quarter of a percentage point cut in interest rates. Welcoming the rate cut, Treasurer Jim Chalmers sees the fight against inflation as at last being won, or at least largely so. In this term he wants to turn to finding ways to promote productivity in Australia, where we’ve been losing that battle.

Meanwhile, most immediately, the Treasurer is fighting critics who are campaigning against his tax hit on those with more than $3 million in their superannuation accounts. The government plans to increase the tax on these accounts but, most controversially, to tax their unrealised capital gains.

Jim Chalmers joins us today to talk about these issues.

Jim Chalmers, we saw the Reserve Bank this week lower rates again. But the bank’s Monetary Policy Statement used the word ‘uncertain’ about the aspects of the future multiple times – many, many times. How are you planning for an uncertain economic environment to come?

Jim Chalmers:

First of all, Michelle, very good news that interest rates were cut for the second time in 3 months. That does reflect the progress that we’re making together on inflation.

But it does also recognise this very uncertain global economic environment. The language that the Reserve Bank Governor used yesterday and that the Board used in their statement is not dissimilar to some of the things that I’ve been saying for some time now. The escalating trade tensions, the weakness in the Chinese economy, conflict in the Middle East and Eastern Europe – all of these things are casting a dark shadow over the global economy, and that has implications for us as well.

But I think overwhelmingly this rate cut was about both kinds of inflation being within the target band. The Reserve Bank said that they were increasingly confident they were getting on top of things, that the upside risks to inflation were subsiding. And so that’s a very good thing. But also it recognises the international environment, as does the government.

Grattan:

Much of the uncertainty is coming from the Trump administration’s unpredictable tariff policy. The RBA has modelled 2 scenarios for tariffs, what it calls ‘trade peace’ and ‘trade war’, and Governor Bullock hasn’t ruled out a recession. What’s your reading of this?

Chalmers:

I think, first of all, the Reserve Bank is doing diligent work, looking at a range of scenarios from best case to worst case and central case, just like the Treasury does. We think through the various ways that this can play out.

And I think it’s helpful to remember if you look at the Reserve Bank’s forecasts and the Treasury’s forecasts, neither the bank nor the Treasury is expecting our economy to shrink. In fact, in both instances the forecasts say that the economy will grow more strongly next year compared to the financial year that we’re about to finish.

And so the bank and the Treasury expect our economy to continue to grow. Of course people think through the various scenarios. The international environment is casting a dark shadow over the global economy and our own economy. And that’s why it’s so important that the Australian economy has got the characteristics that you would want going into this volatility and unpredictability – the lower inflation, the higher wages, the low unemployment, the budget is in better nick than most countries around the world, we’re starting to see interest rates come down, the market’s expecting further interest rate cuts.

And so we’re well placed and well prepared, but it is good, diligent work by the Reserve Bank, by the Treasury and others to think through what the best and worst‑case scenarios might be. But our central case, our expectation and our forecasts all reflect some degree of confidence that our economy will continue to grow, not shrink as other countries have.

Grattan:

Parliament doesn’t meet until July, but obviously you’ll be thinking ahead. What are your priorities when it sits again?

Chalmers:

I think the Prime Minister has made it really clear that one of the things we’re really excited about legislating is the cut to student debt. That will take some of the burden off graduates but it will also provide some cost‑of‑living help to students or graduates repaying a student debt. So that’s going to be a big priority.

In my own portfolio, obviously we’ve got the changes to the super arrangements, we’ve got the standard deduction we announced during the campaign, we’ve got some payments reforms that we need to legislate. So it will be a really busy agenda, but I share the Prime Minister’s view that one of the big priorities when the parliament returns will be cutting student debt for millions of people.

Grattan:

On superannuation, you’ve had legislation which you haven’t got through to increase the tax on superannuation balances over $3 million. At the moment that’s 15 per cent, you want to take it to 30 per cent but also, and most controversially, you want to tax unrealised capital gains – that is gains that people haven’t actually cashed out. How is that fair?

Chalmers:

This is a modest change that we announced almost 2 and a half years ago now. We announced it at the beginning of 2023. We’re now in the middle of 2025. And what this change is about, it’s about making concessional treatment for people with very large superannuation balances still concessional but a little bit less so. And that will help us fund our priorities, whether it’s Medicare, the tax cuts and other priorities in budget repair. So it’s a modest change.

In terms of the calculation of unrealised gains, that’s actually not unique in the system. There are other ways in the super system and more broadly that unrealised gains are calculated. Now, we did, I think, 3 rounds of substantial consultation on these changes in the last 2 and a bit years.

And what we learnt throughout that consultation process is that nobody could propose to us a better way of making this calculation. Some of the alternatives would impose costs on everyone in the fund rather than just people over $3 million. And there are other options as part of that consultation as well.

And so Treasury advises us that this is the best, simplest way to go about it. I know that people have views about it. I know that there’s a campaign in a couple of our newspapers about it. But this is all about making sure that it’s still concessional treatment, it only impacts about 0.5 per cent of people in the super system with very large superannuation balances. It makes the system a bit fairer, and it’s important in terms of the sustainability of the budget.

Grattan:

Just on the practicalities, if you or I have more than $3 million in our superannuation fund, how do you actually calculate this unrealised capital gains, given that the fund could include a farm, it could include a small business?

Chalmers:

It’s the value at the start versus the value at the end –

Grattan:

Of the financial year?

Chalmers:

Yeah, allowing for withdrawals and contributions. And, again, this calculation is made elsewhere in the superannuation system, the way that a number of the funds have to report makes this calculation. So the calculation is not new. And if you make a loss you can carry the loss forward. There’s a whole bunch of appropriate arrangements made in the calculation.

Grattan:

It sounds very complicated. You’d need a good accountant.

Chalmers:

Typically people with more than $3 million in superannuation have got access to pretty useful advice, that’s the first point. But, secondly, we did consult on this for some years, and this is the way that we propose to go forward.

Grattan:

One of the critics, one of the strongest critics, has been Paul Keating. Now, he would consider himself father of the superannuation scheme, right? He says that the non‑indexation of the $3 million just introduces bracket creep.

Chalmers:

First of all, I mean I think you know – you and I have spoken on a number of occasions over the years – you know the regard that I have for Paul, and I do talk to him from time to time, including about this issue. And I respect him too much to kind of relay or convey those private conversations –

Grattan:

– it would have been a lively discussion, I’d imagine.

Chalmers:

I think there’s a range of views, and Paul’s views, I think, are relatively well known on this. When it comes to indexation, I understand the argument. There are so many instances in the tax system where thresholds aren’t indexed, and from time to time governments take decisions to raise those thresholds. I’m anticipating that that’s what would happen here. Some of these calculations about what people’s liability would be in 40 years assume that the $3 million threshold never changes.

Grattan:

So why not do it at the start?

Chalmers:

I think we’re making it consistent with other areas of the tax system where the threshold is not indexed. I fully anticipate that governments of either, if not both political persuasions at some point in the future will change the threshold. And that’s why a lot of the calculations that you see reported in the media are based on a pretty unrealistic assumption about what the next 30 or 40 years will look like.

Grattan:

Now, you’ve got a problem of getting this through the parliament, which, with the new Senate, means getting it through the Greens. What are the chances of that happening, do you think?

Chalmers:

I’m not sure yet. We haven’t had that discussion with the crossbench. I think the final makeup of the Senate is not yet clear, and the parliament is not coming back in the next couple of weeks and so we’ve got time to have those discussions. No doubt the new Leader of the Greens, Larissa Waters, no doubt will appoint a Treasury spokesperson and we’ll engage with them in the usual respectful way to –

Grattan:

– what’s the main sticking point there, do you anticipate?

Chalmers:

Last time they wanted a lower threshold, last time it was in the parliament.

Grattan:

And you’re not up for that?

Chalmers:

Not something that we’ve been considering. And they’ve talked about indexation as well, the question you asked me about a moment ago. But, again, we’ll see who we engage with. We’ve got a bit of time. They’ll have a view. They know our policy. But those conversations haven’t begun.

Grattan:

Let’s turn to productivity. You’ve said that this will be a key focus during this term. But you’ve also noted that you need more than 2 terms to really get major progress here. Why does it take so long?

Chalmers:

The point that I’ve made about productivity is that this is a challenge that hasn’t just been hanging around the last couple of years, it’s been hanging around the last couple of decades.

And if there was a quick fix for productivity, if there was some kind of switch that we could flick, somebody would have flicked it already. So it’s one of those economic objectives where there’s not the same kind of instant policy gratification that you might see in other indicators in our economy.

I’ve tried to be upfront with people and say productivity was a big focus in the first term. Some of the changes that we made around strengthening and streamlining foreign investment and competition and the payments system, the changes we make in human capital, the announcements we’ve made about abolishing non‑compete clauses and a national regime for occupational licensing – those are all substantial reforms and they’re all about productivity.

But what we’ve said is in the first term we focused primarily on inflation without forgetting productivity. In the second term we will focus much more heavily on productivity but being upfront with people that you don’t expect quarter‑to‑quarter, instant changes in the level of productivity in our economy from some of these medium‑term policies that we’re putting in place.

So I’m working closely with the Productivity Commission on the next steps in our productivity agenda. We think productivity and the future of our economy will come from the energy transformation, from human capital and giving people the skills to adapt and adopt technology, the artificial intelligence revolution. It will come from making sure we get value for money in the care economy. And it will come from making our economy more competitive and dynamic.

So on each of those fronts we’ve already done a heap of work. We’re looking for more reforms in those areas, working with the Productivity Commission to do that, but being upfront with people about how quickly we can turn around this problem that has been really one of the defining features of our economy now for decades.

Grattan:

There was, of course, in 2023 a Productivity Commission report which ran to some 9 volumes, I think, and had 70‑odd recommendations. And yet a lot of that hasn’t been done.

Chalmers:

There were 29 different reform directions in that report and we think that we are progressing in some form more than two‑thirds of them. And I know that’s not general accepted wisdom about that report, but more than two‑thirds of the 29 directives we are progressing in one form or another.

The other thing is, of the 71 specific recommendations, we think about half of those – around 36 of those – involve state and territory governments either partly or fully. And so a bit of perspective on all of that.

Specifically, we picked up and ran with some of their ideas on vocational education and training, cybersecurity, government data, skilled migration. So more of that report is being acted on than I think is broadly accepted. But if the point, the kernel of the question is, should we try to do more on productivity, I’ve already flagged that that will be a big priority.

Grattan:

The Productivity Commission has called for ideas from the public to improve productivity. And it’s now identified what it calls 15 priority reforms for further exploration. And one is to support business investment through corporate tax reform. Are you willing to even contemplate this? You’ve been quite shy about tax reform that’s robust.

Chalmers:

First of all, again, we actually progressed a whole bunch of tax reform in the first term – income tax reform, production tax credits, tax breaks for small business, tax breaks for build‑to‑rent –

Grattan:

Maybe it was the easy stuff.

Chalmers:

We changed the PRRT arrangements. That didn’t feel easy at the time.

Grattan:

Modestly.

Chalmers:

Multi‑national tax reform is no small thing. And so, again, a bit of perspective. We did half a dozen meaningful tax changes in the first term.

When it comes to the consultation that the PC is doing, and I think it’s terrific that they’re doing that consultation, and that consultation reflects some of the asks that are put to us from time to time from the business community in particular, and I welcome that, too. Let’s have a proper, national conversation about that.

When it comes to company taxes, I’m the only person in this, or Katy Gallagher and I are the only people in this that have to make it all add up. And so sometimes our constraints are fiscal.

We’ve got to work out what we can afford to do in a world where we’ve got to fund these priorities – strengthening Medicare, investing in the care economy, some of the big pressures on our budget, defence. We’ve got to fund all of that. And so some of these proposals on tax reform which are costly to the budget need to be seen in that light as well.

Grattan:

Yes, but that doesn’t really go to the fundamental question, and that is whether you think it would be a good idea to have this on the agenda.

Chalmers:

I don’t have an ideological view about company taxes. I have an economic view. One of the things that’s good that Danielle Wood and the PC are consulting on is we’ve got this challenge in productivity and the thing that the economists call capital deepening – whether or not we have a deep and robust enough capital base.

And so they’re consulting on whether tax has a role to play in that. I don’t have an ideological view about that. I’ve got a fiscal view about that, and I’ve got a view about where the productivity is going to come from in a modern economy like ours. I think it’s important that we don’t over focus on some of the areas that have been perennial parts to this conversation – scorched earth industrial relations, the headline company tax rate.

These are parts of the productivity discussion, but they’re not the whole thing. Energy, human capital, competition and dynamism, care economy, AI and technology. I’m trying to have a broader conversation about how we get more productivity in our economy because in some of those areas, that have not been central enough to the national conversation about productivity, I think that’s where we might find that we can make the most progress.

Grattan:

But isn’t company tax important when we’re trying to compete internationally for investment?

Chalmers:

Again, it does get raised with me from time to time by investors, but it’s not the whole story, and often it’s not the main story. When international investors are weighing up whether to invest in Australia, they care about the stability of our laws, they care about our skills base, our human capital. They care about access to cleaner and cheaper energy. They care about how long it takes to get approvals.

There are real areas here where there’s a productivity dividend if we get it right, where we become more attractive as an investment destination if we get it right. And that conversation, which I have relatively frequently with global investors and domestic investors, is not a conversation wholly and solely about company tax.

Grattan:

Just finally, Jim Chalmers, you like to indulge in some blue sky thinking from time to time, a bit of essay writing. You might have a little time over the winter break. What’s on your horizon in that regard?

Chalmers:

I’ve already had a discussion today with Katy Gallagher setting out what the rest of the year looks like and how that relates to some of these priorities that you’ve been kind enough to talk with me today about. I’m trying to do a bit more reading this term than what I did last term.

Grattan:

What are you reading?

Chalmers:

I just finished that Ezra Klein book called Abundance, which goes right to the core of some of these things you’re talking about. How do we think in a progressive way about making our economy more efficient and more productive. That Ezra Klein book called Abundance is a ripper. I am grateful to Andrew Leigh for suggesting it to me, and I’ve gotten through it now. So that kind of reading. I confess I’ve started the book about Joe Biden, the Jake Tapper book, as well.

Grattan:

About his health?

Chalmers:

About his health, yeah. And, like everyone, I send my best wishes to the Bidens after that news that we got earlier in the week about his health. So try to do a bit more reading.

But I’m really excited about a new term, a new opportunity working closely with Katy to make sure we finish the fight on inflation, we make our economy more productive, we think more expansively about the big opportunities from AI and energy and some of these things that we’ve been talking about today. And I have been finding inspiration in trying to do a bit more reading this term so far than what I managed last term.

Grattan:

Jim Chalmers, thank you very much for joining The Conversation’s Politics podcast.